McInerney v. Chicago City Railway Co.

177 Ill. App. 630, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1236
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 4, 1913
DocketGen. No. 16,912
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Ill. App. 630 (McInerney v. Chicago City Railway Co.) 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
McInerney v. Chicago City Railway Co., 177 Ill. App. 630, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1236 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for four thousand dollars against the appellant for negligently causing the death of Dennis J. Mclnerney.

The appellant had a car barn facing north on 39th street between State street and Wabash avenue, Chicago. In the front of the barn on 39th street were three ear entrances, each twenty feet or more wide and through each of which were two car tracks. These tracks curved from the main lines on 39th street until they were about eighteen feet inside of the said barn, when they then extended straight north and south parallel to each other inside the barn. At the northwest corner of the barn was a sand room, and next east and adjacent thereto was an oil room. The east side of the oil room was a brick wall extending on a slight angle from the front of the barn about eighteen or twenty feet south and a little easterly. At the northeast and southeast corners of said rooms were iron posts. Just east of the oil room was the westerly of the said car entrances and through which the westerly track curved from the main line at a point on 39th street west of said entrance. This entrance track was so close to the said posts and the east wall of the oil room that the appellant’s large cars running on said track barely cleared the said posts, and when partly in the barn on the said curve would come up to within five to eight inches of the said wall. The decedent, in passing out of the barn, was caught between the said w;all and an incoming car and so badly crushed that he died immediately thereafter.

The appellant insists that the proof fails to show it to be guilty of the negligence charged and also that the decedent was clearly guilty of contributory negligence.

The appellee called two witnesses who gave testimony in relation to the accident. The first was the motorman who operated the car in question, but was not at the time of the trial employed by the appellant. He testified, among other things, that the said car was about fifty feet long and nine or ten feet wide; that he came east on 39th street and turned into the barn on said westerly track, sounding his gong and going at the rate of three miles an hour; that he did not see the decedent, and the first he knew of the accident was when he heard a yell; that he thereupon stopped his car, within two or three feet, and the front end of the car was then about thirty feet past the oil room; that he then looked back and the decedent was lying on his back about three feet from the track and about two and a half feet south of the oil room. The other witness, James Mikitize, gave most of his testimony through an interpreter. It is often inconsistent, and in many respects it is difficult to determine exactly what he did mean. On an examination of the record, giving the appellees the most favorable version it is susceptible of, it is on the material points in substance as follows: That he was working for the appellant at the time of the accident, but not at the time of the trial; that about nine months after the accident he was laid off and told to return in thirty days, but did not return; that just south of the sand room was a coal room, and south of and adjacent to the coal room was the wash room, which would be southwest of the oil room; that he was in the wash room with the decedent and he saw the decedent pass out of the wash room and go toward the door, walking slowly; that he first saw the car just as the decedent passed the post at the southeast corner of the oil room; that the bell on the car was ringing and it was going pretty fast, about four to five miles an hour; that when the decedent had passed the post about three or four feet, and when about a foot back of the front vestibule, the car struck him and crushed him against the post; (he also testified that the decedent walked about six, seven or eight steps past the post before he was struck by the car); that the westerly rail was about two feet from the wall, with just enough space for the car to pass, and that it cleared the said post by about five inches; that there were no signs warning them of danger at the place in question; that the employees at the barn went in and out of the entrance in question and at that time of the evening cars came into that door every two or three minutes and sometimes oftener.

In behalf of the appellant the conductor and three workmen testified in relation to the accident, all of the workmen testifying through an interpreter. The conductor testified that the car ran into the barn at the rate of about two miles an hour, and the car bell was ringing continuously; that the headlight on the front of the car was lit and also lights were burning inside the car, but he was at the rear of the car and did not see the decedent until after the accident. The workman, Joseph Zarumba, a sweeper about the barn, testified that he was about fifteen or. twenty feet south of the corner post and saw the accident; that the decedent started out on the run, made a turn at the post and ran in by the wall as the car came in; that the car was coming very slowly; the bell was being rung and there were lights in the car; that about the middle of the car struck the decedent when about three feet from the post; that he “hollered” at the decedent when he ran around the post; that the car cleared the post about six or seven inches. The other workman, Gregor Grinevesky, testified that he was about ten or fifteen feet south of the said post and saw the accident; that the car came into the barn very- slowly and he thought that the bell was ringing; that the decedent started out on a run and ran in between the car and the wall; that “it was about the third part of the car that pressed him,” and at that time he was close to the corner of the oil room; that sometimes a car went in that entrance every minute. The other witness, Frank Damisky, testified that his work was wiping cars; that he stood just south of the oil room and saw the accident; that the car came in very slowly and the bell was ringing; that the decedent ran out and was going fast; that witness “hollered” at him when he turned the corner of the oil room; “that the car when it came in was away and then afterwards it straightened up and pressed him to the wall;” that about the middle of the car struck him when close to the post, and the car was ten or fifteen feet in when decedent went between it and the room; that sometimes cars came in those doors every two or three minutes.

The accident was about six o’clock in the evening of October 1, 1907. The decedent had been working for the appellant about the said barn for five days. He was forty years old and a cooper by trade, and so far as can be determined by the record was of ordinary intelligence. The location of the tracks, the posts and the wall and the situation, with cars coming in and going out of the barn on the said track, were open and apparent. The appellees argue that there is a difference between knowledge of the situation and knowledge of the dangers. That is true; but in a situation of the nature shown in this case it is apparent that a knowledge of the conditions means a knowledge of the dangers. Any ordinarily prudent man with knowledge of the proximity of that track to the posts and wall would certainly know that to get between a car and the wall or one of said posts would be extremely dangerous. Two of the workmen recognized the dangerous position of the decedent the instant they saw him turn the corner and called to him. We think the decedent must, in the very nature of the situation, have known and understood the danger.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. App. 630, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcinerney-v-chicago-city-railway-co-illappct-1913.