Flanagan v. Chicago City Railway Co.

90 N.E. 688, 243 Ill. 456
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 N.E. 688 (Flanagan v. Chicago City Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan v. Chicago City Railway Co., 90 N.E. 688, 243 Ill. 456 (Ill. 1909).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a judgment of the Appellate Court affirming a judgment recovered in the circuit court of Cook county by the appellee, against the appellant, for personal injuries. The errors assigned are the denial of appellant’s motion to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor and the refusal to give certain instructions which were asked by the appellant.

Appellee’s injuries were received in a collision between a street car of appellant and a baker’s wagon which appellee was driving. The accident occurred on Forty-seventh street, in the city of Chicago, between three and four o’clock on the morning of April 24, 1903. Appellant operates a double track street railroad in Forty-seventh street, running east and west, the north track being used for westbound cars and the south track for east-bound cars. The negligence charged in the various counts of the declaration is, that appellant wholly neglected, failed and refused to stop the car or slacken its speed so as to enable appellee to safely cross the track, and that it so carelessly and improperly ran and managed the car that by and through the negligence and improper conduct of the servants of appelI ant, appellee was run against and injured; that appellant ran the car at a high rate of speed without sounding a gong, ringing a bell or giving any other signal of the approach of the car, and that appellant ran and operated its car without a light or lighted headlight.

The appellee stopped his wagon to make a delivery of goods on the south side of Forty-seventh street, about three doors west of Wallace street. He testified that when he returned to his wagon he looked east but did not see or hear a street car approaching. He then got into his wagon and started west on Forty-seventh street, intending to cross to the north side of the street, where he expected to make another delivery about 230 feet west of where his wagon had been standing. The horse walked in a north-westerly direction about sixty feet across the rails of the east-bound track and the space between the two tracks, and had reached a point where the horse and at least half of the wagon had crossed in safety the west-bound track, when the wagon was struck by a street car going west on that track. It war. a misty morning, and no gong was sounded nor any signal given of the approach of the car. The horse was thrown down, the wag-on was turned over and shoved about thirty-six feet, and appellee was thrown to the pavement on the north side of the street. One of the passengers in the car, who was called as a witness by appellant, testified that he heard no signal given or gong sounded before the crash and there was nothing to call his attention to the danger until the crash came. The motorman in charge of the car testified that when he first saw the wagon it was near Wallace street, thirty-five or forty feet ahead of him, going-west on the south track; that he was going about twelve miles an hour, and at that rate could stop in forty or fifty feet; that he rang the gong, and when the car was about fifteen or twenty feet from the wagon he saw the horse turn into the north track, and he then applied the brakes; that the first thing that took place after shutting off the power and applying the brakes was the bump of the car against the wagon. Under this evidence it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether, at the time and under the circumstances, the car was operated at a dangerously high rate of speed and whether any signal was given to appellee of the approach of the car.

It is insisted that it is negligence, as a matter of law, for the driver of an enclosed wagon to drive his horse at a slow walk along a public street on which cars run, and in the middle of the block attempt to cross one of the tracks over which he knows a street car daily passes at about that hour, without looking for such car or making any effort to ascertain its whereabouts. The appellee testified that before he got into the wagon he looked east for a car and saw none coming; that when he got into the wagon he did not drive along the south side of the street and then turn directly across the tracks, but that he drove diagonally, in a north-westerly direction, across the tracks, and that he had gone only sixty feet when he was struck. If this testimony was true, then it might fairly be argued that he could reasonably assume, without being guilty of a want of ordinary care, that the appellant would not, in the few seconds he would be engaged in crossing the track, run a car in the darkness along the street at a high rate of speed without a headlight and without giving any signal of its approach.

Counsel for appellant insist that not only is it possible to see a car lighted as they claim this one was, at the distance they claim it was when appellee testified he looked, but that it would be gross carelessness to fail to see it. Therefore the)r say this is conclusive that appellee either did not look at the time he claimed he did, or that if he did look he saw the car,—that is, that his testimony is not true. Even if we should be inclined to agree with them in their conclusion, if we were authorized to weigh the evidence, that argument is conclusive that the court properly overruled the motion to direct a verdict so far as this point is concerned. On such a motion the court does not .weigh the evidence.

The court refused to give to the jury, on behalf of the appellant, the following instruction:

“The court instructs the jury that as the plaintiff was about to cross the tracks of the defendant in Forty-seventh street the law placed upon the plaintiff, and upon the employees of the defendant in charge of the car in question, the same legal duty, viz., the duty of exercising ordinary care to avoid a collision. If, therefore, you find, from the evidence, that a want of ordinary care on the part of the defendant’s employee in charge of said car and a want of ordinary care of the plaintiff combined to bring about the accident, and that a want of ordinary care on the part of both of the said employees and of the plaintiff contributed proximately to such accident, then, in such case, you should find the defendant not guilty.”

The instruction announced a correct rule of law applicable to the case. It was, however, not error to refuse it, because by the eighth instruction given on behalf of appellant, read in connection with the series, the same rule was stated to the jury in substance.

Appellant requested an instruction that there was no liability for an unavoidable accident, and that if the jury believed, from the evidence, that, so far as appellant was concerned, the accident was unavoidable they should find the defendant not guilty. The court instructed the jury that the burden of proving negligence of the defendant was on the plaintiff; that this rule must govern the jury in deciding the case, and that if by this rule the plaintiff had failed to establish his case, it was the duty of the jury to find the defendant not guilty. An unavoidable accident is necessarily one occurring not because of negligence. The requirement of proof of negligence therefore eliminates the hypothesis of unavoidable accident, and it was not error to refuse to give the instruction.

The court refused appellant’s request to give to the jury the following instruction:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 688, 243 Ill. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-chicago-city-railway-co-ill-1909.