Kilroy v. Retirement Board of the Park Policemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund

17 N.E.2d 527, 297 Ill. App. 261, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 650
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 17, 1938
DocketGen. No. 39,859
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 N.E.2d 527 (Kilroy v. Retirement Board of the Park Policemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund) 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
Kilroy v. Retirement Board of the Park Policemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund, 17 N.E.2d 527, 297 Ill. App. 261, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 650 (Ill. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice John J. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal seeks to reverse a judgment entered in a common law certiorari proceeding which quashed the return of the respondent, Retirement Board of the Park Policemen’s Annuity and Benefit Fund, and ordered that it “pay to the Petitioner, Agnes Kilroy, the annuity provided for the widow of a policeman whose death shall result from injury incurred in the performance of an act or acts of duty in accordance with the provisions of the legislative enactment creating the Park Policemen’s Annuity and Benefit Fund, being section 31 of said enactment, said payments to date from the day following the date .of the death of the husband of said Petitioner.”

Respondent contends that “Officer Kilroy did not die as the result of injuries incurred in the performance of an act of duty, and that there was no causal connection between the alleged injuries and the death of Officer Kilroy”; and that “the nisi prius court had no power to weigh the evidence and substitute the judgment of the court for the judgment of the defendant board.”

The theory of petitioner (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff) is that “she is entitled to compensation annuity as the widow of Fred J. Kilroy, a deceased member of the police force of the Lincoln Park Commissioners of the City of Chicago, who is alleged by the plaintiff to have died as the result of injuries incurred in the performance of an act of duty. ’ ’

Fred J. Kilroy was a park policeman in the city of Chicago, employed by the Lincoln Park commissioners. He entered the police service February 16, 1922, and died March 17, 1930. He was the husband of Agnes Kilroy, plaintiff, and the father of four children, namely, Dorothy, James, June and Shirley Kilroy. Following the death of officer Kilroy, the respondent board granted his widow, Agnes Kilroy, an annuity of $15.17 a month for life or until remarriage, together with an additional allowance of $10 a month for each minor child until such child attained the age of 18 years. Payment of such allowances began as of the day following Kilroy’s death.

In February, 1931, plaintiff presented to the board a petition requesting that she be paid “compensation annuity” as provided in section 31 of the act governing the park policemen’s annuity and benefit fund (Ill. State Bar Stats. 1935, ch. 105, par. 459 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 100.584]) alleging that her husband’s death resulted from injuries incurred in the performance of an act of duty. Following an investigation by its attorney her application for such increased annuity “was laid on the table” at a meeting held April 8, 1931, the board finding that “the death of officer Fred J. Kilroy was not the result of an injury sustained by him on January 31, 1930, at Montrose avenue and Sheridan road, while in the performance of an act of duty.” In June, 1931, plaintiff requested that her application be set down for hearing. Thereafter, a partial hearing was had at a meeting of the respondent board on October 6,1931, but a motion made at that time that “Mrs. Kilroy’s application for increase in her annuity be taken from the table” failed to carry. Subsequently, plaintiff’s attorney appeared before the board on November 7, 1933, and outlined his version of the facts upon which she predicated her claim, but no action was taken by the board. On or about April 12,1935, plaintiff filed a proceeding in mandamus against respondent seeking to compel payment to her of the increased compensation annuity provided for in section 31 of the act, heretofore referred to. Thereafter hearings were had and testimony taken before the board in connection with plaintiff’s claim on May 6, June 10, August 5 and September 9, 1936. A synopsis of the testimony and affidavits, as well as of various reports theretofore made to the board by its attorney, was submitted to respondent on October 7, 1936. At a meeting of the board held November 4, 1936, plaintiff’s application for increased compensation annuity was denied. May 17,1937, an order was entered in the circuit court of Cook county allowing plaintiff’s petition for mandamus to stand as a petition for certiorari, with leave to respondent to file its return instanter. Respondent’s return, which included all the evidence presented in the matter of plaintiff’s application, was filed the same day.

' It appears from said return that on January 31,1930, at 4:45 p. m., Fred J. Kilroy was struck by an automobile and knocked down while attempting to assist a lady across a driveway in Lincoln Park; that he continued to perform his duties thereafter that evening, returning to his home at about 8 p. m.; and that Dr. William J. Schaffer was called to Kilroy’s home that same night to treat him.

The only question before the respondent board was whether or not Kilroy’s death occurred as a result of the injuries incurred by him in the performance of an act of duty on January 31, 1930.

• Plaintiff and three of her children testified before the respondent board and a number of her friends and friends of Kilroy submitted affidavits to said board to the effect that prior to his injury Kilroy was an affable, affectionate husband and father, with a pleasant disposition, and that after said injury there was a marked change in his personality in that he became sensitive, explosive and irritable. Evidence was also submitted to the board, either in the form of affidavits or the testimony of witnesses, that Kilroy, commencing about seven or eight days after his injury, suffered from severe and protracted head pains, as well as from hallucinations, especially as to his physical condition and the improbability of his recovering from his injuries.

Dr. Harold S. Hulbert, a specialist in mental and nervous diseases, called by plaintiff as an expert witness before the board, testified in answer to a hypothetical question which included the assumption that the hypothetical person “after a period of about seven or eight days [subsequent to his injury] began to show signs or symptoms of organic brain disease,” that it was his opinion that either “thememory defect, sensitivity to noises, the change in personality, profound change in mood, show that the brain tissue itself was involved . . . the combination of the pains plus this impaired brain condition, keeping him from thinking, was the cause of his deciding to die by suicide . . . the injuries were, within reasonable medical certainty, the proximate cause of his death . . . the personality change, the depressed mood, the emotional instability, 'and the head pains following the accident were unbearable, and he died because of the combination of these things. ’ ’

As heretofore stated, when plaintiff’s application for the increased annuity was first presented to the board the matter was referred to respondent’s attorney for an investigation of her claim and a report thereon. The first reports of the attorney furnished the b.asis for the original refusal of the board to act favorably on plaintiff’s application. These and subsequent reports of said attorney, although not sworn to, were incorporated in the proceedings of the board which were included in its return to the writ of certiorari. Plaintiff strenuously objects to these reports being afforded any consideration in our determination of the question as to whether there was any evidence in the record of the proceedings of the board, that fairly tended to show that the board was legally justified in denying plaintiff’s application for the compensation annuity.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E.2d 527, 297 Ill. App. 261, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilroy-v-retirement-board-of-the-park-policemens-annuity-benefit-fund-illappct-1938.