Lang v. Chicago Railways Co.

181 Ill. App. 654, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 325
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,556
StatusPublished

This text of 181 Ill. App. 654 (Lang 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
Lang v. Chicago Railways Co., 181 Ill. App. 654, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 325 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was injured by reason of having the rear wheel of a wagon in which he was then riding struck by a street car of appellant, whereby he was thrown from the seat to the tongue or pole of the wagon. The accident occurred on Halsted street about midway between Clay street and Center street. Center street is north of Clay street. It is 781 feet from the center of Center street to the center of Clay street. There are on Halsted street two street car tracks on which appellant was at the time of the accident operating street cars. The west track was used for south bound cars and the east track was used for north bound cars. On the east side of Halsted street opposite the place of the accident, and approximately midway between Center and Clay streets, there is a gate leading from the street into the grounds of a nursery and asylum. Halsted street was there 66 feet wide. It was 38 feet between the curbs. The two street car tracks occupied fourteen feet and five inches. Appellee had driven into this gate with a wagon loaded with vegetables on an average of once in each week for three years. The accident happened between five and six o’clock in the evening of August 14, 1909. At that time appellee approached the place of the accident from the north driving a team of horses hitched to a wagon well loaded with vegetables. He drove down the west side of Halsted street until he reached a point nearly opposite the gate into which he intended driving, when his son, a lad at that time about fourteen years of age, alighted from the wagon where he was riding with his father and went to open the gate. Appellee then turned his horses’ heads to the east and drove them at a walk across the two street car tracks towards, and for the purpose of entering, the asylum gate that had then been opened by his son. When his horses and all of the wagon ahead of the rear wheels had cleared the east street car track, a north bound street car struck the hub of the rear wheel of the wagon with sufficient force to push the rear end of the wagon around to the north, draw the team back into the street with their heads to the south, scatter the vegetables about the street, throw appellee from his seat on the wagon, break and disable the street car, and make sufficient noise to attract the attention of persons in buildings near there. While there is a controversy as to how far the car was from the place of the accident when appellee started.to cross the street, it is admitted on all hands that the motorman saw appellee when he did so, and that from that time on until the collision occurred there was nothing to obstruct appellee’s view of the car or the motorman’s view of appellee and his rig. The jury found appellant guilty and assessed appellee’s damages at $4,000. Judgment was entered on this verdict and this appeal followed.

Appellant contends that the evidence shows appellee was guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar his right to recover. Unless appellee was at and just before the time of the injury in the exercise of such care for his own safety as an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under the same circumstances, he can not recover. That was a question peculiarly for the jury, and unless their finding is manifestly against the weight of the evidence, their finding must be upheld by this court. Chicago Union Traction Co. v. Jacobson, 217 Ill. 404. Whether appellee was negligent in crossing the street when and in the manner he did depends very largely on how far the car was from him when he started across the street

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and the speed at which he drove his horses, taken in connection with the ordinary speed at which cars were operated at that place. If the car was at such a distance that an ordinarily prudent person knowing the usual speed at which cars were there operated would have undertaken to drive across the street in front of it, at the speed appellee drove, then he was not guilty of contributory negligence. In determining whether it was safe to cross appellee had the right to assume that the motorman would not wilfully, knowingly or heedlessly run over him or run the car at a high and dangerous rate of speed or at such a speed as to place it beyond his control. While street cars have the paramount right of way on the part of the streets covered by the tracks on which they run, those operating them have no right to deliberately or negligently run down persons or teams that are momentarily infringing on that right. One is not chargeable with contributory negligence merely because he fails to anticipate another’s negligent, wilful or unlawful acts. Chicago City Ry. Co. v. Fennimore, 199 Ill. 9; Henry v. Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 236 Ill. 219; Dukeman v. Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 237 Ill. 104.

It was 26 feet and 2y2 inches from the west curb to the east side of the east or north-bound street car track there. When appellee started to cross the street, his rig stood north and south close to the west curb of the street. The rig was from the head of the horses to the extreme rear end of the wagon approximately 22 feet in length. The team must, therefore, travel not more than approximately 48 feet before the rear wheels of the wagon would clear the east street car track. They were driven across on a “fair’ ’ walk. The entire rig, except the hind wheels, had cleared the east street ear track when the collision occurred. According to the testimony of appellee and at least two witnesses, when appellee started his team across the street, the car was standing still at Clay street, a distance of about 450 feet south of appellee. After the car started°from Clay street until the motorman put on the brakes it was running, according to the testimony of the conductor and motorman, 10 or 11 miles an hour. The conductor testified that after the brakes had been applied he looked out on the east side of the car and saw the horses just crossing the east street car track; that then the car was 100 feet from the horses; that after the brake was applied the car slowed down until, when it struck the hind wheel of the wagon, it was not going more than three or four miles an hour. According to the conductor the horses when the brakes were applied were just about where the hind wheel of the wagon was when the car struck it. If the conductoras testimony is correct, the horses traveled after the motorman set the brakes on the car about 12 feet, while the car traveled 100 feet at the reduced speed. Again, if the conductor is correct, the horses had traveled more than 30 feet after they started to cross the street before the motorman set the brakes and while the car was traveling at 10 or 11 miles an hour. The car must, therefore, have gone more than three times as far before as it did after the brakes were set, or over 300 feet, making the total distance traveled by the car after appellee started to cross the street and before the collision over 400 feet. This corroborates appellee and his witnesses as to where the car was when appellee started to cross the street. The motorman testified that the car was within 75 or 100 feet of where appellee crossed the street when he first started to do so, but admits his judgment on distances is not reliable. He also testified that the car he was running was 18 to 20 feet long. The conductor says it was 30 to 35 feet long. The motorman also testified he could stop the car in 75 to 100 feet under the conditions existing at the time in question.

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Related

Chicago City Railway Co. v. Fennimore
64 N.E. 985 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1902)
Chicago Union Traction Co. v. Jacobson
75 N.E. 508 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1905)
Henry v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co.
86 N.E. 231 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
181 Ill. App. 654, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lang-v-chicago-railways-co-illappct-1913.