Illinois Central Railroad v. Meyer

65 Ill. App. 531, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1105
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Ill. App. 531 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Meyer) 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. Meyer, 65 Ill. App. 531, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1105 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Me. Presiding Justice Lacbt

delivered the opinion of THE CoUET.

This was a suit in an action on the case by appellee against appellant to recover for damages arising from an injury receiver by the latter by reason of the train, on which he was fireman, colliding with another train running in the opposite direction on appellant’s road, causing appellee, to save himself, to jump from his engine and injure himself. His left foot and leg were run over by the cars and crushed so that amputation became necessary. The accident occurred at or near the station of Lead Switch, in Jo Daviess County, Illinois. The first count in the declaration, and the only one on which appellee claims a right of recovery, and the only one which there is any evidence to support, seeks to recover on the theory and charge that the conductor of the train, George McDuff, was “the superior servant,” in charge of the appellee as fireman and of the running of the train, and had entire control and management of it; in fact, that he was representing appellant as vice-principal in the running of the train and that the accident ivas due to his negligence in not causing the train which he was running, and on which appellee was fireman, to stop and not to run past Lead Switch station, where he was ordered by the train dispatcher or transmitter to “ meet wild east bound train No. 508 at Lead Switch.”

The train McDuff was running was No. 18, and was west bound. This wild train was the one with which the collision took place just west of Lead Switch. It is insisted on the part of appellee that the failure of the conductor, McDuff, to eause the brakes to be set in time to stop his train at Lead Switch and thereby prevent collision with the train which he was ordered to meet there, was such negligence as rendered appellant liable for the injury done to him by reason of the collision. The act of negligence of MeDuff was one, if at all, of omission, and not of commission, The declaration further avers that the conductor had control of the fireman as well as all other of the employes of Ms train, and had a right to report any disobedience of his orders to the company and have them discharged, L e., if the company would discharge them for disobedience.

The case was tried by a jury and resulted in a verdiet for appellee and judgment was given against appellant for $9,000, the amount of the verdict after remittitur of $6,000 by appellee.

The appellant insists that admitting all that the evidence shows or tends to show, including all legitimate inferences that can be drawn therefrom, the appellee has no cause of action, and that the court below erred in not giving the jury an instruction which it offered directing it to find the issues for the defendant, which is as follows: “ The court instructs the jury that all the evidence in this case has been excluded from the jury and there is now no evidence before the jury in the ease, and.it is the duty of the jury to find the defendant not guilty.”

The instruction proceeded on the ground that there being no evidence before the jury on which a verdiet for appellee could be properly based it should be excluded and the jury instructed and find the appellant not guilty for want of evidence.

It was in substance the same as to instruct the jury to find for appellant on the evidence, there being none on which a verdict could be based.

The appellee’s eonnsel have argued the ease, as they say, as to whether the facts and the declaration make a good canse of action, and say that the ((record is in such condition that the ease can be decided by this court upon its merits,” and if we find with them, to affirm, and if we believe appellee has no canse of action and can have no case under any circumstances, to reverse, the judgment.

We have carefully examined the evidence and duly considered the arguments of counsel, and have arrived at the conclusion that there is no material contradiction in the evidence and that the case can be fully considered as to whether the judgment can be sustained as a legal proposition.

The Supreme Court has holden that where no question of law has been raised in the Circuit Court, that the Appellate Court’s finding of the ultimate facts on which the verdict of the jury necessarily rests is final and conclusive, and the Supreme Court will not consider, on appeal from the Appellate Court, the question as to whether the evidence as a whole sustains the verdict, and reverse for want of evidence, but will treat that as settled by the finding of the Appellate Court, that matter being without its jurisdiction in accordance with the provisions of the statute. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Reardon, 157 Ill. 372; Huntington v. Metzger, 158 Ill. 272. And the Appellate Court, accordingtothe opinion in the last cited case, has no right to examine the question as to whether the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict except as a question of fact, and not as a question of law, unless the latter question be raised by an offered instruction in proper form sufficient to raise it. See also Lignard v. Rhoades, 156 Ill. 431. Rut the point as to whether there is evidence sufficient to warrant a verdict for a defendant, may be raised as a matter of law, so as to open for consideration in the Supreme Court on appeal from the Appellate Court by a demurrer to the evidence or its equivalent, or request to the court to take the case from the jury and instruct them to find a verdict for the defendant. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Reardon, supra. Numerous other cases decided in that court are to the same effect but the above are sufficient to show the rule established by the court.

It appears that in case there is no instruction, or what is equivalent to it, in the Circuit Court, to have the jury' instructed to find for the defendant, a question of law can not be raised; but the Appellate and Supreme Courts are bound to treat the question as to whether there is sufficient evidence to support the verdict as a question of fact and not of law, even if the “ evidence given at the trial with all the inferences that the jury could justifiably draw from it were so insufficient to support the verdict for the plaintiff, that if returned it must be set aside.” See cases above cited, and as to the last proposition, The People v. People’s M. Co., 126 Ill. 466.

If the evidence will not support the verdict and is so insufficient that the court must set it aside if for defendant, if rendered, and the question of its sufficiency is raised, as indicated by instruction to the jury, then it becomes a question of law, and the judgment of the Appellate Court, in case of affirmance by the latter court, may be reversed by the Supreme Court in a proper case for error in Appellate Court in not treating the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict as a matter of law, and reversing the inferior court’s judgment, for error in not giving the instruction' to the jury to find for defendant.

In the case at bar, the controlling question raised is, whether the conductor, McDuff, was a vice-principal with the appellee in his relation to him in running the train. In case he was, then the question of fellow-servants becomes unimportant, and the verdict would be sustainable; but in case he was not, then the conductor and appellee were fellow-servants, and the judgment should be reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. App. 531, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-meyer-illappct-1896.