Johnson v. Kushler

269 Ill. App. 553, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 744
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,260
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 269 Ill. App. 553 (Johnson v. Kushler) 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
Johnson v. Kushler, 269 Ill. App. 553, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 744 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

In a 4th class action in tort to recover damages for personal injuries received by plaintiff in an automobile collision early in the morning of January 24, 1932, as well as for property damage to his automobile in which he then was riding, there w,as a trial without a jury on May 18, 1932, resulting in the court finding defendant guilty “in manner and form as charged in plaintiff’s statement of claim,” assessing the damages at $500, and entering judgment against defendant in that sum. The present appeal followed.

In his statement of claim plaintiff alleged in substance that on January 24, 1932, in the nighttime, defendant, by his driver or employee, had been operating his autotruck, with trailer attached, easterly on a public highway known as Higgins road in Cook county, Illinois; that defendant’s driver had stopped the truck and trailer, and they were standing in the highway facing east; that plaintiff was riding in his automobile, “driven by his agent,” traveling easterly in the highway and was in the exercise of due care for his own safety; that it was defendant’s duty not to permit the truck and trailer to remain in a stationary or immobile position in the highway, during the period of one hour after sunset until sunrise of any day, “without exhibiting therefrom lighted lamps, as required by a statute of Illinois, showing a tail-light and three red lights in the reverse direction, so as to warn users of the highway, approaching or passing said truck and trailer, of their position on the highway”; that defendant by his driver, not regarding said duty, then and there “negligently and carelessly,” and “wantonly, willfully and maliciously, ’ ’ caused the truck and trailer to stand and remain on the highway without exhibiting said lights from the rear, and without giving other warnings or signals; that by reason of defendant’s negligence and wanton conduct, plaintiff’s automobile “ran into, collided and struck with great force and violence upon and against said trailer”; that as the result of the collision plaintiff received serious personal injuries to his damage in the sum of $500, and in addition his automobile was damaged to the extent of $500; and that plaintiff’s total damages amount to' the sum of $1,000, etc.

The statute referred to in plaintiff’s statement of claim is evidently section 16, as amended, of the present Motor Vehicle Law of this State (Cahill’s St. 1931, ch. 95a, ¶ 17, page 1924), which reads in part as follows (italics ours) :

“(a) When upon any public highway in this State, during the period from one hour after sunset to sunrise, every motor bicycle shall carry one lighted lamp and every motor vehicle two lighted lamps showing-white lights, . . . visible at least two hundred (200) feet in the direction toward which each motor bicycle or motor vehicle is proceeding, and each motor vehicle, trailer or semi-trailer shall also exhibit at least one lighted lamp which shall be so situated as to throw a red light visible in the reverse direction. . . .

“(c) After October 1, 1931, every motor vehicle of the second division as described in section 2 of this Act (i. e., one ‘designed and used for pulling- or carrying freight’), the length of which, together with any trailer or trailers in tow thereof, is more than 25 feet . . . , while being operated on the public highways of this State outside the corporate limits of cities, towns and villages, during the period one hour after sunset to sunrise, shall display, ... on the rear thereof in a horizontal line approximately six inches apart, three red lights plainly visible at a distance of at least 200 feet; . . . also on the rear of the body of said vehicle, not more than 12 inches from the lower left hand corner, one red reflector. . . .

“(f) During the period from one hour after sunset to sunrise every . . . motor vehicle, which is standing on any road, highway or street, shall display a light on the front and at the rear of the same. However, etc.” (Here follow provisions for parking without lights in any city, town or village, under rules prescribed by ordinance.)

In defendant’s .affidavit of merits, sworn to by an agent, it is denied that at the time and place plaintiff was in the exercise of due care for his own safety, or that defendant by his driver was guilty of the negligence or wanton conduct as charged, or that the truck and trailer were standing in the highway or were without the rear lights as required by statute, or that the collision was proximately caused by any negligence of defendant’s driver.

On the trial plaintiff testified in his own behalf as to the happening of the accident, and he called five witnesses, passengers in his car, who gave their versions of the collision, which occurred about 2:15 o’clock, a. m., on a clear night in an open country district. Five men and three young women were in the car, which was of the sedan type for five passengers. One of the young women (not called as a witness) was the driver. She was seated on the left side of the front seat, and next to her sat plaintiff and next to him George Siegman. On the back seat were three men and in the laps of two were seated the two other young women. Plaintiff also called as witnesses a man named Crane, and a motorcycle policeman named Barnes, both of whom arrived on the scene of the accident after it had happened. The occupants of the car were on their way to Chicago. They had been to a party, given by friends on a farm near Dundee, Illinois.

Plaintiff testified that he was the owner of the car; that the young woman driver “was driving the car for me”; that she had never driven it before; that he was sitting on the front seat between her and Siegman, and was looking forward; that she was driving the car at a speed “around from 35 to 38 miles per hour”; that he “had the front lights on, but the dimmers instead of the brights,” and that they “would throw light ahead about 35 feet”; that “it is possible that I could have seen farther ahead if I had had the bright lights on”; that “travelling at a speed of 35 or 40 miles an hour, it is possible to stop my car within 10 or 12 feet”; that just before the crash he was looking ahead; that “in a fraction of a second I saw a car with no lights on it, and, as there was no chance to turn, we crashed head on into Kushler’s trailer”; that “we were about three or four feet from the trailer the first time I saw it”; that he “didn’t see any red lights or any red reflectors on the trailer ’ ’; that after' he was taken out of the car and before taken to a hospital in Elgin for treatment he “looked at the trailer, saw that his car was about 8 or 10 feet behind it,” that “he didn’t notice” whether or not there were any lights on the rear of the trailer.

George Siegman, also seated on the front seat, testified that just before the collision we were “travelling about 30 to 35 miles an hour ’ ’; that the headlights of our car “would throw a light forward, maybe, 35 or 40 feet”; thát “I didn’t see any red lights, or red reflectors, or trailer lights”; that there “was a crash” and he “was knocked unconscious”; that he saw the trailer “just before the crash” and “it looked to me as if it was standing still on the highway.”

The testimony of the three men on the back seat was to the effect that just before the collision each was “looking forward” and “didn’t see” any red lights or red.

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Bluebook (online)
269 Ill. App. 553, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-kushler-illappct-1933.