Lanham v. Illinois Central Railroad

181 Ill. App. 63, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 200
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 Ill. App. 63 (Lanham v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Lanham v. Illinois Central Railroad, 181 Ill. App. 63, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 200 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Creighton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case brought by the appellee against the appellant company, to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by appellee while attempting to board a coach on the rear of a freight train on appellant’s road.

Upon a hearing the jury returned a verdict against the appellant and in favor of the appellee, in the sum of $3,000.. After overruling motions for new trial and in arrest of the judgment, the trial court entered a judgment in the amount of the verdict, and thereupon this appeal was granted and has been perfected.

The injury complained of occurred at Colfax, a station on the road of the appellant, on the 26th day of October, 1910, while appellee was attempting to board a passenger coach on the rear end of a freight train. While the evidence as to the occurrence is somewhat conflicting as to the material points connected with the accident, it is uncontroverted that appellee had gone to the station of appellant in advance of the approach of the train, and, together with a number of other passengers, came forward to board the train immediately after the coach came up to the station. One or more passengers immediately got aboard in advance of the appellee. Just as appellee had taken hold of the hand rail and placed her feet upon the lower step of the coach, the train lurched forward and then moved back a distance of from two to four feet, appellee lost her balance and her feet slipped from the step and fell to the ground and her body went against the side of the coach and she held on to the railing with her hand or hands. She was immediately assisted by a gentleman present and went aboard the train, and complained of being frightened. As she was assisted aboard the train it was standing still and remained so for a short space of time, variously estimated at from one and one-half to fifteen minutes.

It is contended by appellant that the only motion of the coach after it drew up in front of the station was the natural rebound incident to the stopping of the engine, the forward movement of the train against it and the rebound of from two to two and one-half feet, and that appellee attempted to enter the train before the coach had stopped, or at the time of the rebound immediately after stopping. The appellee contends that when she first sought to board the coach it was standing still upon the track, but that before she had time to get aboard, the car lurched backward and threw her against the side of the car and caused the injury complained of.

Mrs. Dunlap, a witness, testified that she was approaching the train from the station behind appellee and just prior to her effort to board the train; that as appellee took hold of the railing and placed her feet upon the lower step of the car, the car lurched backward three or four feet, throwing appellee’s feet upon the ground; that a gentleman picked her up and helped her to board the car, and that the .witness then boarded the car which remained standing on the track for ten or fifteen minutes; that the movement of the train backward and then forward, left the coach near where it first stopped; that she knew nothing about the “slack” of trains, but had seen other trains stop that way.

Grace Waunderland and Mary Strickland each testified that they were approaching the depot crossing just as the freight train pulled across the walk before it stopped; that they went around the rear of the train, and just then appellee stepped up and took hold of the hand rail on the rear of the coach, and that just as she stepped upon the step of the car the train stopped and there was a jar which threw her feet off the step and that-she still had hold the hand rail with one hand.

The appellee contends that the train pulled up in front of the station and the coach stopped still and that other passengers went aboard the train and that she attempted to follow; that when she had taken hold of the rail and had her feet upon the lower step, the train made a “jiggle” and threw her against the car; that the motion of the car was backward and then forward; that she could not tell how long the train remained standing still after she went into the coach.

B. M. Judd, a merchant at Colfax, who chanced to be passing near the train at the time of the accident, testified that the train pulled up in front of the station and was standing there when he saw appellee attempt to get aboard the car; that she had hold of the railing and one foot on the step of the car when the train came back and threw her; that he picked her up and put her aboard the car and that in about two minutes the train pulled out.

Upon the question of whether appellant was guilty of negligence at the time of the injury, and as to whether or not appellee was, at the time, in the exercise of due care and caution for her own safety, the evidence is, to say the least, very unsatisfactory.

As to the extent of the injury complained of, the evidence is also conflicting and unsatisfactory.

First, the appellee, in addition to the injury to her arm and shoulder, complains that at the time of the injury she was pregnant, having become so about three months before the accident, and that in consequence of such accident a miscarriage resulted and she was sick for a long space of time, and was under the care of a physician all the time and in a hospital at different times, and as a result is now permanently disabled.

The facts disclosed by this record upon that point are, that on the 26th day of October, 1910, the injury complained of occurred. On Sunday following, she contends, a miscarriage took place. At the time of the alleged miscarriage there was no physician present of consulted, the only person present at the time being a daughter-in-law of appellee. The symptoms and evidence of miscarriage stated by appellee and her daughter-in-law, were severe pains and the passage of blood clots, and afterwards a flooding, and that appellee was confined to her bed for the space of between two and three weeks; that appellee consulted Dr. Lang-staff within three or four weeks after the miscarriage, and visited Dr. Schultz early in November after the accident, and Dr. McIntosh about the middle of December, and went to see Dr. Horine on the 7th day of December, but the record fails to show that appellee made any complaint to any of these physicians as to the miscarriage, but did complain as to an injury to her arm and shoulder and received treatment for same, except that she told Dr. Horine she had become unwell the day before, and asked him to treat her for excessive discharges; that on the 31st of December of the same year, appellee called upon Dr. Myer, of Bloomington, and there, for the first time, made known her contention that a miscarriage had occurred, and that the doctor prescribed for and treated her at intervals until February, and advised her to go to the hospital, where she went and remained eight or ten days, and then the doctor found blood clots and flooding, and again in early spring, she was in the hospital under the treatment of the same physician; that the daughter-in-law who attended appellee at the time of the alleged miscarriage, testified that there was no foetus or other substance, except blood clots and blood passed, and that she removed and washed the cloths.

Dr. F. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 Ill. App. 63, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanham-v-illinois-central-railroad-illappct-1913.