Iddings v. Pennsylvania Railroad

256 Ill. App. 189, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 17
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 3, 1930
DocketGen. No. 8, 386
StatusPublished

This text of 256 Ill. App. 189 (Iddings v. Pennsylvania Railroad) 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
Iddings v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 256 Ill. App. 189, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 17 (Ill. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, Samuel Iddings, brought his action of trespass on the case against the appellant in the Logan county circuit court, to recover damages for the loss of 6 head of steers which were killed by one of appellant’s trains about 3% miles east of Atlanta on the nights of October 9 and 10, 1928. The cause was tried upon the single issue of the alleged failure on the part of appellant to erect and maintain statutory fences upon the right of way, by reason of which the cattle of appellee strayed upon the right of way of appellant and were there killed.

The cause is presented in this" court solely upon the assignment of error that the verdict is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. There was a verdict and judgment in the sum of $740 in favor of appellee ánd appellant has appealed. No questions as to the admission or exclusion of evidence are raised, and there are no criticisms made as to any instructions given or refused.

As to the situation and surroundings, appellant’s railroad runs in a southeasterly direction from Atlanta in Logan county to Waynesville, DeWitt county, a distance of about 6 miles. About 3 miles east of Atlanta it crosses a small stream known as Clear Creek and about five-eighths of a mile further in a southeasterly direction, passes under an overhead highway bridge on a public road running north and south. Between the bridge over Clear Creek and the overhead bridge, the tracks, for the greater part of the distance, run through a cut and upon a curve much like the letter S. Approaching Clear Creek bridge from Atlanta there is a downward grade, and, after passing.the creek, a rising grade. About 12 rods east of the Clear Creek bridge there is a farm crossing, with gates in both the north and south right of way fences. The gates are ordinary slide gates, made of 16 foot lumber 1 by 6 inches in size. The right of way fence on the south side of the right of way was constructed of posts, with woven wire and barbed wire attached; much brush, briars and weeds had grown up in, through and about the fence. A short distance east of the farm crossing, a fence, running north and south and connecting with the south right of way fence, separated the field into which the farm crossing entered on the south from a field, which, at the time of the accident, was a meadow from which the hay had been harvested. The field on the south into which the farm crossing entered was, at the time of the accident, in corn, part of which had been cut and shocked, in rows running from north to south. On the north side of the right of way at the farm crossing was a small timber pasture.

Appellee, the plaintiff, a farmer and stock raiser living in Atlanta, owned a farm of at least 80 acres lying about a quarter of a mile south of the right of way of the appellant company. The east part of his land was in pasture and adjoined the corn field above referred to and was separated from it by a barbed wire fence. The east line of appellee’s farm and the east line of the corn field were coincident. Clear Creek, running in a southeasterly direction after crossing under the right of way of appellant and through the cornfield, cut off about an acre and a half of the northeast corner of appellee’s pasture. •

On the day before the cattle were killed appellee had in his pasture 42 head of steers coming 2 years old. They were fed by him between 4 and 5 o’clock of that day. On the following morning appellee, upon going out from Atlanta to his farm to feed his steers, found that 6 were missing. These were the 6 killed upon appellant’s right of way.

The division fence between appellee’s pasture and the cornfield was the portion maintained by the owner of the cornfield, and was built of posts and barbed wire. This fence, crossing Clear Creek, was broken down at or near the creek on the night the cattle were killed and all, or a major portion, of the herd of cattle passed through this fence into the cornfield immediately south of appellant’s right of way. Working their way north through the cornfield for a quarter of a mile, they, or a part of them, came upon appellant’s right of way.

There was testimony on the part of appellant that at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon of October 9, 1928, the farm gates on the south and north sides of the right of way were closed, and that on the next morning, before 7 o’clock, appellant’s employees found a considerable portion of appellee’s herd upon the right of way, 6 of which had been killed, and both gates open. One of appellant’s witnesses testified that he observed cattle tracks coming into the south side of - the right of way through the open south farm gate. Appellee’s testimony is abstracted and in parts was as follows: ‘ ‘ Commencing with the fence on the south side of the right of way at Clear Creek, the fence runs up even with the north end of the bridge, then it turns in and runs under the bridge. There is 'no fence after it goes through under the bridge. Under the bridge there were two'wires at the time the cattle got in. There were two wires left there of that fence and there was a little lot of grass. I think the top wire was maybe a foot and a half high. They were barbed wires. I think at the north corner of the bridge the wires were a little higher maybe; but down at the south corner, about eight or ten feet there, it was about I suppose a foot and a half high. That was on the east side of Clear Creek.

“There was no fence or wire across Clear Creek on the south side of the railroad. I have never seen any fence there. I made an examination of the ground as to tracks of those steers that same evening after they were appraised. Starting from the bridge over Clear Creek, under the bridge there were tracks coming up, part of them on the north side of the bridge and part on the south side, and tracks ran up here to come on top of the track, and that first steer was killed about 100 feet of the bridge. In regard to those tracks, I started at the creek where the cattle come through this field and the cattle had scattered, some one way and some another and I couldn’t trace any of them very closely. The tracks were scattered so they didn’t make any trail, and I searched around a while and I went over to the creek and some of them had come along the bank of the creek there. They followed a trail along the creek down until they got to this bridge, and there was a kind of path there and there is two or three willows go across it, and there is a path running over and there is stuff running over that about knee high. Then when they got in there, under the bridge, the creek and ditch there on the other side stopped them and they crossed over this fence and they went under the bridge. The tracks went up there and I noticed along the bridge here, as far as the other bridge and along up to where the first steer was, but I couldn’t see any tracks coming back west. They were all going east, and the first steer was killed about 100' feet of the bridge, and that the.next one a little farther on.

“The condition of those tracks showed they were fresh; I should say they had been made about 12 hours. The fence from Clear Creek up to the farm gate is a woven wire and then some barbs above it in places and in places the barb is off. As to the number of places the barb wire was down, I noticed one place in particular about half way between]the bridge and the gate. When I looked at it I. saw there had been something crossing over, and I was trying to find out whether horses or cattle.

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Related

Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Harris
54 Ill. 528 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
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82 Ill. 76 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 Ill. App. 189, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iddings-v-pennsylvania-railroad-illappct-1930.