Fugett v. Murray

35 N.E.2d 946, 311 Ill. App. 323, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 722
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 14, 1941
DocketGen. No. 9,659
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 35 N.E.2d 946 (Fugett v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fugett v. Murray, 35 N.E.2d 946, 311 Ill. App. 323, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 722 (Ill. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

Leslie Fugett was killed and his wife, Mae Fugett, injured when the motorcycle on which they were riding, on State Highway No. 45, collided with a horse which was loose on a highway, belonging to Gerard Murray, the defendant. Suit was brought against the defendant, Gerard Murray, by Mae Fugett as administratrix of the estate of Leslie Fugett under the Injuries Act, and by Mae Fugett, individually, for damages for personal injuries sustained by her.

In count one of the complaint the administratrix seeks damages for the death of her intestate and in count two, Mae Fugett, individually, asks for damages for personal injuries to herself. The charges of negligence in the two counts are identical. A jury trial resulted in a verdict finding the defendant not guilty under count one, but guilty under count two and awarded Mae Fugett damages of $2,500. Motions for a new trial made by the defendant and by the administratrix were overruled. Judgment was entered that the administratrix take nothing by virtue of the trial. Judgment was entered for Mae Fugett for $2,500. The defendant has appealed from the judgment against him, and the administratrix prosecutes a cross-appeal from the judgment that she take nothing as a result of the trial.

Several charges of negligence in the complaint predicate the action on section one of the Animal Act (sec. 1, ch. 8, Smith-Hurd’s Annotated Statutes [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 5.001]) which is as follows: “Hereafter, it shall be unlawful for any animal of the species of horse, ass, mule, cattle, sheep, goat, swine or geese, to run at large in the State of Illinois: Provided, that no owner or keeper of such animals shall be liable for damages in any civil suit for injury to the person or property of another caused by the running at large thereof, without the knowledge of such owner or keeper, when such owner or keeper can establish that he used reasonable care in restraining such animals from so running at large.” The suit was tried on the theory that a duty rested on the defendant to show he used reasonable care to prevent the horse from being on the highway. The liability of the defendant for the horse being loose on the highway, depends upon the construction of the above section of the statute.

The proviso in the statute was added in 1931. As a consequence of the enactment of section one as it now stands, without the proviso, the law of the State of Illinois required the owner or keeper of stock, named in the statute to keep them from running at large on the public highways. The owner or keeper was liable in a civil action for damages resulting from his stock being loose on the highway even though he did not know the stock was so at large. It was not necessary for the plaintiff in such an action to allege that the owner or keeper negligently and unlawfully permitted his stock to be at large on the public highway. (Farrell v. Crawford, 222 Ill. App. 499.) Every animal of the species named in the statute is running at large unlawfully if it is on the public highway unattended, unrestrained and uncontrolled. (Farrell v. Crawford, supra; Bulpit v. Matthews, 145 Ill. 345; Morgan v. People, 103 Ill. App. 257; Donaghue v. Fraikin, 200 Ill. App. 339.) It is our opinion that the proviso was passed by the legislature to relieve the owner of stock of the harshness of the law, as declared in the Farrell case. Under the proviso the owner or keeper of stock may show in a civil action against him for injury caused to a person or property resulting from his stock running at large on the highway, that without his knowledge the stock was so at large, and that he used reasonable care to restrain the stock from being at large.

In the case here the plaintiffs introduced evidence proving that the horse belonged to the defendant, that he had charge of it, and that it was at large on the highway; also, evidence tending to prove that the plaintiffs were in the exercise of reasonable care for their own safety, and that the horse running at large on the highway was the proximate cause of the accident. The plaintiffs then rested their case in chief.

The general rule is that where an accident occurs as a result of the violation of the statute making it unlawful for stock to run at large on the highway, there is a presumption of negligence on the part of the owner and keeper of the stock, which is sufficient to carry the case to the jury. (45 A. L. R. 507 and cases there cited.) The defendant claims the benefit of the proviso. The proof to be established under the proviso was within the knowledge of the defendant and not the plaintiffs. The burden of evidence, after the plaintiffs rested their case in chief, was on the defendant.

On the evening of Saturday, June 17, 1939, Leslie Fugett and Mae Fugett, his wife, left Joliet for Kankakee riding on a motorcycle. Leslie Fugett was operating the motorcycle and Mae Fugett was riding on a seat directly behind her husband, and sitting very close to his back, sometimes with her hands in the pockets of the jacket her husband was wearing. After leaving Joliet they rode on State highway 44 which extends in a southwesterly direction until it joins highway 45. From the junction of the two high- . ways, highway 45 ran south toward Kanakakee. There was a stop sign at the junction of the highways. Leslie Fugett stopped his motorcycle at the stop sign, then turned it to the right and drove the motorcycle south on highway 45, for approximately two miles. It was about 8:15 o’clock p.m., C.S.T. when the motorcycle collided with the horse of the defendant, which was running at large on highway 45.

It is contended by the appellant that the verdict awarding $2,500 to Mae Fugett, individually, is against the manifest weight of the evidence. The accident occurred near the corral on the defendant’s farm, which is on the west side of the highway No. 45. The pasture on defendant’s farm was north of the corral. The corral, pasture and field are connected by a series of lanes and gates, as described minutely by the various witnesses. The defendant and his witnesses testified that about seven p.m. on the evening of the accident, he together with his sons, placed the horse which was involved in the accident, in a pasture with three other horses; that the fences around his place were substantial and in a good state of repair, and that he had no knowledge that the horse was out of his pasture on the road, until after the accident had occurred. In respect to the location of the pasture, fields and lanes etc., and the state of repair of the fences, the defendant was corroborated by other witnesses. He was also corroborated by other witnesses that he placed the horse in question, in the pasture with the other horses at the time he states.

In rebuttal, Robert Lee Fugett, a brother of the deceased, testified that shortly after the accident, he and a man by the name of Emerson who represented a Furnace Company, had a conference with the defendant on his farm; that they went to the home of the defendant for the purpose of getting information with reference to the accident; that during their talk the defendant told about the death of the horse, and he was asked how the horse got out onto the highway; that the defendant stated he did not know how the horse got out, unless while putting the horses through the corral into the pasture, that one of them went around the gate instead of through it. The defendant denied having such conversation with these men.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E.2d 946, 311 Ill. App. 323, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fugett-v-murray-illappct-1941.