Illinois Central Railroad v. Larson

42 Ill. App. 264, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 262
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ill. App. 264 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Larson) 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. Larson, 42 Ill. App. 264, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 262 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Lacey, P. J.

This was an action in tbe case by appellee, who sues as the next friend of James A. Larson, a minor, for injuries received by him by the running away of his team while attempting to cross tbe railroad track of appellant at 67th street in the city of Chicago, Illinois, recovery being 82,500. The gist of the action was the alleged negligence on part of appellant’s servants, the conductor and brakeman of its train of cars with an engine attached, in backing the ear negl i-gently without notice to the injured party, James A. Larson, while he, with a wagon loaded with slag, to which was attached a team of horses, was attempting to cross the railroad track at the crossing just behind the train, having just passed about half way over the crossing and standing still. The horses’ heads had just gone over the track and were in the act of crossing behind the car, when one of the servants of the a¡)pollan t ordered him to stop, which he did, and turned his horses’ heads off the track to the north, while the train was headed south and very close, when the car backed and ran the engine close by the horses’ heads, frightening them so that they became unmanageable and thereupon they ran away, by reason of which Larson was thrown out of the wagon and injured severely. His thigh bone was fractured and his head so severely injured that there was concussion of the brain, from which he has never recovered, so that he can not give any account of the accident, and while his memory was good before the accident, it is entirely defective since. Wells H. Fenton, the conductor and collector of the train, gives the following account of the accident: The train in question was suburban and ran no farther south than this station at 67th street, and they had to back up from the point where it stopped and go to the cemetery. At the time it started back, the conductor was nearly to the end of the back coach on the west side of the train between the train and the station, and when he gave the signal to back up he proceeded to go to the back end of the train where the brakeman was. As the conductor gave the signal, the engineer or fireman rang the bell, the same time the brakeman ran around to the platform. As he got there the train had just got under motion, and as it started he called to young Larson to stop, and at the same time gave the signal to the conductor or the engineer to stop, and the conductor repeated it to the engineer, who applied the brakes and stopped after the train had moved about two-thirds the length of the passenger car. Before the train had started from where it stopped to back up, it had not entirely cleared the crossing. The conductor was not aware of the cause of the signal to stop when it was given. When he got behind the train, young Larson, the teamster, and the horses, were pretty close to the side of the car, with the horses’ heads turned toward the north. When Fenton saw that the train cleared the team, he again proceeded to back the train as he had first started to do. After the second stop the bell was rung and the train backed up, and after it had passed the team straightened around with their heads to the west‘into the road and started west over the crossing. From this point was where the team started to run away, and, after running about 100 feet, young Larson, who was sitting on the front end of the wagon, lost his balance and was thrown out and injured as before stated. The brakeman’s name was Kapp, and he it was who called to young Larson to stop at the time he was about to start across the track with the team. The horses’ heads were about three feet from the car when the second order to back was given. The conductor could have pulled up the. train and let the team pass if he had so desired. The train backed by the team not faster than you could walk, not over four miles an hour. When young Larson was crossing, the Michigan train was close behind him to the east on one of the six railroad tracks at the crossing, the boy having driven his team just ahead of it. As testified to by Lillie, who was hauling another load of slag for the same party employing young Larson, and was just behind him and saw the occurrence, when the locomotive came back past the horses’ heads, close to them, the steam was coming out of the engine and they were jumping and seared, and when the train passed the horses started at once and ran away. The conductor said to Larson, “ D——n you, you can’t go by here, we are going to back.” This witness saw Larson hanging on to the lines for fifty or sixty feet, but could not see him after that. The evidence tended to show that young Larson was a capable boy to handle a team, about fifteen years old, and was large and strong of his age, and that the horses were reasonably gentle. It appears from another eye witness, that when the train backed past the horses, they were so close to the car, that the car coming close to them made them shy off, as horses will do when anything comes close to them, and when the engine got along near the horses, they reared up and stood on their hind feet while the engine was passing them, and after it passed broke into a ron. There was room for the team to pass before the train commenced to back the first time. The evidence also tended to show that the appellant’s train had stopped, and that one team in the same company had passed, and that Larson’s team was about to. pass and was seen by the servants of the appellant, or should have been with ordinary care, as it was approaching the crossing, and that after this the train was negligently backed north, past and in front of the horses’ heads of Larson.

It is insisted that the evidence fails to support the verdict in two particulars: First, that Larson did not use reasonable care in approaching the appellant’s railroad track, and second, it was not sufficiently shown that appellant’s servants were negligent in the time and manner of backing down the train in front of the horses. It seems to us that the verdict is sustained in both those particulars. We see no good reason to charge Larson, the driver of the team, with negligence. He saw that the train of appellant had passed the crossing, and there was no direct evidence, and very little circumstantial, showing that he knew that this particular train was in the habit of backing down onto the “ Y” at that point, or that it would do so without giving notice. The other point of appellant’s negligence, we think, was fairly left to the jury, and its finding in that respect was fully warranted. At the time the appellant’s train backed down and came to a stop, and found the horses’ heads so near the train, and Larson and his team in the condition described, there were two courses open to the servants of the appellant; the one to back down north past the horses, or to draw up the train south, and let the team pass over the crossing to the west before attempting to back the train. This would only have taken a short time, and under the circumstances would have been a much safer course as regarded the appellee. The running the four cars of' which the train consisted, together with the engine, emitting steam and smoke and sissing from the steam, past the horses’ heads, under the circumstances, seems to us an act of gross negligence, when it was open to them to start the cars ahead, and get entirely out of the way of the horses in about half or two-thirds the length of one of the cars, and the jury were fully warranted in so finding. Besides, there was much evi-. deuce tending to show that appellant’s servants saw the team approaching and in close proximity to the crossing, and restrained from going back by the Michigan Southern train behind it on an adjoining track before any signal was given to back the appellant’s train.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 264, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-larson-illappct-1891.