Illinois Central Railroad v. Kerr

125 Ill. App. 363, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 247
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1906
DocketGen. No. 4,611
StatusPublished

This text of 125 Ill. App. 363 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Kerr) 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. Kerr, 125 Ill. App. 363, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 247 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

3Ir. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Some five years before the death of 3frs. Kellie Kerr, an operation was performed upon her, by which the abdominal region was laid open in front, from the navel downward. At that or some later time, her left ovary was removed. She was in ill health thereafter, her chief trouble being in the region of the bowels. From January 19 to 3Iareh 22, 1904, she was under treatment by Dr. Stealy, of Freeport, who found her complaining of pain in the lower left abdomen, with stomach trouble. He found symptoms which he attributed to adhesions, due to previous trouble in the abdomen. This was accompanied by constipation. He used massage, electricity and internal medicine; this treatment being designed to produce absorption of the adhesions. On September 9th, she came to Dr. Stealy again, and was very much worse in every respect. She had vomiting at times, and much gas in the bowels, with pain and distention. He-found a mass in her left side as large as his two fists. The symptoms of adhesion had increased so much as to give very marked evidence of obstruction of the bowels, though not of complete strangulation. Dr. Stealy advised a surgical operation. She went home to consult her husband, and did. not return to Dr. Stealy. About the middle of September, she-went to the sanitarium of Dr. White at Freeport. ITe found distress in the bowels, and concluded there were chronic adhesions along the line where the abdomen had been opened and closed again at her former operation. He found a distention of the colon, and concluded that part of the intestines adhered to the front wall of the abdomen. The patient was constipated. He used injections, salt packs, and massage of the abdomen, the purpose of the massage being to overcome the adhesions. She had great tenderness all over the-abdomen. She remained at the sanitarium under this treatment some six or seven weeks, and then went to her home, and came to the sanitarium occasionally for treatment. On the morning of Tuesday, Kovember 22, 190-4, she was at the-sanitarium, and was examined by Dr. White. The patient was laid upon a table and Dr. White manipulated the abdomen bi-manually, that is, externally and through the vagina, and examined the womb and remaining ovary. This was a special examination, for the purpose of determining whether it would be worth while to continue the massage-treatment, and also to make a record of her condition. He found the.distress through the bowels relieved, and concluded that the treatment she had received was releasing the adhesions, and that her general condition was improved. He did not discover anything that morning of an acute nature,, nor any symptoms of a stoppage of the bowels. He testified he did not get time to treat her that morning, as she had to go home on the train.

Wadham, the home of Mrs. Kerr, is about seventeen miles west of Freeport on the Illinois Central Railroad. She left Freeport for home that morning about half past eleven on a ■westbound passenger train, which was somewhat late. She had a commutation ticket, good between Wadham and Free-port, which the conductor punched. The first station west of Wadham was Fora and the next Warren. In the seat with her was Mr. Deam of Warren, with whom she was ae- . quainted. Wadham and Fora were flag stations where that train stopped only on signal. The conductor failed to give the signal to stop at Wadham, and the train went through that village at its usual speed of from 35 to 50 miles per hour. When she exclaimed that she was being carried by her station, either Deam or the brakunan went forward and notified the conductor. The conductor went back and talked to Mrs. Kerr. Deam testified that there was a car between the ladies’ car in which Mrs. Kerr was riding and the smoker in which the conductor was found, and that as they went back Mrs. Kerr had left the car in which she had been riding and had come forward into the next car, and was met by the conductor there; but the clear preponderance of the evidence is that there was no such car in the train; that there was but one car between the diner and the smoker, and that Mrs. Kerr was riding in that car, and was found by the conductor in that car. She talked with the conductor, and stood in the aisle leaning against the seat. lie expressed his regret, and told her the only thing that he could do was to buy her a ticket and send her back on the first train, and that his train did not stop at Fora, and she had better go on to Warren, and that Warren was a larger town and a nicer place for her to stay in till the train came than Fora. She replied that she had relatives both at Fora and at Warren, but she preferred to get off at Fora if he would stop the train, and he told her he would do so. During this conversation, she told the conductor she would make him trouble for carrying her by. The conductor stopped the train at Fora, and she got off there, and he paid the agent for a return ticket for her, and it was delivered to her.. The waiting room was warm. She went in and sat down. The train left, and the station agent started for his dinner at four minutes after noon. • When he returned at one o’clock, she was gone. She went to a store and telephoned or caused a telephone message to he sent to her sister, Miss Mahon, who lived with her at Wadham, to come after her. Miss Mahon drove to Hora with a horse and covered buggy and at 1:30 p. m. found her at a store in Hora, and took her home, a distance of four miles. Where Mrs. Kerr was or what happened to her from till 1:30 p. m. is not otherwise disclosed.

Mrs. Kerr complained all the way home from Hora to Wadham of pain across the bowels. When she reached home she was suffering a great deal, and gradually grew worse. Hext morning Dr. Kreider was called. He found her pulse feeble, features shrunken, extremities cold, and she had serious nausea. He used hot applications and injections, and made other efforts to relieve her, and came several times that day. Dr White of Freeport came early Thursday morning. He found the abdomen distended and enlarged, and the patient vomiting every few minutes, and vomiting matter, from the smaller intestines. She had spasms with intense suffering. Her lower bowels were completely paralyzed. There was no reaction from the intestinal canal. She was attended by the local physician several times that day. Early next morning she was taken to Freeport on a train, and taken to a hospital. She had had no passage of the bowels since her sister met her Tuesday at Hora. Dr. White and others performed an operation, opening the abdominal tract. A pint or more of fluid came forth, indicating peritonitis. They opened the intestines and let out the gas. They found that the intestines adhered to the line of the cut made at the operation five years-before. Deeper in the abdomen they found an adhesive band across the pelvis. The intestines had slipped behind this band and twisted, producing strangulation or a complete stoppage. From nine to twelve inches of the intestines were practically gangrened. They had much difficulty in keeping the patient alive during the operation. After the adhesive-band had been broken, the bowels resumed their usual functions. The attending physicians cleansed the abdomen, made an artificial opening from the exterior of the-body into the intestine to let out gas and putrid material, and closed the rest of the opening, taking such precautions as they could for the benefit of the patient. She died that afternoon. The immediate cause of her death was the strangulation of the intestine, and the collapse and peritonitis attending the strangulation.

William O. Kerr was the husband of Kellie Kerr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Ill. App. 363, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-kerr-illappct-1906.