Fejes v. State

46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 109
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedMay 13, 1994
DocketNo. 86-CC-3287
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 109 (Fejes v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fejes v. State, 46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 109 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

Mitchell, J.

The claim for damages in excess of $100,000 was brought by Claimant, Ann Fejes, executrix of the estate of Joseph M. Fejes, alleging that Respondent was negligent in causing the death of Joseph Fejes. The claim arises out of an accident involving a single motor vehicle driven by Mr. Fejes striking a bridge abutment on U.S. Route 45, approximately three-tenths of a mile south of Champaign County Road 2300N on June 27, 1984.

In the complaint, Claimant states that “Respondent owed Plaintiff a duty to exercise reasonable care in maintaining, repairing and improvement of highways within the State.” (Complaint, par. 3.) Claimant alleges that Respondent breached its duty by committing one or more of the following negligent acts or omissions:

1. Negligently failed to place a guard rail around a certain bridge abutment on U.S. Route 45 in Champaign County, Illinois between the municipalities of Urbana and Rantoul.

2. Failed to provide or post adequate warning of the presence of said unguarded bridge abutment to the users of said highway at the above place.

The complaint includes a bill of particulars in paragraph 13, detailing damages as $193,440 for loss of income, $150,000 for loss in value of business and $4,289.90 for funeral expenses, for a total of $347,729.90.

A hearing was conducted on December 23, 1991. After the close of Claimants case in chief, Respondent moved for a directed verdict which was taken under advisement and Respondent proceeded with its defense without waiving its motion.

Claimant's Case In Chief

In the presentation of her case in chief, Claimant called four witnesses: Douglas A. Reifsteck, an occurrence witness; Terry A. Klutts, the State trooper responsible for investigating the accident; Jongin Cragg, a former real estate broker; and Matt Fejes, the son of decedent. Ann Fejes testified as a rebuttal witness. The testimony of Charles D. Sanders, Respondent’s witness, is used by Claimant in her brief to support her case.

Claimant presented 27 exhibits of which 25 were offered into and admitted into the record. Claimants exhibits nos. 1 through 23 are photographs depicting various views of the northbound and southbound lanes of U.S. Route 45 at or near the subject bridge abutment. Claimants Exhibit No. 24 is the Illinois State Police Traffic Accident Report No. 6877834. Claimants Exhibit No. 25 is an October 4, 1984 letter signed by Cragg confirming that Matt Fejes and Joe Fejes received and turned down an offer of $750,000 to purchase the building and business of the Town & Country Steak House. Claimants exhibits nos. 26 and 27 were used to refresh the recollection of Matt Fejes, but were not offered into or made a part of this record. Exhibits nos. 26 and 27 are attached to the transcript.

Claimant presented a certified copy of the Life Tables, dated 1978 and published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The parties stipulated that the 1978 table indicated a life expectancy of an average white male of the age of Mr. Fejes at his death was 11.6 years. The Commissioner took judicial notice of the stipulation and information, and the tables were not made part of the record.

The unrebutted testimony presented in Claimants case in chief is as follows:

Mr. Fejes was traveling to Rantoul by himself on June 27, 1984, in his daughters car, a 1967 Volvo. Mr. Fejes had trouble shifting the car because it was a stick shift and he had never driven it on the highway.

Douglas A. Reifsteck, a farmer from Tolono, witnessed the accident on U.S. Route 45 that resulted in the death of Mr. Fejes at about 10:50 a.m. on June 27, 1984. Mr. Reifsteck was hauling grain with a tractor-trailer from an elevator in Thomasboro, a small town between Urbana and Rantoul. Mr. Reifsteck first observed Mr. Fejes turning around in Thomasboro and heading south, the direction Mr. Reifsteck was traveling. U.S. Route 45, where the accident occurred, is a four-lane divided highway, two lanes being for southbound traffic.

As Mr. Reifsteck picked up speed going south out of Thomasboro, Mr. Fejes passed him, going about 45 to 50 miles an hour. Mr. Fejes passed Mr. Reifsteck about half a mile before the accident occurred. Mr. Reifsteck watched as the car Mr. Fejes was driving veered into the passing lane, and then moved off to the right and hit a concrete bridge abutment, all in about two seconds time. Mr. Reifsteck stopped his truck, put on his four-way flashing lights and called for police and ambulance on his citizens band radio. The abutment hit by Mr. Fejes is identified as survey station 2573 on U.S. Route 45 between Thomasboro and Urbana.

On cross-examination, Mr. Reifsteck stated that he did not see any brake lights and did not see the vehicle skid. He did not see any movement back to the left by the vehicle to try to get it back on the road.

State Police trooper Terry Klutts was one of the police officers who responded to the call. Trooper Klutts observed that Mr. Fejes had collided with the bridge abutment. He determined that Mr. Fejes was not breathing and had no pulse, and he administered CPR until the ambulance came. The coroner’s physician determined that Mr. Fejes died within seconds of the accident.

After Mr. Fejes was taken away by ambulance, trooper Klutts took measurements and interviewed witnesses. Trooper Klutts determined that Mr. Fejes had left the road 173 feet before he hit the abutment. Klutts determined that it would take a vehicle traveling 60 miles an hour between two and three seconds to travel 173 feet.

According to trooper Klutts’ measurements, the southbound lane of the road at the bridge where Mr. Fejes was killed was 25 feet 10 inches wide, wall to wall. The pavement of the southbound lane was 22 feet wide and the bridge wall was one foot, ten inches from the edge of the pavement. On cross-examination, Klutts reviewed his report and stated that the roadway at the bridge was 25 feet 10 inches from curb to curb, therefore the bridge walls would then be a total of 29 feet 6 inches apart. The bridge abutment itself was 3 feet 10 inches high and 11 inches wide. A rain gutter, four inches deep, extends along the side of the roadway north from the bridge, about 130 feet 9 inches.

There were guardrails at three of the four approaches to the bridge, but none at the corner of the bridge abutment that Mr. Fejes hit.

There was a driveway or an entrance to a field on the west side of U.S. Route 45 and approximately 10 feet to the north of the bridge. The field had no fences, but was open, without any demarcation lines from the ditch that ran under the bridge all the way north to County Road 2300N. County Road 2300N is about three-tenths of a mile north of the accident scene.

In the beginning of 1984, while Mr. Fejes was still alive, Jongin Cragg, a real estate broker employed by Norrick and Morrow, conveyed an offer to purchase the Town & Country restaurant for $750,000 from Yen Ching, Inc. The offer to purchase was turned down because Mr. Fejes thought the business was worth more. After the death of Mr. Fejes the real estate was sold for $600,000 on March 1, 1985, to the same people who had made the previous offer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fejes-v-state-ilclaimsct-1994.