Illinois Central Railroad v. Latimer

21 N.E. 7, 128 Ill. 163
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 7 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Latimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court 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. Latimer, 21 N.E. 7, 128 Ill. 163 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action of trespass, brought in the Circuit Court of DeWitt County, on June 28, 1887, by the appellee, a girl six years old, who sues by her mother and next friend, against the appellant Company, to recover damages for the removal of appellee, at a place other than a regular station, from a passenger train of cars operated by appellant between Wapella and Clinton in said county, while the appellee was riding thereon as a passenger. The verdict and judgment in the Circuit Court were in favor of the plaintiff, and such judgment, having been affirmed by the Appellate Court, is brought here by appeal from the latter "court. All the questions of fact are settled by the judgment of the Appellate Court.

First, it is assigned as error, that the Circuit Court refused to dismiss the suit, upon motion of defendant below, because it was brought by a next friend without previous authority or appointment by the court, and without filing a bond for costs before or at the time the suit was commenced. "When the motion to dismiss was overruled, a cross-motion by the plaintiff below for leave to file a bond for costs was allowed, and the plaintiff, in obedience to a rule by the court, filed the bond on the same day. The error is not well assigned.

Section 18 of chapter 64 of the Eevised Statutes, being “An Act in regard to guardians and wards,” (Starr & Cur. Stat. page 1242) contains a proviso to the effect “that any suit may be commenced and prosecuted by any minor by his next friend, without any previous authority or appointment by the court, on such next friend entering into bond for costs, and filing the same in the court in which such suit is instituted.” The proviso must be construed in connection with the part of the section, which precedes it. The preceding portion of the section directs, that “nothing contained in this act shall impair or affect the power of any court * * * to appoint or allow any person as next friend for a minor to commence, prosecute or defend any suit in his behalf.” The power is here conferred to appoint a next friend to “prosecute” the suit, as well as to “commence” it. The prosecution is designated as being distinct from the commencement of the suit. It follows that a next friend might be appointed to prosecute after the suit was commenced. This must be kept in mind in determining the meaning of the language used in the proviso. The words of the latter must be taken to mean, that without previous authority to “prosecute, ” as well as in the absence of previous authority to “commence,” the suit may be “prosecuted” as well as “commenced” by filing a bond for costs. On entering into the bond and filing it in court at any time during the prosecution of the suit when the court shall so order, the suit may proceed. The filing of the bond is a substitute for the previous appointment, whether it be an appointment to prosecute, or to commence the suit. The design of the statute in conferring upon the court the power to appoint a next friend was to insure the conduct of the suit by a responsible person. This end can be gained by the filing of a good bond for costs, whether it be done at the beginning of the suit, or after the suit has been begun. We do not agree with counsel in the view advanced by them, that the filing of the bond is a “pre-requisite and jurisdictional necessity.” (Baker v. Palmer, 83 Ill. 568.)

Second, it is assigned for error that certain questions, asked of some of the witnesses, were improper, and that certain testimony, which was admitted, should have been excluded. We can not stop to notice all of the objections, made by counsel for defendant upon the trial below. Many of these objections are extremely technical, but they arrange themselves mainly under two general heads. In the first place, objection is made to testimony, introduced by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing, that an extra train was following the train, from which plaintiff was ejected, and was expected to reach and, as matter of fact, did reach the point, at which she was put off, in about fifteen or twenty minutes after her removal. The evidence tends to show, that the appellee was placed upon the train by her uncle, in the afternoon of June 14,1887, at Wapella, for the purpose of being carried from Wapella to her home in Clinton, distant about four and a half miles; that the conductor found her in one of the cars with a paper hatbox in her hands, and asked for her fare, which amounted to about seven cents; that the child had no money with which to pay her fare; that the conductor then stopped the train at a point within the corporate limits of Wapella, but about a half of a mile south of the passenger depot, and there put the little girl off with her box; that she ran back towards the depot, crying as she went, and being obliged to pass a cattle guard and culvert on her way.

Counsel for appellant admit that railroad companies are not allowed to put off even adult passengers “at out-of-the-way places and at a distance from possible aid, food and shelter.’5 They claimed on the trial below, and are claiming here, that the conductor had as much right to put appellee off the train at any point within the corporate limits, as at the platform of the depot. The character and location of the place, where the removal took place, and all the circumstances attending the act of removal, were matters about which both sides introduced testimony. The fact, that in a few moments a train was ex-peeted to arrive at the place of removal, was a circumstance proper to be considered by the jury, in connection with all the other facts in the case, as bearing upon the question whether it was proper or improper for the conductor to make the removal at that particular point.

In the next place, the plaintiff endeavored to show that she was suffering from functional disease of the heart, produced by the fright she suffered when ejected from the train. Upon this branch of the case physicians were placed upon the stand as expert witnesses. Appellant objects, that certain questions, addressed to the medical witnesses, required them to express their opinions upon the evidence, and that they were thereby made to usurp the function of the jury in deciding whether or not the affection of the heart was produced by the act of ejection from the train. In other words, it is claimed, that the questions objected to are such as were condemned by this court in C. & A. R. R. Co. v. S. & N. W. R. R. Co. 67 Ill. 142, and Hoener v. Koch, 84 id. 408. In the first case, a witness was asked, what would be the damages to the defendant, if certain work was done ? In the second, a witness was asked, whether, taking the facts as he understood them, he saw any evidence of malpractice?

No such interrogatories, as those commented upon in the cases cited, were addressed to the witnesses in the ease at bar. The physicians, who were examined on the trial below, were asked whether fright would produce the heart trouble, with which appellee was said to be afflicted. It was proper for them to give their professional opinion upon this subject.

Third, the giving and refusal of instructions are objected to mainly upon two grounds. The first relates to the definition of “regular station.” Section 94 of chapter 114 of the Eevised Statutes (Starr & Cur. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 7, 128 Ill. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-latimer-ill-1889.