Hardin v. City of Moline

179 Ill. App. 101, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 4
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5,657
StatusPublished

This text of 179 Ill. App. 101 (Hardin v. City of Moline) 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
Hardin v. City of Moline, 179 Ill. App. 101, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 4 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Whitney

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was injured by falling into a hole in a sidewalk in the City of Moline. In her declaration she charges appellant with negligence in that it permitted the said sidewalk at the place where the hole existed to he and remain in an unsafe condition, after notice, etc., and in failing to properly light that portion of the street in which the alleged defect existed. The plea of not guilty was filed, and a trial had, resulting in favor of appellee, with verdict and judgment against appellant for $1,425. An appeal is prayed to this court, with 17 errors assigned, but appellant presents in argument only the following:—(1) It was improper .to introduce proof that plaintiff was the head of a family; (2) There was no proper evidence introduced to show either actual or implied notice to the City of Moline of the alleged defect in the sidewalk; (3) The verdict of the jury is against the weight of the evidence ; (4) The court erred in not directing a verdict for defendant, (a) at the close of plaintiff’s case, (b) at the close of all the evidence; (5) The damages awarded are excessive; (6) the court erred in giving plaintiff’s instructions Nos. 1, 2 and 3 as modified; (7) The court erred in refusing defendant’s instructions Nos. 2, 3 and 5; and on the grounds pointed out in the argument appellant seeks a reversal, thereby waiving all other errors assigned.

Taking up the points made in argument, the first to be considered is the alleged improper introduction of evidence showing the members of the family of appellee. There is no proof in the record that appellee was the head of a family, or that any one of the members of the family was dependent on the earnings of appellee for support. Indeed, it is shown by the evidence that appellee lived with her husband, who in law is the head of the family.

The evidence on the subject of the members of the family is as follows:—(Appellee’s Testimony.) “I have a family; I have four children and a husband; my occupation during the last eight or nine years has been washing, ironing and janitor work;” which testimony as the questions were asked was objected to as irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial, and the objections were overruled.

Under the authority of City of Joliet v. Conway, 119 Ill. 489, the overruling of the objections to this evidence was not error. The only theory on which it could be contended to be erroneous was that such evidence might tend to arouse the sympathy of the jury; but appellant is hardly in condition to make that point, and cannot avail itself of the objection to appellee’s testimony, because without objection it was allowed to be shown for appellee by the witness Fanny Lee, that she was a daughter of appellee and lived with her father and mother, and that she had two sisters and one brother.

The evidence of the witness Fanny Lee was substantially the same as that of appellee on the same subject, so that the jury had the very same evidence before them, whether they considered the evidence of appellee, which was objected to, or the evidence of Fanny Lee, which was not objected to.

The second point made in the argument is the lack of evidence to show notice to the city of the defect in the sidewalk. The proof was that years before, under a former Mayor, the practice had been inaugurated and followed of having police officers, when they came into the office of the police, before leaving, after having been on duty, to report to the desk officer all defects they had found in the streets and sidewalks, and of having the desk officer make a notation thereof in a book, and prepare a slip, giving an indication of the defect and its locality, and hanging the slip on a certain hook in the office for the superintendent of streets, and of having the street superintendent go to that office at least once each day, and get these notes or slips, under orders to proceed to make necessary repairs at once, without waiting for any special order from the Mayor.

The proof further is that this practice had been followed after that Mayor had retired, and the Mayor came into office who was in office at the time of the accident, and that the police records show under date of' August 29, 1907, two days before the accident, “Wash-outs on 9th. Avenue between 27th. and 29th. streets. Rept. to Comr.” It was also proved that this was made by the desk officer, and that the abbreviation above quoted meant, “Reported to Street Commissioner,” and that the place specified was the place where the accident occurred; that the slip containing the entry was placed on the Street Commissioner’s hook in his office; that the Street Commissioner came into that office every morning between seven and eight o’clock, and took such slips as were upon the hook, and that the Street Commissioner was on duty during the entire month of August, 1907, and always got the slips.

It is not contended by appellant, at least it is not pointed out in the argument, how this evidence was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial any further than to say so, but the only point to be gleaned from the argument is, that the proof does not go far enough, and show that at the time of the accident, any one had been instructed by resolution or ordinance to report defects, make entries in the book, or on slips and hang the slip on the hook; and that it did not appear from the evidence by a like resolution or ordinance that the Street Commissioner had been instructed to collect the slips. In short, that it is not shown it was the legal duty of anybody to do anything so far as streets and sidewalks are concerned. The Street Commissioner, Hanson’s testimony, was given on a former trial, and read at this trial, said Hanson having died before the second trial. He testified as to directions given him by the Mayor who succeeded the Mayor under whom the custom is claimed to have originated, and who was the Mayor at the time of the accident, and that those directions were in substance like the instructions under the former Mayor. He also testified to the slips, and to his getting them, and to Ms being on duty all of the month of August, 1907, so that the city must have had actual notice through the officer presumably actually charged with the duties of looMng after the streets and sidewalks.

If the Street Commissioner had notice acquired in any way it amounted to notice to the city. Under the authority of City of Joliet v. Looney, 159 Ill. 471, this was sufficient notice and the evidence in the record in the relation thereto was, in the main, competent and admissible, at least we see no reversible error in its admission.

The next point made in the argument is that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. This was a question for the jury. There was proof that appellee fell into a hole in the sidewalk, and that she was hurt thereby; that she was attended by physicians for treatment for the injuries resulting from the accident; that she had to be sent to the hospital, where an operation was performed, by which a part of the shin bone was removed; that she incurred quite a large expense for medical and surgical attendance. This is in no way rebutted or denied. If the city was chargeable with notice of the defect in the sidewalk that caused the injury when appellee fell, and had reasonable time after getting such notice to repair the defect, and did not, then as a matter of law, under the evidence, it was liable. We hold the city was liable.

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Related

City of Joliet v. Conway
10 N.E. 223 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1887)
City of Joliet v. Looney
42 N.E. 854 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 Ill. App. 101, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-v-city-of-moline-illappct-1912.