Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Warriner

132 Ill. App. 301, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 128
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 1907
DocketGen. No. 4,775
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 Ill. App. 301 (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Warriner) 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 Railroad Co. v. Warriner, 132 Ill. App. 301, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 128 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On November 3, 1904, a little boy about one year and eight months old, was struck by the engine of a south-bound passenger train of the Illinois Central. Bailroad at the crossing of Wilson street in the Village of Peotone, and died from the injuries then received. His administrator brought this suit to recover damages for the benefit of the next of kin. By the action of the plaintiff and by the rulings of the court before the case went to the jury, the declaration was reduced to the second and fifth counts, each of which charged that the railroad company ran the train at a speed which violated an ordinance of the village restricting the speed of trains within the corporate limits to ten miles per hour, and that said child was struck and killed by reason of such unlawful speed of the train. The general issue was pleaded, and upon a trial the administrator had a verdict and a judgment for $2,500 from which the railroad company appeals. Appellant contends that the court erred in admitting in evidence the ordinancethat the proof did not warrant a verdict that the parents of the child were in the exercise of due care for its safety, and for that reason did not warrant a verdict for appellee; and that the court erred in giving the first, second and third instructions requested by appellee.

Section 4 of article 5 of the general act for the incorporation of cities and villages provides that when ordinances are printed in book or pamphlet form, purporting to be published by authority of the board of trustees or the city council, they need not be otherwise published; and such book or pamphlet shall be received as evidence of the passage and legal publication of such ordinances, as of the dates mentioned in such book or pamphlet, without further proof. Appellee offered in evidence, from a printed pamphlet, a torn title page, the first page, the last page, and section 1 of ordinance 12 therein. The torn title page revealed nothing except that it related to some village in Will county, Illinois. The first page, which was also a title page, contained these words in large letters: “Revised Ordinances of the Village of Peotone, Illinois.” The last page was a printed copy of a certificate by the president of the board of trustees and by the clerk of the village of Peotone, purporting to certify “that the foregoing are true and authentic copies of the ordinances of the village of Peotone, denominated ‘the Revised Ordinances of the Village of Peotone, Will county, Illinois,’ deposited in the office of the clerk of said village, and that the same were duly arranged, printed and published by the authority of the president and board of trustees of said village, and that the foregoing ordinances were respectively duly passed and approved on the 19th day of August, A. D. 1890.” Beneath this was an attestation clause purporting to have affixed thereto the corporate seal of said village, and dated August 20, 1890, and signed by the village clerk, underneath which were the words “approved August 20, 1890,” signed by the president, both signatures and the seal being printed. ' The parts so offered were admitted over the objection of appellant. After appellee had closed his proofs appellant introduced in evidence the last paragraph of said ordinance No. 12, which contained the certificate of the village clerk that said ordinance was passed August 19, underneath which was the approval by. the president dated August 20, 1890. Appellant then moved to exclude section 1 of said ordinance No. 12. This was denied and appellant excepted. The usual manner of showing that such a pamphlet or book is published by authority of the village board or city council is by a statement to that effect on the title page; and words on such title page alleging that the pamphlet or book is published by such authority fills the measure of proof required by the statute above cited, and also of a like enactment as to the manner of proving statutes of other states. Eagan v. Connelly, 107 Ill. 458; McCraney v. Glos, 222 Ill. 628; C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Wilson, 225 Ill. 50. Must such publication by authority be shown on the title page? The pamphlet offered in Village of Wapella v. Davis, 39 Ill. App. 592, did not contain that statement on the title page, but such publication by authority appeared from a section of the ordinances when considered in connection with the printed certificate of the clerk at the end. It was held that it was sufficient if it appeared from any part of the pamphlet that it purported to be published by the proper authority. In McGregor v. Village of Lovington, 48 Ill. App. 202, the proof that the pamphlet of ordinances there introduced was published by authority of the village trustees was contained in the printed certificate, of the clerk. It was there said: “It is sufficient if the book, on its title page or by printed .certificate of the clerk, or otherwise on its face, purports to have been published by the authority of the trustees.” We think these decisions rest upon sound principles. It follows that appellee made all the proof the statute requires to admit said section 1 of brdinance No. 12 in evidence. The proof above mentioned, introduced by appellant, showed that while the clerk’s printed certificate recited that said ordinances were passed and approved August 19,1890, the statement at the foot of said ordinance No. 12 said it was passed August 19, but approved August 20,1890. This did not destroy this pamphlet as competent evidence of the passage, approval and legal publication of this ordinance. As said in C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Wilson, supra, it “did not disprove'the passage of the ordinance, but, at most, merely tended to show that the records of the Village board were incorrectly or carelessly kept.”' It is entirely immaterial to the rights of the parties here whether that ordinance was approved August 19 or August 20, 1890. The court did not err in admitting the ordinance and in refusing to exclude it.

The ordinance restricted appellant to. a speed of ten miles per hour. Appellee’s witnesses showed that the train in question was running at a speed of from twenty to forty miles per hour. Appellant’s witnesses, the train men, fixed it at from nine to twelve miles per hour. Appellee outnumbered appellant in witnesses upon this subject, and no witness for appellant would testify that the speed did not exceed ten miles per hour, except that the engineer thought that at the time the engine struck the child (which he had seen when some distance away) he had reduced the speed below ten miles per hour. There was an automatic crossing bell east of the tracks on the north side of Wilson street. It was operated by electricity, and its circuit extended over one hundred and thirteen rods to the north, and the bell must begin to ring when the head of the south-bound train was that far north of Wilson street, but within the village limits. When the mother and Maud, a daughter, in the house, heard that bell ring, the mother exclaimed “Where is the baby,” and they looked in the sitting room and then went into the back yard and then ran to the front, and the mothér was next behind Mabel, another ' daughter, running towards the train when the child was struck. The father was east of that track and a short distance north of Wilson street on his way home when he saw the child, and be dropped what he had in his hands and started on the run for the crossing but the train reached the crossing before him. The end or corner of the pilot-beam struck the child on his head and knocked hi in into the ditch west of the track.

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132 Ill. App. 301, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-co-v-warriner-illappct-1907.