Illinois Central Railroad v. Weiland

67 Ill. App. 332, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 89
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 14, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 Ill. App. 332 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Weiland) 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. Weiland, 67 Ill. App. 332, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 89 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion oe the Court.

The appellee was in the service of the appellant as a switchman, and at the time of the trial, which was about two and a half years after he received the injury for which he sued, he was thirty-five years of age. The direct injury received by him resulted in the amputation of three fingers of his left hand at the knuckles, and the crooking of his little finger at the first joint. He had worked as switch-man seven years, and at the time of the accident was earning from $3 to $4 a day. His greatest earnings since the accident have been 81-50 a day.

The jury gave him a verdict for 86,500, which was remitted down to 84,500, and judgment for that amount rendered.

It is urged that the court erred in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the appellant’s plea of the statute of limitations to certain additional counts filed by appellee, more than two years after the filing of the original declaration, on the ground that such additional counts set up a new cause of action.

We have examined the original and the additional counts, and think the court properly sustained the demurrer to the plea.of the statute. The cause of action stated was the same in each.

The injury was the cause of action. The various counts were but restatements of the same cause of action upon different grounds. Swift & Co. v. Foster, 55 Ill. App. 280; Swift & Co. v. Madden, 63 Ill. App. 341.

The negligence of appellant, upon which the appellee relies, and which was alleged in one or more of the several counts of the declaration, consisted, first, in not furnishing a sufficient number of men to do the work in which appellee was assisting, to enable the appellee to perform his duty with reasonable safety to himself, and, the dangers being complained Of and made known to appellant, a promise by appellant, through its empowered agent, to give appellee safer employment in a reasonable time, accompanied by' a request to appellee to continue in the work as it was until such remedy could be furnished; second, in furnishing appellee with a car whose appliances were defective, in that its brake was out of order.

During the two or three months immediately preceding the accident, the appellee had worked in the transfer yards of the appellant, as a member of a “ stake ” engine crew, engaged in the distribution of freight cars from the inbound yards to the out-bound yards. Connecting such divisions of the yards there were two parallel tracks, a portion of which were gravity tracks, extending from the top of what is spoken of as “ the hill,” beginning at or near one end of the in-bound yards, and inclining downward toward what is called a “ puzzle ” or “ diamond ” switch, located near the entrance to the out-bound yards. By means of such switch, cars coming down the gravity tracks were distributed to the appropriate tracks on which out-going trains were made up. The “ stake ” engine was operated on one of the two parallel tracks, and, by means of a stake extending from it to the corner of a car upon the other track, would push the car along to the point where the incline downward in the track began, and then leave it and go back for another car. The momentum so given to the car by the push of the engine and the downward inclination of the tracks, was calculated to be sufficient to carry the shunted car over the “ puzzle ” switch, and as far as necessary into the out-bound yard. As a shunted.car should approach, it was the duty of the switchman "waiting for it at the “ puzzle ” switch to set the switch so as to conduct the car upon the appropriate distributing track beyond. Signs, or marks, which he understood, would indicate to him the track for which the approaching car was destined. Then, as the car came, he would catch and climb upon it, and there operate its brake, so as to regulate its speed for its point of destination, and as it approached the car or train to which it was to be coupled, he would descend from the rear end of the car and run ahead on the ground, so as to be ready to do the coupling at the instant it should strike the car to which it was to be joined. Completing the coupling work, he was required to get back to the “ puzzle ” switch in time to repeat a like duty with reference to the next car that should be shunted down the gravity track. This, it was testified, was lively work, and kept the switch-man on the run.

Appellee testified that on the day in question when he reached the top.of the car and took hold of the brake, he noticed that the brake did not work effectually, but that he did the best he could with it, and when he sup]rosed he had sufficiently reduced its speed, he descended to the ground and ran past the car to its front end in order to couple it to the standing car ahead.

Reaching there while the shunted car was yet in motion and about ten feet distant from the car ahead, and looking forward to the standing car, he saw that there ivas in that car a coupling link which would prevent the coupling of the two cars if the link which was in the moving car were not removed. He, accordingly, “ hustled ” to throw out the link in the moving car, with his right hand, and as the ears were about to come together he stooped and reached his left arm under the “ dead-woods,” which were on both cars, and extending his hand upward to guide the link into its place, the moving car came so rapidly that his hand was caught and his fingers crushed.

It is claimed that the accident would not have happened, except for the rapid approach of the shunted car, and that because of the defective brake, its speed could not be sufficiently lessened by the appellee within the short time intervening between the time when he was obliged to mount the car at or near the switch, and when he had to dismount in order to be ready to do the coupling.

It does not appear with certainty just how much time did so elapse, but the distance that the car had to traverse was not great, considering what had to be done. '

It did appear that it was a box car, and that the brake was on its front end; that the ladders or steps were on the ends and not on the sides of the car; that it was hazardous to mount or dismount except at the rear end of a car so moving, lest in case of a slip or a fall, the car would run over the person who should fall, and that it was customary to use only the rear ladders. After mounting, it was, therefore, necessary that the appellee should, as he did, go from the rear to the front end of the top of the car, there operate the brake so as to properly adjust the speed of the car, then pass back to the rear and descend to the ground and run along past the car to its front end and make the coupling.

And it was made to appear, as is nearly obvious, that to do what was so necessary, required very quick work, and we may say, required the exercise of much judgment, agility, dexterity and exactness.

It was also shown that it was dangerous work, which may readily be perceived.

Upon the question of whether the brake was, or not, defective, in that its shoes were so worn as to imperfectly press upon the wheels of the car, there was a contrariety of opinion among the witnesses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Ill. App. 332, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-weiland-illappct-1896.