Krug v. Walldren Express & Van Co.

214 Ill. App. 18, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 186
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 7, 1919
DocketGen. No. 24,650
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 214 Ill. App. 18 (Krug v. Walldren Express & Van 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
Krug v. Walldren Express & Van Co., 214 Ill. App. 18, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 186 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant appeals from a judgment against it for $12,500 entered upon the verdict of a jury in an action for personal injuries.

There are four counts in the declaration, three of which aver negligence in varying forms against defendant as the proximate cause of the injuries to plaintiff, and the fourth count avers that defendant’s servant, in the operation of its truck upon the occasion in question, when danger was imminent, carelessly, recklessly and wantonly ran the same upon and against plaintiff, thereby seriously injuring him. The cause proceeded to trial under this declaration with an unimportant amendment to the second count and defendant’s plea of not guilty.

The accident to plaintiff happened March 31, 1916, when he was nearly 15 years of age and a schoolboy. The place of the accident was Thomas street, Chicago, a densely populated residential neighborhood. The time of the accident was about sunset. The manner of its occurrence was in brief that plaintiff with other boys was playing a game of baseball in the roadway where various kinds of vehicles were driven. The boys had made a baseball diamond, the first and third bases of which were at opposite street curbs, and the home plate and second base were in the center of the street. The truck of defendant at the time of the accident was running in Thomas street towards the home plate. Plaintiff Krug had batted the baseball so dexterously and far that he and the boys naturally concluded that he then faced what is known in baseball parlance as a “home run.” Plaintiff ran swiftly around the bases with his mind intent on reaching the home plate. When he was running as fast as he could from third base towards the home plate, the truck of defendant, driven behind plaintiff by defendant’s servant, rapidly overtook the boy, whose mind was so intent on the objective home plate that he was not conscious of the fact that the truck was in the street, and he was struck by it and very seriously injured. While darkness was coming on, there was plenty of light for the boys to play ball and for the driver of the truck to so operate his truck, in the exercise of ordinary care, as to have easily avoided striking the boy. The truck when it struck plaintiff was to the left of the middle of the street when, according to the rule of the road, it should have been driven to the right of the middle of the street.

After plaintiff was struck by the truck he was found to be bleeding at the nose, mouth, ears and head, and to have wounds on both his legs. His nose was broken, as also his lower and upper jawbones, which had to be plated and wired together; he lost some of his teeth, and had a wound on his head and a bone depression of the skull over the left eye; he also suffered the fracture of three ribs. Two bones in the right leg were broken and the right ankle bonés, ligaments, tissues and skin were crushed and the ankle so badly injured as to leave plaintiff with a stiff and deformed clubfoot on that leg. He also suffered a diagonal compound fracture of the left leg, and from infection caused by the" dirt of the street being ground into his wounds. The left leg is shortened 2 inches; the injury to his nose prevents him from breathing through one nostril, and the sum total of plaintiff’s injuries have left him a cripple for the rest of his.life. He has in consequence of his injuries undergone several surgical operations, has suffered much pain on account of his injuries, and was rendered helpless for many months while he was under medical and surgical treatment.

It is argued for reversal: (1) that the verdict is grossly excessive; (2) improper remarks of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury; (3) error in the giving and refusing to give instructions; (4) error in .the court’s refusal of defendant’s motion to withdraw a juror and continue the cause because of an alleged improper answer of a witness to a question put by plaintiff’s counsel ; and (5) that the court should have granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict because plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and because there was no evidence justifying the finding of the jury that plaintiff’s injury was wantonly and wilfully inflicted. We will pass upon these contentions in the order recited.

First: The question of damages was a matter for the jury, and we are satisfied that the amount assessed is not only not excessive, but that it is not fully compensatory for the serious and painful injuries suffered, resulting in the permanent crippling of plaintiff, who from the threshold of his career will be compelled to go through life seriously handicapped physically as the result of the injuries which he received and for which defendant is, as respondeat superior, liable for the reckless, wanton and wilful conduct of its servant. Larger verdicts have been sustained by this court for injuries less serious than those suffered by plaintiff.

Second: We find nothing in the argument of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury that was improper. All the argument complained of was in reply to observations made by defendant’s counsel in his argument to the jury. We are hardly convinced that the reference by counsel to his client as “an American boy,” being It ut the statement of a bald and patent fact, was improper or a subject for censure by the court or for the penalizing of the injured client, particularly when defendant’s counsel, in accounting for the absence of a material witness, laid stress upon the witness being in the service of his country beyond the seas in the American Aviation Corps. Such remarks of both counsel were not only proper but ethical. The arguments of counsel regarding presumption arising from the violation of the State Motor Law and the compensation which his client should receive for his injuries were both permissible, especially that pertaining to the latter, which was simply an effort to offset the estimate made in argument by defendant’s counsel as to what compensation should be admeasured to plaintiff. Graham v. Mattoon City Ry. Co., 234 Ill. 483.

Third: In the view we take of this case, the rulings of the court on instructions to the jury, if erroneous— which we do not concede—had no baneful effect upon the rights of defendant.

Fourth: If we should give effect to this assignment of error, the wheels of justice would be retarded beyond measure. The court’s ruling upon the answer of the witness was all-sufficient as a corrective. The question, “What did you see the truck do?” was proper, although the answer that, “It came near striking a boy named Bingo on Campbell avenue,” might not be exactly responsive; still, it being stricken out with the consent of plaintiff’s counsel, the impropriety of the answer worked no injury to defendant. Furthermore, we are not prepared to say that the answer was not responsive and, as part of the res gestae, pertinent. It was something that happened immediately preceding the accident to plaintiff and tended to show the manner of the operation of the truck by defendant’s servant at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 Ill. App. 18, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krug-v-walldren-express-van-co-illappct-1919.