Illinois Ruan Transport Corp. v. State

28 Ill. Ct. Cl. 323, 1973 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 280
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedJune 7, 1973
DocketNo. 5421
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 Ill. Ct. Cl. 323 (Illinois Ruan Transport Corp. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Ruan Transport Corp. v. State, 28 Ill. Ct. Cl. 323, 1973 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 280 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

Perlin, C.J.

Claimant seeks recovery of the sum of $9,650.10 for damages arising out of an accident on August 16, 1965, when one of claimant’s trucks overturned to avoid colliding with a State dump truck.

Thomas Plank testified as follows: He was operating claimant’s tractor and trailer loaded with approximately 8,250 gallons of gasoline, proceeding east on Route 140, a two-lane highway east of Meadowbrook, Madison County, Illinois. It had been raining. He was coming off a hill or grade about 11:20 a.m. when he saw a State dump truck “sitting on the road” about two or three hundred feet ahead and a car behind it blinking its taillights. He saw no warning signs or signals and no flagman. He put on his brakes and tried to stop. There was a car coming in the opposite direction, so he applied his brakes and the cab and trailer skidded off the road sideways and overturned. He estimated that he was going about 40 miles per hour but did not know what distance it would take to stop a 73,000 pound vehicle. The truck turned over about one and one-half times. He had been driving semi-trailer rigs for 22 years. He was familiar with the road. Vision is not as good in a truck as it is in a passenger vehicle because “you are higher up in a truck” and hanging trees block the vision, especially in the summertime.

Charles Richard Johnson testifed for the claimant as follows: He was driving west on Route 140 at the time of the accident. There is a hill and curve “coming on this bridge,” a small concrete bridge. There was a State truck stopped right on the bridge. There was “quite a bit of traffic.” Just as he came past the State truck he saw a tractor trailer coming down over the hill from the opposite direction. There were no flagmen and warning signals from the east, although there was a flagman standing beside the truck between the bridge and the truck, but he was not using any flags and there were no signs. It had been raining. There were two or three cars stopped behind the truck; he saw claimant’s tractor trailer come over the hill. The driver tried to stop but lost control because it was so wet. Then the truck overturned one and one half times. The driver “came out the windshield and landed in the road.” Men wearing orange highway jackets directed traffic after the accident, although not before. However, one of these men was standing between the truck and the bridge at the side of the truck before the accident. After the accident the State truck pulled off the road. The witness left the scene after taking the driver to a telephone where he called his company which called the police. Mr. Johnson testified that he was not a very good judge of distance, but he thought the truck was about one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet away from him when he started losing control of the vehicle and he was about twenty feet away from it when it stopped. The driver was, according to the witness, about 300 or 400 feet away from the car stopped behind the truck when he started losing control. The driver had come down a hill and a curve and then the road was straight right before the bridge. In the opinion of the witness, there was no choice for the truck driver but to brake in order to avoid hitting the cars in back of the truck or the witness’ car.

Albert Perkins McCormick testified as follows: He was traveling east on Route 140 at the time of the accident and saw the truck coming over the hill and around the curve in his rear view mirror. The witness was just coming to a stop and he flashed his tailfights off and on. Perkins stopped because there was another car and a State truck stopped in front of him in the middle of the road. The State men were working on the bridge. He did not see any warning signals or flagman on the highway. The truck was about one hundred yards behind him when he started flashing his signals. He then saw the trailer truck brake, apparently to avoid hitting the witness; the trailer then started slipping to the right and overturned after hitting a stump. There were skid marks approximately 75 feet long on the road. The road was slippery after it rained. He left after the driver was taken to make a phone call. He did not see a flagman go out to control traffic after the accident. When the witness was approaching the place where the truck was stopped he was going about 30 miles per hour on account of the road conditions. The State truck did not have a flashing signal which was operating on top of it. The truck was traveling at about 40 miles per hour.

Dennis Klohr, a maintenance engineer for the Illinois Division of Highways testified on behalf of respondent as follows: He was not an eye witness to the accident, but conducted an investigation of the scene with reference to distances and sites on August 20,1965. A truck approaching the bridge would have a full view of the bridge a distance of eight hundred feet from the work area on the bridge. The truck finally rested at 283 feet from the bridge. The approach to the area is a moderately steep grade for seven hundred feet and the bridge is visible about 800 feet away which is approximately halfway down the hill.

Dennis Franklin Weaver testified that on the date of the accident, he was working for the State of Illinois as a Section Leader and was engaged in filling pot holes in the pavement on Route 140 at the time of the accident. They had a yellow ton and a half truck equipped with a red light on top. The red light was working. One man, John Smith, of the approximately five-man crew was “flagging” behind the truck and another, Dewey Bail, was “flagging in front of the truck.” “We had one-way traffic going” with two flagmen wearing orange vests. Each had paddles with “Stop” on one side and “Go” on the other side. Mr. Bail was about fifty to seventy-five feet in front of the truck and the other flagman, Mr. Smith, was twenty or twenty-five feet behind the truck. Smith had two cars stopped because Mr. Bail had cleared the traffic going west and Smith had two cars stopped waiting to go around the truck and go east. The witness did not observe the Ruan transport truck coming down the highway. He had finished the job and was in the truck when Mr. Bail told him there had been an accident in the back. The witness then pulled the truck off the highway and got out to see the overturned truck. It had been raining and the pavement was slick. There were no signs out saying “Road Work” or “Men Working.”

Dewey Bail testified that he was working for the State as part of the maintenance crew at the scene of the accident. He was flagman at the time. Johnson was a flagman with him. Johnson was temporary and that was the first time he had worked with him. Johnson was behind the truck flagging and the witness was a couple of hundred yards east of the truck. They both had a paddle and a red flag. He was dressed with a highway jacket and was guiding one-way traffic; his traffic had cleared and he had let the last car go, getting ready to flag Johnson to let his cars come around at the time the truck came down the hill. He saw the truck approaching the area. Before he saw the truck he heard it as it approached the curve at the top of the hill. He stated: “it’s a pretty sharp curve, then it straightens on down, and as I saw him I heard him hit the air brakes; that the truck went straight until it got to the foot of the hill, then it veered off onto the shoulder, hitting the stump and jackknifing.” The signal light on the truck was operating at the time and the State truck is colored yellow.

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Related

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45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 201 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1993)
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36 Ill. Ct. Cl. 61 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1984)
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35 Ill. Ct. Cl. 10 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1981)
Gramlich v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Ill. Ct. Cl. 323, 1973 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-ruan-transport-corp-v-state-ilclaimsct-1973.