Mattice v. Klawans

228 Ill. App. 126, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 203
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 16, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,175
StatusPublished

This text of 228 Ill. App. 126 (Mattice v. Klawans) 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
Mattice v. Klawans, 228 Ill. App. 126, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 203 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, Estelle L. Mattice, claiming to have been injured by an automobile owned by the defendant, Nathan N. Klawans, crushing her against a street car, brought suit and obtained a judgment for $5,000. This appeal is therefrom. Suit was instituted on January 8, 1918. The declaration, consisting of two counts, set up: (1) that on October 8, 1917, the deféndant, possessed of and driving an automobile at the intersection of Broadway and Roscoe street, in Chicago, managed it so negligently that, while the plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care, it ran into and seriously injured her; and (2) that while the plaintiff was alighting from a street car at the street intersection, and in the exercise of ordinary care, and the car was standing still and passengers were being discharged, the defendant, in violation of his duty and section 2728 F of the city ordinance, which required him not to pass or approach with his automobile within ten feet of the street car while it was stopped or standing to discharge or take on passengers, negligently drove the automobile within one foot of the street car, where the plaintiff was alighting, and, in consequence, collided with and injured her.

The defendant pleaded the general issue and non-ownership and noncontrol.

At the trial, which was before a jury, the only witness who testified to the circumstances out of which it is claimed the cause of action arose was the plaintiff herself. Her evidence is to the following effect: That on the evening of October 8, 1917, at which time she was fifty-eight years of age and weighing about 180 pounds, she boarded a street car on Broadway, a north and south street, to go to Boscoe street, an east and west street; that the street car stopped on the south side of Boscoe street at the intersection with Broadway; that when it stopped and she was getting off, and while she had hold of the street car with her left hand and was facing north, an automobile belonging to the defendant collided with her right side and hip; that the automobile then backed up and let her loose from the street car; that after the automobile backed, she asked the man at the wheel his name; that at that time there were two men in the automobile ; that she took a book out of her pocket and took down the number of the automobile, which was 207771; that she learned afterwards, in July 1920, that the defendant, Nathan N. Klawans, owned that automobile; that she saw him afterwards — having looked up his residence in the telephone book, and gone out to his house on Geary street — and recognized him as the man who was in the automobile the evening she was injured; that immediately after the collision she went home; that she did not have much pain until she got home and undertook to go upstairs; that she then felt pain in her side and hip; that she went to bed and went to sleep and when she woke up she was in great pain; that the pain was in her side, hip, shoulder and the first finger of her left hand; that the evening of the day after the injury she sent for Dr. Banes, a female doctor, the wife of her attorney, and on the second day after the injury one Dr. Loeser attended and examined her; that she was then taken to the American Hospital, Dr. Banes accompanying her.

She was visited by Dr. Loeser after she got to the hospital; they rubbed her shoulder, hip and back with liniment, and bandaged her around the hips and ribs. She remained at the hospital from October 9 or 10 until November 2, 1917. Dr. Loeser called upon her at the hospital every day. A special cloth belt was made for her which she wóre from November 1 until the last of March, 1918; it went entirely around her body and over her hip and down the back. When she left the hospital she used two crutches and was taken in a taxi to Mrs. Kloess’ home on Lawrence avenue. Before the accident she weighed 182 pounds and the next Spring 147 pounds, and at the time of the trial 145 pounds. Subsequently she left the Kloess place on Lawrence avenue, being carried down from the third floor to a taxi and taken from the taxi to a train in a wheel chair, and went to Hartford, Connecticut to her daughter’s home. When she arrived at Hartford, she was taken from the train in a wheel chair to an automobile and then driven to her daughter’s home and carried up to the third floor and put to bed. She had pain nearly all the time in her hips and side and shoulder. She stayed at her daughter’s from about November 5 or 6,1917, until March, 1918. Sometimes she went out driving in her daughter’s car. Two attendants from a sanitarium would come and carry her down to the car and then again back to her room.

From her daughter’s she went to her brother’s at Binghamton, New York. At that time she moved about on crutches. She stayed at her brother’s until the last of May, 1918. While she was at her daughter’s home and also while she was at her brother’s, physicians attended her. She left her brother’s in May, 1918, and went to her sister’s in Rochester, New York. At her sister’s she used crutches most of the time. She was there for about four weeks and then went to Detroit, Michigan, where she stayed with her husband’s nephew until her daughter came to Detroit in the fall or winter of 1918. She then went to her home and stayed there until April, 1920, and then came to Chicago, and went to Mrs. Kloess’. Since she came back to Chicago she has had pain nearly all the time in her hip, one side, and her shoulder. Four or five years before the injury in question she had two attacks of pneumonia and was treated by Dr. John Davis.

On cross-examination, she testified that at a former trial of her case, which was in progress about a week before, Dr. Loeser was called as a witness; that she does not know the name or whereabouts of the woman who was with her the evening she was injured; that she has never seen her since; that when she came back to Chicago she made unsuccessful inquiries of a number of persons about her; that the woman did live in a two-flat building between Clark and Halsted streets; that she was never there more than twice; that she originally met her at a restaurant where they took supper; that she did not consider that she was acquainted with her; that on the evening in question they had dinner together, on Clark street, and then went and boarded the car together; that the other woman got off at Roscoe street, first, and at the rear end of the car; that she followed her out; that she saw the other woman on the sidewalk after the automobile backed up; that before that she (the witness) screamed and that then quite a number of people came out of the street car, some out on the platform, some out on. the ground; that she saw the other woman was still standing on the sidewalk; that she does not remember that she came over to her or that she asked her to; that when the automobile struck her and pinned her against the street car she felt that she was being crushed and hurt; that it was a sort of numbness ; that when the automobile backed away, she stood in the street with her feet on the ground and was so excited she did not feel any pain until five or ten minutes later when she began to walk; that she asked the boy at the wheel, who seemed about eighteen years of age, his name, but he did not answer; that there was a man at his side who was about forty or forty-five years of age, who is the defendant here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 Ill. App. 126, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattice-v-klawans-illappct-1923.