Humason v. Michigan Central Railroad

102 N.E. 793, 259 Ill. 462
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 793 (Humason v. Michigan Central Railroad) 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
Humason v. Michigan Central Railroad, 102 N.E. 793, 259 Ill. 462 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action in the circuit court of Cook county against the Michigan Central Railroad Company and the Illinois Central Railroad Company to recover damages for the death of Edwin A. Humason, an employee of the latter company. At the close of appellee’s case the jury, under an instruction from the court, found the Illinois Central Railroad Company not guilty. The question of appellant’s negligence was submitted to the jury and a verdict returned against the Michigan Central Railroad Company. Judgment being entered on that verdict an appeal was taken to the Appellate Court, where the judgment was affirmed. A certificate of importance being granted, the case has been brought here for further consideration.

The declaration originally contained six counts. After' the verdict finding the Illinois Central Railroad Company not guilty, the first, second, third and fifth counts were withdrawn upon motion of appellee’s counsel and the case against appellant submitted to the jury upon the fourth and sixth counts, only.

Humason met his death about 5 :4o o’clock in the afternoon of November 8, 1909, near Thirteenth street, on certain elevated tracks just south of the Twelfth street passenger station of the Illinois Central Railroad .Company in Chicago.- He was assistant station master for the Illinois Central Railroad Company, having been about eight years in that capacity and an employee of the company in various capacities for several years before that. His office was at the north end of said passenger station. Beginning at a point about opposite said office and east of it, an inclined elevation led south'to the tracks of the St. Charles Air Line, having on it two sets of railroad tracks., the east tracks being for north-bound and the west tracks for south-bound traffic. At Thirteenth street the incline reached a height of nine or ten feet, and a flight of wooden steps had been built on each side by the Illinois Central Railroad Company for the use of its employees in crossing the elevation to go from one part of the yards to another. There- was no walk of. any kind across the two sets of tracks, connecting the two stairways. From this point the elevated tracks continued south, gradually rising, to Sixteenth street. Humason, as assistant station master, had charge of making up trains on the Illinois Central, his work being done mostly on the east side of the elevated tracks. From morning to night he was working around numerous tracks in the yards and had been doing so for years. In going from his office to the yards to supervise the making up of trains he could cross the elevation at this point or cross at grade at the north end of the station and walk down. He could also walk under the elevated tracks at Fifteenth-street, two-blocks south of these stairways. At about five o’clock on the day of the accident deceased was in the yards at Sixteenth street, performing his usual duties in making up trains. Two Michigan Central locomotives left that company’s round-house at Sixteenth street and Indiana avenue at 5 :io P. M. on that day bound for South Water street, to take out a freight train. This route from the round-house to South Water street was over the St. Charles Air Line to the elevated tracks in question, thence by those tracks north over the crossing where the deceased was, killed. The locomotives were running backward at the rate of about seven or eight miles an hour,—“drifting down” the incline, as one of the witnesses put it, without the use of steam. The only witness who saw them before they reached the place of the accident stated that he saw no light of any kind upon the engines and heard no whistle blown. No witness testified as to whether a bell was rung or a lookout kept. The testimony shows that about 5 :3o P. M. they were standing a little distance north of the elevated crossing at Thirteenth street, and the body of the deceased was lying a short distance south of them. His hat was found on the ground near the foot of the elevation, about fifteen feet from said stairs. Some of his clothing was found thirty-five feet north of the hat, on the east rail of the north-bound elevated tracks, and his body, not yet cold, was about seventy-five feet north of the clothing. Strips of clothing were found in the foremost driving wheel of the north engine. The two engineers at that time were on the ground beside the body and a short time thereafter got upon their engines and went north. These engineers did not testify, although they appear to have been still in the employ of appellant. No evidence was offered by appellant.

Appellant insists that neither the fourth nor sixth count of the declaration stated a cause of action. The sixth count alleged, in substance, that appellant and the Illinois Central Railroad Company were jointly using the two elevated tracks; that the Illinois Central Railroad Company had provided for the deceased a certain place to cross the said elevated tracks, which was then and there known to the said appellant company or in the exercise of ordinary care should have been known; that the appellant. company carelessly and negligently propelled a certain locomotive engine upon and along said tracks and over said place so provided by said Illinois Central Railroad Company for Humason to cross said tracks without giving reasonable and necessary warning of the approach thereof, by reason whereof deceased, while in the exercise of reasonable care for his own safety, was struck and killed. Counsel for appellant argue that this count is faulty in several respects, among other things in not alleging that the appellant company knew, or had reason to believe, deceased would be crossing the tracks at any particular time, or knew, or should have known, that his duties required him to cross at any particular time, or that the Illinois Central had a right to impose upon appellant the duty to observe any particular place provided-by the Illinois Central Railroad Company for its employees to cross the tracks, and also in not alleging facts- from which such a right could be inferred. Even if it be conceded, for the sake of the argument, that this count was defective in' any of the particulars urged, viewed in the most favorable light for the appellant’s contentions, the defects and omissions, being of such a nature that they could duly be available on demurrer, are cured by the verdict and cannot be raised after verdict, for the issues joined on the trial necessarily required proof of the facts defectively presented, without which proof it cannot be presumed that the court would have directed or the jury would have given the verdict. (Sargent Co. v. Baublis, 215 Ill. 428; Brunhild v. Union Traction Co. 239 id. 621; Grace & Hyde Co. v. Sanborn, 225 id. 138.) This count being sufficient to- sustain the verdict, it is unnecessary to consider the sufficiency of the fourth count. Scott v. Parlin & Orendorff Co. 245 Ill. 460.

At the close of appellee’s case, and again after counsel had withdrawn the first, second, third and fifth counts of the declaration, appellant made a motion for a ■ directed verdict. It is urged that the evidence' fails to show that the deceased met his death by means of the engine of appellant; that he could not have been in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety at the time of the accident, and that there was no evidence in the record showing negligence on the part of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 793, 259 Ill. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humason-v-michigan-central-railroad-ill-1913.