Mayers v. Smith

25 Ill. App. 67, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 523
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 17, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ill. App. 67 (Mayers v. Smith) 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
Mayers v. Smith, 25 Ill. App. 67, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 523 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Wall, J.

This was an action on the case under the 9th section of the Dram Shop Act.

The declaration alleged that defendants sold and gave intoxicating liquors to David Smith, husband of the plaintiff, which contributed to his intoxication, and in consequence thereof he came to his death, whereby the plaintiff was injured in her means of support. ,

A trial by jury resulted in a verdict of $2,500 for the plaintiff, and the court, after refusing a motion for new trial, rendered judgment thereon.

The record is brought here upon a writ of error. It is alleged that the evidence does not show with such clearness as to support the verdict, that deceased came to his death in consequence of his,intoxication, nor that he obtained liquor from defendants, or either of them, and that, admitting liquor was obtained by him from defendant Miller, it does not appear that it could have contributed so substantially to his intoxication as to render him liable in any event.

These questions of fact have received our attentive consideration, for they were urgently pressed in the oral argument as well as in the printed briefs. It seems to be reasonably apparent from all the evidence, that Smith was so far intoxicated on the last night of his life as to lose his road homeward, and that while in this condition he fell from a high embankment into a shallow stream of water, where he was found the next morning lying on his face, dead. It is probable death was produced by drowning, as no severe wounds or bruises were discovered. He left the shop where he was emiployed as a journe)rman tailor, in the City of Bloomington, about 5 o’clock in the afternoon of October 5th, with the sum of §5. He paid $3 to one Parker and a small sum at a meat shop, and when found the morning of the 6th, he had 25 cents on his person.

According to the testimony of Dunn, he was seen about 6 o’clock in the afternoon, stepping off the sidewalk in front of Miller’s saloon, in which place he drank whisky a few minutes afterward. He was somewhat intoxicated when Dunn first saw him, and although this witness tried to get him to go to his home, he did not succeed. He finally gave Dunn the meat he had purchased for his supper, and, persisting in his refusal to go home, Dunn left him.

He was found soon afterward at the saloon of Mayer, the other defendant, where he remained for some time, leaving there a little before 8 o’clock in company with Bowen, another tailor, considerably intoxicated. The evidence of the plaintiff tends to show that he drank whisky three or four times while at Mayer’s saloon. About 11 o’clock he was seen going in the direction of the place where he lost his life, having come from the direction of Mayer’s saloon somewhat under the influence of liquor. This was the last time he was seen alive.

All the circumstances tend to show that he was so intoxicated that he failed to go home at the usual hour for supper; that he continued to drink and that he did not finally start homeward until the saloons were required to close for the night. The details of the testimony, which can not now be referred to, are consistent with this view, and the whole evidence considered, there was enough to warrant the jury in believing that his death was due directly to his intoxication. That he was in the saloons of the defendants is not denied, but it is seriously and stoutly controverted that he drank anything at either place. Upon this point the conflict was settled by the jury in favor of the plaintiff, and without referring to the particulars of it, we think there was enough in the proof to justify the conclusion. The liquor was obtained at Miller’s, if at all, four or five hours before he.was last seen alive, and it is strongly insisted this could not have contributed to the fatal result. The statute imposes liability where the intoxication is caused in whole or in part by the liquor furnished by the defendant. Conceding as a reasonable construction that the liquor so furnished must have contributed in some direct and substantial, though possibly slight degree, it seems apparent that if he did drink there, as testified by Dunn, being then somewhat intoxicated, and that he kept on in the same course, as shown by the other testimony, the contribution of the defendant, Miller, is sufficiently direct and substantial to bring him within the scope of the law.

It follows that we can not interfere with the j udgment, upon the ground that the evidence fails to support it.

It is also urged that the court erred in refusing to permit the defendants to challenge peremptorily two of the jurors. In impaneling the jury, the plaintiff and defendants had each accepted two panels of four each. After the third panel of four had been passed on and accepted by the plaintiff, but before it had been accepted by the defendants, and before any of the jury had been sworn, the defendants asked leave to challenge peremptorily two of the jurors who were in the first and second panels, which had been accepted by both sides, the defendants having up to that time used but one peremptory challenge. The court refused this request and defendants excepted.

The propriety of this ruling depends upon the construction to be given See. 21, Ch. 78, R. S., which reads as follows • “Upon the impaneling of any jury in any civil cause now pending or to be hereafter commenced in any court in this State, it shall be the duty of the court, upon the request of either party to the suit, or upon its own motion, to order the full number of twelve jurors into the jury box, before either- party shall be required to examine any of the said jurors touching their qualifications to try any such causes; provided, that the jury shall be passed upon and accepted in panels of four by the parties, commencing with the plaintiffs.”

In the case of Sterling Budge Co. v. Pearl, 80 Ill. 251, the Supreme Court had occasion to consider this section, and held it required that there should, at all times while the jury xvas being impaneled, be twelve jurymen in the box, and though the point xvas not before the court for decision, it was remarked by the court: “ When the panel of four is accepted by both parties they become a part of the jury, and a panel of four more is called up, and the same process is repeated.” This can not, of course, be regarded as a judicial construction upon the point noxv at issue, because it was not involved in the case then before the court, but we are of the opinion it is the sound construction, and that the trial court ruled properly in the case at bar. Many of the references of counsel are irrelevant, and none of them, so far as we are advised, is directly in point, because none of them arose upon a statute like ours. It is conceded, if the two panels had been sxvorn as they were accepted, it xvould have been too late to exercise the peremptory challenge. We suppose the practice is not uniform in this State as to the sxvearingof the jury by panels as accepted, or the xxdiole twelve after the three panels have been filled by acceptance on both sides.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ill. App. 67, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayers-v-smith-illappct-1887.