Kapella v. Chicago Railways Co.

228 Ill. App. 528, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 254
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1923
DocketGen. No. 37,280
StatusPublished

This text of 228 Ill. App. 528 (Kapella v. Chicago Railways Co.) 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
Kapella v. Chicago Railways Co., 228 Ill. App. 528, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 254 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal the defendants, Chicago Railways Company and others, seek to reverse a judgment for $2,125 recovered against them by the plaintiff, Minnie Kapella, in the circuit court of Cook county, said judgment being based upon the verdict of a jury finding the issues for the plaintiff and assessing her damages at the amount above named.

On the evening of March 20, 1919, the plaintiff was a passenger on a street car operated by the defendants, which car was proceeding in a southerly direction along Racine avenue in the City of Chicago. The plaintiff indicated to the conductor that she wished to leave the car at the intersection of Racine avenue and 50th street, and the car stopped at the north side of 50th street for the purpose, of permitting her to alight.

It is the theory of the plaintiff that as she was getting off the car started up and caused her to fall, inflicting the injuries which form the basis of this action. It is the theory of the defendants that she did not fall as she was getting off the car but after she had entirely left it and that her fall was not occasioned in any way by the movements of the car.

The plaintiff lived at 4954 South Racine avenue, which is the second door north of the northwest corner of Racine avenue and 50th street. She was thirty-seven years and nine months old at the time in question; she then weighed about 208 pounds and was about five feet eight inches tall, and had always been, according to her testimony, healthy and strong. She was a married woman and had eight children. For several years up to March 8, Í919, sh§ had been working in various departments in the stockyards and had earned from $18 to $30 a week. Her work was eight hours night work, part of it being the handling of twelve pound cans of bacon, carrying them from one table to another.

As to the occurrence in question, she testified that when the car got to 49th street she left her seat and went to the door and said to the conductor, “50th place”; that shortly thereafter the conductor gave the signal to stop; that she stood in the car, in the doorway, and as the car slowed down and came to a standstill she stepped out on the platform and was there when the car stopped; that then, at once, she took hold of the rail, which was on the body of the car, with her left hand, placed her right foot on the lower step, and was in the act of putting her left foot down towards the ground when the car started and, her hand being loosened from the rail of the car, she fell. When asked how the car started, she said, “Well, kind of quick, not too quick, but how they mostly start. ’ ’ She further stated that when she fell she fell on her right side; that she was facing more towards the west than the way in which the car was going.

The injury which she first noticed, according to her testimony, was in her ankle,. and gave her much pain during the night of the injury. She testified also that she felt pain in her whole right leg and side and her chest. Her right ankle became badly swollen and discolored and there was also some discoloration in her right knee and her right elbow. The morning after the injury she called in a doctor and he bandaged her right ankle and gave her some -salve for her bruises. She kept complaining of the pains in her side and on the second day after the injury the doctor discovered a hernia. She testified that she had never had anything of that kind prior to that time.

Dr. Belsan, surgeon to St. Bernard’s Hospital and of the Illinois Central Hospital, testified that he had attended the plaintiff and her family as a physician; that' he was called by her after she had the fall in question; that he examined her and found “multiple contusions of her right limbs — that is her right leg, her right arm and then a few bruises on her back”; that she complained of some pains in the inguinal region, in the right groin; that there were contusions of the tibia and on the anterior part of the thigh and of the ankle of the right leg’; that he treated her for three or four months. He further testified that he remembered a few blue spots on the back, also, that “the bruises on the limb and on the back they got along very nicely, they were simply a little bruise underneath the skin.” He further testified that in three or four days he noticed a small hernia on the right side; that he kept her in bed for several weeks; that after she got up the hernia got much larger, and pursuant to his advice she got a truss; that the hernia is so large that the truss which she got shortly prior to the trial, pursuant to his instructions, does not hold the viscera in; that in his judgment such a hernia incapacitates one from doing any heavy work, lifting or being on one’s feet a great deal.

The only occurrence witness who testified for the plaintiff was one Charles Koslowski, who had lived for about four years with his father, a laborer, at 4948 South Racine avenue, a couple of doors, as he said, north of where the plaintiff lived, that is number 4954. He was nineteen years and twenty days old at the time of the plaintiff’s injury. He had worked for Armour’s for five years. He knew the plaintiff but only to the extent of knowing who she was. He testified that when he got to the front door of his home, the night in question, he saw a southbound street car stopped at the corner; that a woman was just about to get off the car, and as she was about to get off the car moved and she was thrown to the ground; that the car kept going and stopped at the other corner; that a young man, who was at the corner, picked her up and a policeman in uniform, and the conductor, and a man in civilian clothes, got off the car and went back and picked her up; that he was about thirty or forty feet away at the time she fell. He says that when the car stopped it was across 50th street. On cross-examination he testified that the front end of the car when it first stopped was about one foot north of 50th street; that he could see all along the west side of the car and that no one got off the front end; that he saw a large woman who, he found out afterwards was the plaintiff, get off the rear end; that the car came to a standstill; that she stepped down a couple of seconds after the car stopped; that she took hold of both railings, the one on the south end of the car and the middle one that goes to the roof, and faced west; that she was just partly off and partly on, the right foot partly on the ground and partly in the air, and was just about to get off when the car moved, and she fell on her right side, on her elbows and knees.

Four occurrence witnesses were called for the defendants. One Kolin, a shoe salesman, twenty-two years old, testified that he was riding on the rear platform and when the car came to a stop, a large woman got off and started to walk towards the west sidewalk; that after the car had gone about a car’s length it, stopped again and he turned and saw that she had fallen down, about four feet from the curbstone, with her hands and knees down, forwards, towards the west, her hands being on the curbstone; that he, the conductor and a policeman got off and helped her up; that the last he saw of her she was walking into a yard.

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Bluebook (online)
228 Ill. App. 528, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kapella-v-chicago-railways-co-illappct-1923.