Lavis v. Wisconsin Central Railroad

54 Ill. App. 636, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 190
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 30, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 54 Ill. App. 636 (Lavis v. Wisconsin 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
Lavis v. Wisconsin Central Railroad, 54 Ill. App. 636, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 190 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a,n action to recover for a personal injury to the plaintiff, who, on the evening of Sunday, October 28 1888, was being carried as a passenger, in a passenger train of the defendant, on its line of railroad, from Chicago to Austin, a suburb of Chicago.

At a point on the railroad, a short distance before the station of Austin is reached, occurs a reverse curve in the road, described by witnesses as a sharp double curve, resembling an elongated letter S.

During the trip, and shortly after the last station before reaching Austin was passed, the plaintiff got up from his seat, which was near the center of the car, and started to walk to the water-closet at the rear end.

He testified that the rear door of the car seemed to be swinging as he approached it; that he was walking along easily, and that just as he got near the door and probably three feet from it, the car seemed to strike the curve, and gave a sudden lurch that threw him out of the open door and across the brake, breaking two of his ribs; that he fell to the platform and caught the railing, on the end of it, with both hands, and hung on for quite a distance, his feet hanging off the platform; that then a lurch of the car in the opposite direction threw him to the ground, and the wheels of the next car took off his left leg and right foot except the heel. He also testified that there had been several lurches of the car on the trip, but that the first one that occurred after he left Ms seat was the one that threw him out.

Mrs. McCormick was a passenger on the same train and sat in the car next behind that in which plaintiff rode. She testified that she sat next to the front window of the car, on a seat running lengthwise, and was looking through the window directly toward the car ahead of her out of which the plaintiff came; that the first she saw of the plaintiff was when he was five or six feet from the door and was coming toward it; that the door opened and he was pitched out head first, screaming as he went, his hands striking first the casing of the door and then the brake; that he struck the round top of the brake and fell; that the brakeman, who made announcement of stations, was standing with his arms on the door looking in the direction of the car out of which the plaintiff came; that he and her husband, who was sitting next to her, immediately ran out on the platform; that the brakeman came back into the car directly afterward, but gave no signal to stop the train, though she asked him why he did not; that the speed was not slackened, and the train ran right along to the next station; that the train was jerking all the way, sometimes running smoothly and then giving a jerk, and that the plaintiff was thrown out at the time the car struck the first curve of the reverse or double curve, and that the train in her opinion was running at twenty-five or thirty miles an hour.

Jacob P. Hohmann, a policeman, testified that upon the arrival of the train at Austin he was informed of the accident, and at once went down the track to where he found the plaintiff lying between the double tracks with one foot hanging a little by the skin of the heel, and the other crushed; that about two hundred feet back and east of where the plaintiff was lying, he found his hat, and that it could be seen by marks on the gravel that the body had been dragged in the neighborhood of that distance; that the hat was right at the beginning or east end of the second curve which began at the west end of the first curve, and the body was at the west end of the second curve.

The train passed on from Austin to Harlem, which was the end of its trip, a distance not ascertainable from the abstract of the record, but from observation believed to be two or three miles from the place of the accident, and from there "returned to Chicago.

An offer was made to prove by one Perley, that when the train reached its destination, the engineer procured from a neighboring saloon a billiard cue with which he plugged up some opening in the engine, which was objected to on the ground that there was no proper foundation therefor in the declaration, and the objection was sustained.

After some additional counts were filed, one of which was framed in order to fit the offered testimony of said Perley, the plaintiff, in the absence of said Perley, offered to prove by a witness, named Richardson, that upon the arrival of the train at Harlem he saw the engineer of the engine working about the engine and plugging it in some way with a billiard cue; and it was thereupon agreed by defendant’s counsel that Bichardson would so testify, and that for the purposes of the motion to be made by defendant, he should be regarded as having so testified.

The plaintiff’s case being then closed, the court, upon the defendant’s motion, instructed the jury that “ under the evidence ” the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.

There are indications in the record of much controversy over the pleadings in the case. Whether the court ruled correctly upon such questions need not be discussed, inasmuch as the instruction that was given was equivalent to an instruction that, under the evidence, no recovery could be had upon any condition of pleadings. The original declaration and the first additional count thereof charged that the defendant by its servants in disregard, etc., “ suddenly caused said train to be given a very violent jerk, by means whereof,” etc. That was a sufficient allegation of negligence. The addition to that allegation of the words, “ by means of the engine being started afresh, or by some other means unknown to plaintiff,” added nothing to the allegation of negligence, and might have been treated as surplusage.

We are aware of an increasing tendency in actions of this kind to go into much greater detail in the declaration than is necessary in stating the manner or particulars of the alleged negligence.

The most approved precedents in cases of actions against carriers for injuries to passengers, allege the negligence in general terms only. Curtis v. Drinkwater, 2 Barn. & Adol. 169 (522 Eng. Com. Law, 79); Carpue v. London & Brighton Ry., 5 Adolph. & Ellis, N. S. 747 (48 E. C. L. 746); North Chicago Street Ry. Co. v. Cotton, 140 Ill. 486.

In this last cited case the first count of the declaration— a most general one-^was approved in the following words:

“ The circumstances of the injury do, in our opinion, give presumptive evidence of at least the specific negligence charged in the first count of the declaration. That charge, as we have seen, is very general, and consists of negligently running and operating its road, and the cars propelled, thereon.”

In 2 Thompson on Negligence, 1241, it is said:

“ It is not necessary to set out the facts constituting the negligence complained of. An allegation specifying the act constituting the injury, and alleging that it ivas negligently and carelessly done, is sufficient.”

Tested by the above rules, the counts of the declaration referred to were sufficient to support the prima facie case made by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ill. App. 636, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavis-v-wisconsin-central-railroad-illappct-1894.