Malmgren v. Aurora, Elgin & Chicago Railroad

193 Ill. App. 241, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 627
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 9, 1915
DocketGen. No. 6,014
StatusPublished

This text of 193 Ill. App. 241 (Malmgren v. Aurora, Elgin & Chicago 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
Malmgren v. Aurora, Elgin & Chicago Railroad, 193 Ill. App. 241, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 627 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On Sunday August 17,1913, at some time near noon, August Malmgren was forcibly removed from a street car operated by the Aurora, Elgin & Chicago Eailroad Company. He brought this suit to recover damages for the injuries he claimed to have sustained thereby. There was a jury trial, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence a verdict was directed and rendered for defendant. A motion by plaintiff for a new trial was denied, defendant had judgment and plaintiff appeals.

In fact, appellant was ejected twice on that day from cars operated by appellee. The testimony of plaintiff, in chief, was confined to the second event, about noon. Appellee cross-examined appellant as to the first expulsion that day and appellant argues that this was error. Appellee seeks to justify this on the ground that one of the two counts of the declaration is for the first expulsion and the other for the second. In common-law pleading a plaintiff often files more than one count for the same cause of action, stating it differently in the second count from the first, and in the second count avers that this was another car or train, or accident, or promissory note, when in fact there was but one cause of action, and this is recognized practice. Therefore, notwithstanding the use of the word “other” in the second count, appellant had a right to confine his attempted recovery to the second assault and to rely upon each count of the declaration as describing that assault. It is the general American rule that the cross-examination shall be confined to the direct. Jones on Evidence, sec. 820, and following sections. Yet more latitude is allowed in the cross-examination of a party, and also such a cross-examination may be allowed as tends to show the interest of the witness, and such prior events may often be gone into if they explain or lead up to the occurrence which, is the cause of the suit. Hanchett v. Kimbark, 118 Ill. 121, and other cases. Besides, this case was not decided by the jury, but by the court, and it is obvious that the action of the court would not have been different if the cross-examination had not covered the prior event. Certainly there was no reversible error in permitting that cross-examination in this case.

Appellee then operated a street railway known as the “Downer Place Line.” Downer Place runs east and west. At LeGrande Boulevard the railway turned south upon that street. The first street south of Downer Place was Garfield Avenue, the next, Park Manor, and the third, Kensington Place. Garfield Avenue was the end of actual operations on that line except as hereinafter stated. The company had laid ties and rails to extend said track to Kensington Place. At remote intervals of time a car had gone south beyond Garfield Avenue and had discharged passeng’ers at Kensington Place. At that time appellant lived near the comer of LeGrande Boulevard and Kensington Place. A number of other people lived in that vicinity. On Sunday morning appellant took the car at Garfield Avenue and went down town and bought a newspaper and then took a return car and, as he paid his fare, he told the conductor he wished to go to Kensignton Place. The conductor made no reply. The car stopped at Garfield Avenue and notice was given for every one to get out, and soon thereafter the car started on its return trip to the center of town. Appellant stayed on the car. So did a number of other persons, who lived in his vicinity. The conductor called upon appellant for his fare and he refused to pay, saying that he had told the * conductor that he wanted-to go to Kensington Place and that he would not get off until he was taken to that street. The same thing occurred with other people who lived in his vicinity. The conductor finally, during his return trip, reached the barn and took the car into the barn and left it there, and all those who had refused to pay left and went away except appellant. Appellant boarded another car bound down town and refused to pay, and before he reached that end of the line the conductor, the motorman and two policemen took him off the car, against his utmost resistance, during which removal a window in the yestibule was broken and appellant received some wounds and bruises. He then took another outward bound car with another conductor, paid the conductor his fare, saying he wished to go to Kensington Place, and when G-arfield Avenue was reached and the passengers were notified that that was the end of the route, he and one friend remained on the car. Soon after the car started back the conductor asked appellant for his fare. He refused to pay, on the ground that he had paid to go to Kensington Place and that he would not get off until the car took him there. The conductor told him that he must pay or leave the car. He refused to do either. The conductor stopped the car, called the motorman and two passengers to his assistance, and they removed appellant from the car. Appellant’s counsel- say that he made but a passive resistance. He did not strike or kick any one and no one struck or kicked him, but he made an exceedingly active resistance. The aisle in the car was narrow. He caught hold of the seat handles and held on with all the strength he had. He caught his foot around the supports of the seats. It was an old car and the doors and vestibule were narrow. He braced himself against them, and four men could not get hold of him very well, and they had very great difficulty in removing him. In his testimony as to his former removal froih the car he manifested pride in his strength and in the inability of the conductor to loosen his hold upon the seats. At this second occurrence a window in the vestibule was again broken. After they had him in the door of the vestibule he was able to place his arms in such a position that it was very difficult to get him out. Finally, the conductor, who stood upon the ground, caught hold of his legs and pulled them out from under him and he fell on the car step and was then removed. Two of the men held him on the ground until the car started and then ran and caught the car. He had not had his coat on while in the car. It was thrown out to him after the car started. He walked home, attended to some matter about his horses, went to bed, sent for a doctor and was treated several times, and then began this suit. The doctor found scratches and bruises on various parts of his face and body, especially upon his back, and two cuts upon his back, and extracted two pieces of glass from his back.

The declaration charged that appellant was a passenger on said car and that, while he was lawfully thereon and still a passenger thereon and conducting himself in a peaceable and orderly manner, appellee’s servants with force and arms, without right or provocation, wantonly, wilfully, carelessly and negligently assaulted him. Appellee contends that he was not a passenger and was not lawfully on the car, and that what appellee'@ did was not done without right, nor wantonly and wilfully, but in discharge of a legal right, and that therefore plaintiff cannot recover because he has not proved his declaration. This position would have great force if appellee had filed only the general issue, but it also filed a plea of molliter manus imposuit, to which appellant replied that appellee of its own wrong, and without the cause alleged in said second plea, committed said several trespasses; and thereby an issue was tendered whether more force was used in ejecting appellant from said car than was necessary, and appellant strongly contends that upon that question of fact the evidence required that the cause should be submitted to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Ill. App. 241, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malmgren-v-aurora-elgin-chicago-railroad-illappct-1915.