Illinois Central Rail Road v. Neer

31 Ill. App. 126, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 373
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 27, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 Ill. App. 126 (Illinois Central Rail Road v. Neer) 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
Illinois Central Rail Road v. Neer, 31 Ill. App. 126, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 373 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pleasants, J..

The declaration in this case sets forth that James A. Neer, a locomotive engineer in the employ of the defendant company, on the 22d of November, 1886, at 10:30 o’clock a. M.,Jeft Centraba with a train which was to be moved and run, not according to any time-table, but under special directions from the. train-master, and therefore called a wild train, composed of nineteen cars of cattle and three of dead freight, under an order to make the run to Champaign City in seven and a half hours; that he followed a regular freight train, which, by its time card, was to leave the same place at 4:25 A. m. and arrive at Savoy, the station next south of Champaign, at 1:20, and at Champaign at 1:40 p. m.; that this train was so delayed, by specific direction of the defendant, as to be at Sa\Toy at 6:05 p. m., and that although the defendant had a train-master and a train-dispatcher at Champaign, and a line of telegraph all the way, with operators at each end of the run and at intermediate stations, it negligently failed to advise the deceased of its delay and position; by reason whereof, without any want of due care on his part, he ran his train into it. at said station and was killed by the collision. The plea was not guilty.

A former judgment herein was reversed by this court because of an erroneous instruction given for the plaintiff. In the opinion filed the case was stated fully enough to show the error found, and the views of the court were also incidentally expressed upon some other points, then and now involved. 26 Ill. App. 356. The second trial was had, by agreement, upon the evidence in the bill of exceptions taken on the first, with some additional testimony which did not materially change its aspect; • and the result was a verdict for the plaintiff for $5,000, which the court below refused to set aside. From the judgment entered thereon this appeal was taken.

It seems that the instructions given on this trial were prepared by the court. Counsel has criticised them with somewhat unusual severity. We think their faults are mostly verbal, but do not propose to consider them particularly, because, whatever view may be taken of them, the case, in our opinion, is in condition to be decided upon the merits as shown by the evidence. The questions involved are those of due care or culpable negligence on the one side and the other, and the evidential facts are undisputed. Those averred in the declaration are admitted, and others are shown as follows:

Between Centraba and Champaign City, a distance of one hundred and twenty-three miles, there were twenty-seven stations of all classes, nine railroad crossings on grade, four places for taking water, and one for coal. Deceased had been employed on that run for twenty years. He had pulled this wild train thirty times, making the run once in six hours and thirty-five minutes, seven times in seven hours and thirty minutes to eight hours, and five times in eight to eight hours and thirty minutes—his longest time being ten hours and fifteen minutes, and his average eight hours and thirty-four minutes. On the day of the accident he was delayed by stops and Blowings nearly two and a half hours. He had also pulled the regular (New Orleans way freight), which was known as No. 22, on sixty runs, of which he made only six in card time, and was late on the others from one to seven hours. When it was late at Champaign it was generally late out of Centraba, the variation in time from Centraba being mainly due to the fact that it was sometimes a “through” and sometimes a “way” freight from that point, its character depending on the load it carried. It had been passed by the wild only twice before this accident, and on neither of those occasions was the deceased on either. On the day in question, its conductor received at Effingham, fifty-three miles north of Centraba, an order from the train-master to “pick up all the loads he could find and the engine was able to haul.” Deceased was well aware of its liability to such delays, and of the irregularities in the time of its arrival and the length of its stops at the various stations on the run. On that day he was advised by the register at Effingham that it had left that station at 10:25, being an hour and three quarters behind its card time. There was no registering station between that and Champaign, and though it does not appear whether he did or did not, after leaving there, get any information as to its whereabouts until just before the collision, it is certain that he received none from the train-master.

The last report of these trains to that officer before the collision was that the regular left Tolono, the station next south of Savoy, and the wild left Hayes, the second station south of Tolona, at the same time. According to its card, the regular was due at Hayes at 12:32 and at Tolono at 1:04, so that it was thirty-two minutes ahead of the wild on its own prescribed run of one hour and eight minutes from Hayes to Champaign ; and so, from that report, the train-master may have had no apprehension of its being overtaken. Savoy was a flag station for passenger trains, having one side track, with a switch at each end. Regular local freights usually stopped there. Through freights, having no work there, did not unless flagged. Wild and other trains often passed it at full speed. Its distance from Tolono was a little over five miles. Between them the track was straight, slightly descending to the north, and free from all obstructions to the view. The day of the accident was rainy and at times foggy, requiring frequent attention from the deceased to keep his cab window clear. His fireman observed that he repeatedly wiped it, but whether between those stations he did not notice or recollect. He ran there at the rate of about twenty-five miles to the hour.

The regular stood on the main track at Savoy. It was dark and still raining, though not hard, and the fog had raised. Red lanterns with lard oil lamps—all in good condition, with clear globes and burning well—were hanging from the sides and from the rail at the rear end of the caboose. Such lights are as visible in the dark as in the dusk, and can be seen at a distance of half a mile or more. The conductor saw the headlight of the wild at about that distance, his attention being first attracted by the noise of the coming train. His brake- • man immediately started back with a red lantern to arrest it if possible, and ran four or five hundred feet before his signal was answered and the whistle sounded for brakes; but the train was then within twenty-five car lengths of the station and the collision was inevitable. Another freight train, which the wild passed at Tolono, followed it in a few minutes, and its engineer had no difficulty in seeing the lights at Savoy and stopping his train before reaching it, although he also was running at the rate of twenty-five miles per hour.

On behalf of appellee, it is contended that the company, having imperatively ordered the wild to make the run in seven and a half hours, and by a later order to the regular caused its unusual delay, virtually gave to both trains the right, in the absence of notice, to occupy the same point on the track at the same time, and knowing that freight and wild trains often passed Savoy without slowing, was, by its means of knowledge, in duty bound to know the danger of the situation there, and by proper notice and directions to guard against it; and that its employes on the wild train, who were dutifully endeavoring to execute a specific and imperative order, were especially entitled to such protection.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ill. App. 126, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-rail-road-v-neer-illappct-1889.