Foster v. Shepherd

101 N.E. 411, 258 Ill. 164
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 411 (Foster v. Shepherd) 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
Foster v. Shepherd, 101 N.E. 411, 258 Ill. 164 (Ill. 1913).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Cooice

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Appellate Court for the Third District affirmed a judgment of the circuit court of Moultrie county against the plaintiff in error for $7750 in an action on the case brought by Ethel M. Foster, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Ralph Foster, to recover damages against plaintiff in error, Homer Shepherd, for wrongfully causing the death of her husband. The record has been brought to this court for further review by writ of certiorari.

The declaration contains seven counts. The first count charges plaintiff in error with an assault vi et armis, and alleges that on the 19th day of August, 1909, plaintiff in error did unlawfully shoot and discharge a pistol at, to and against defendant in error’s intestate, and did then and there thereby shoot and kill the said Ralph Foster. The second, fourth and fifth counts also charge an unlawful killing of Ralph Foster, and differ from the first count only in that the assault in these counts is alleged to have been wanton, willful and malicious. The third, sixth and seventh counts allege an assault by negligently and carelessly firing the gun at deceased and thereby killing him. All of the counts of. the declaration are in trespass vi et armis, and the qualifying words “negligently and carelessly,” found in the third, sixth and seventh counts, and “wanton, willful and malicious,” used in the second, fourth and fifth counts, are evidently intended to express the varying degrees of culpability that mig'ht be shown to exist by the evidence. All of the counts allege that the death of the defendant in error’s intestate was caused by the direct and immediate force and violence of the plaintiff in error in wrongfully shooting him, and for such an act trespass vi et amis or trespass on the case is the proper form of action.

At the close of the evidence for defendant in error, and again at the close of all the evidence, plaintiff in error entered a motion for a directed verdict, and the denial of this motion is among the rulings of the court assigned for error. As will be seen from what is said hereafter in this opinion, there was evidence tending to support the allegations of some of the counts of the declaration, and the motion for a directed verdict was properly denied.

Ralph Foster was a young man about twenty-nine years of age, and, excepting about three years’ absence while working in Chicago, had resided during the whole of his lifetime in the village of Lovington, Illinois. Plaintiff in error was about the same age, and these two young men had grown up together, were schoolmates and had been closely associated all their lives. Plaintiff in error’s wife was a first cousin of the deceased and their families were intimate and on friendly terms. Plaintiff in error was an official of the Shepherd National Bank, located at Loving-ton. The father of Ralph Foster had been a merchant in Lovington and had died a few years before the death of his son. The deceased at the time of his death was acting as trustee under the last will and testament of his father, and as such trustee was conducting the mercantile business left by his father. The store building in which this business was conducted was located at the north-east corner of the intersection of the streets known as State and Broadway. The residence of plaintiff in error was located at the north-west corner of the intersection of the streets known as State and Washington, three blocks west of the Foster store. Ralph Foster’s residence was located across Washington street east from the residence of Homer Shepherd and about half a block north. The residence of the mother of Ralph Foster was located one block north and one or one and one-half blocks west of the residence of plaintiff in error. About eleven o’clock on the night of August 19, 1909, the reports of three gun shots were heard by persons in the vicinity of the residence of plaintiff in error, and a few minutes thereafter the dead body of Ralph Foster was found lying on the sidewalk on the north side of State street, immediately south of the residence of Homer Shepherd. The body was lying on its back, with the feet about the middle of the sidewalk and extended towards the north-west, and the head lying south of the south line of the sidewalk and extended towards the south-east. Upon examination it was discovered that Foster had been shot in the back, the bullet entering just above the right shoulder-blade or scapula and about four inches to the right of the spinal column. It was later learned that the bullet had taken a downward course through the lungs and supposedly through the right ventricle of the heart, and was found located immediately underneath the skin four inches to the left of the navel.

Ralph Foster was last seen alive at about 10:30 o’clock that evening on Broadway street, near his store building. At the time the body was' found it was discovered that the two lower buttons in the lapel of the trousers were unbuttoned and the trousers gaping. The theory of the plaintiff below (defendant in error here) is that the deceased left his store building and started to go to the residence of his mother to spend the night there, and while walking along the sidewalk south of plaintiff in error’s home he stopped under a tree, with his back toward the south side of the Shepherd residence, to urinate, and was shot from the south window of the second-story west room of the Shepherd house and killed at the place where his body was found. Plaintiff in error does not deny the killing, but defends upon the theory that Foster had come across the street from his own home for the purpose of frightening him by pretending to be a burglar, and that he fired the shots from the west window of his bed-room believing that deceased was a burglar in the act of committing a burglary upon his residence at the time, and that he acted in defense of his family and his property. Neither of these two theories is supported by the testimony of eye-witnesses, as of the three persons who knew the true facts concerning the killing, Ralph Foster is dead and the plaintiff in error and his wife are not competent to testify. It thus became necessary to determine the probabilities as to the true facts entirely from the surrounding circumstances.

The house of the plaintiff in error is located on the south-east corner of the block and faces east on Washington street, with a side entrance on the south to State street. The south line of the main part of the house is located nineteen feet north of the north line of the sidewalk on the north side of State street. The house is a story and a half in height, and to the west there extends an addition or “R.” The south line of this west portion of the house is located twenty-five feet north of the north line of said sidewalk. The bed-room occupied by plaintiff in error and his wife was located on the second floor in the west end of this addition or “L.” On the south side of this room there is a window, and there is also a window in the middle of the west end of the room. The bottom of each of these windows is about twelve or thirteen feet from the ground. All the evidence tends to show that the shots were fired from this room, the contention of defendant in error being that they were fired from the south window, while plaintiff in error contends they were fired from the west window. Immediately west of the Shepherd residence, and in the same block and about one hundred feet distant, is located the residence of Mrs. E. S'. Jones.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 411, 258 Ill. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-shepherd-ill-1913.