Illinois Central Railroad v. Keegan

112 Ill. App. 28, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 487
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 25, 1904
DocketGen. No. 11,117
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 Ill. App. 28 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Keegan) 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 v. Keegan, 112 Ill. App. 28, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 487 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was injured by falling on certain steps adjoining a station of appellant, up and down which persons had to pass in going to or leaving the station. She claims that her fall was occasioned by appellant’s negligence in failing to exercise proper care of the steps. The accident occurred January 26, 1901, about 1:15 o’clock p. m.

It is averred in the declaration, in substance, that the defendant permitted its steps, leading to its depot, to be and remain covered with snow and ice, and so slippery as to be dangerous, although defendant knew of said danger, and had reasonable time in which to have rendered said steps -safe, prior to the happening of the accident. By reason of the premises, the plaintiff, intending to become a passenger on one of defendant’s trains, and while necessarily passing over said steps, in the exercise of ordinary care, unavoidably slipped on said ice and snow there accumulated, and was thereby thrown with great force and violence to and upon the steps and ground.

Appellant pleaded the general issue. The jury found for appellee and assessed her damages at the sum of $3,000, for which- sum judgment was rendered.

Appellant’s right of wav in the city of Chicago lies north and south on the west shore of Lake Michigan. It has a depot about where Thirty-first street, which is an east and west street, would, if extended easterly, intersect the right cf way. The north and south street next west of the right of way is Lake Park avenue. West of the appellant’s right of way is a stone wall, and running down from the south, and parallel with the wall, and east of it, is a flight of stone steps. The steps are thus described by a witness, a civil engineer, who made measurements of them :

“ There are thirteen steps; .the tread of the widest one is fourteen and one-half inches, the narrowest one eleven and one-half inches; the risers average about six and one-half inches; that is the height from the tread of one to the tread of another. The total horizontal distance from the top of the steps to the bottom is thirteen feet ten inches, and the total depth from the top of the first step down to the bottom is about six feet nine inches., I made measurements of each step and they are almost exactly alike. The top one is the narrowest and it is eleven and one-half inches at the ends. There is practically no difference in "the risers. The width of the steps or the distance from the wall to the railing was nine feet six inches at the top, and eight feet six inches at the bottom. On the west or street side there is a stone wall, and on the east side an iron railing. It is a fence made of iron pickets about,an inch square and probably about five feet high.- The distance from the bottom of the steps to the ticket office is five feet eleven inches. The curb from the street to the sidewalk is six and one-half inches—that is from the asphalt street up to the curb; that is out on the street.”

On the east side of the stone steps there was an iron hand-rail extending from the top to the bottom of the steps. There was no canopy or covering over the steps, the city having refused to permit such. Persons going to the station in question to take appellant’s suburban trains, or leaving its trains at that station, had to pass over the stone steps, there being no other way to go to the station, or to return from it to Lake Park avenue. It was admitted by counsel for appellant that 600 persons passed over the steps daily, and Mrs. Vallo, appellant’s ticket agent at the station, testiñed that 500 persons, on an average, passed down the steps to take suburban trains every foi-enoon.

Henry J. Cox, a witness for plaintiff, testified, substantially, that he has charge of the United States Weather Bureau in Chicago, and keeps a record of all weather conditions, such as temperature, rainfall, snowfall, etc., and that he has the record of the condition of the weather in the city of Chicago on January 26, 1901. Snow on that day began some time before daybreak and ended thirty-seven minutes after two; there was three and one-tenth inches of snowfall; the highest temperature was thirty and the lowest, twenty-three; thirty-two Fahrenheit is the freezing point. On that day it was not warmer than freezing point. On the 25th of January, the day before, it was generally cloudy with some light snow flurry early in the morning, and began at nine o’clock in the morning and ended at 3:30. The temperature-was from twenty-five to thirteen. At no time that day was there temperature which would permit thawing. On'the 24th of January there were light snow flurries practically all day from 5:45 in the morning until five minutes after five in the afternoon. Just a trace of snow; partly cloudy; temperature from, thirty-six to thirteen. On that day the temperature permitted thawing. On the 26th the winds were fresh southerly and southwesterly. These observations were made at the Auditorium tower in Chicago, and the conditions would be practically the same at Thirty-first street. On the 24th of January there was a light flurry of snow, beginning at about 5:45 a. m. and continuing until 5:05 p. m. On the night of the 24-25th a flurry of snow began during the night and ended about 3:30 f. m. on the 26th. The snow began during the night before and fell continually during the daylight hours of January 26th until 2:37 p. m.

Other witnesses testified as to the weather, but there is no substantial conflict between their testimony and that of the witness Cox. The condition of the steps is described by the appellee’s witness substantially as follows:

William H. Sherwood: “ There was some ice- on the steps, I should judge from the sensation xvalking doxvn, and slush with it and snow. 1 should imagine there might have been from one and a half to two inches of ice and snow.”

Q. “ How do you know there was ice there ? ” “A. “ Merely by the feeling. It xvas somexvhat packed doxvn, more or less. Hob regular hard ice; not as hard as ice alone would be. I would describe it as slush.” On cross-examination this witness testified: “The weather was close to freezing, because there was both slush and some harder material under foot, ice or packed snow. The condition was the same in the street, on Lake Park avenue, 'and I have a dim impression that there was, at that time, on Lake Park avenue, from two to six inches of snow. There was a condition of slush generally on the street, slush and ice under it. I noticed places on the steps where it was packed down, apparently by footsteps or ice formed, I think both.” This witness was on his way to take a suburban train, and saw appellee at the foot of the steps immediately after her fall, and tried to help her toward the station.

John Hughes, a police officer, who went to the station with an ambulance, in company with White, another police officer, and the driver, Jones, to assist appellee and take her away, testified that he and White walked down the steps, and that they were very slippery; that there were snow and ice on them—might have been two or three inches—more in some places than others, as in some places it was a little lumpy; that there might have been an inch and a half of ice, with snow on top. On cross-examination this witness said : “ There was some slush and snow, from two to three inches, I should judge, in some places, and there was some ice under it.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. App. 28, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-keegan-illappct-1904.