Miller v. Chicago Transit Authority

223 N.E.2d 323, 78 Ill. App. 2d 375, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 1230
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 28, 1966
DocketGen. 49,962
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 223 N.E.2d 323 (Miller v. Chicago Transit Authority) 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
Miller v. Chicago Transit Authority, 223 N.E.2d 323, 78 Ill. App. 2d 375, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 1230 (Ill. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ENGLISH

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff sustained injury on November 25, 1956, when he was assaulted by two men and pushed onto the tracks from defendant’s subway platform at State and Monroe Streets, Chicago. It was also alleged, pursuant to plaintiff’s theory of liability, that defendant knew or should have known that the platform was a dangerous place, because it had been the scene of previous assaults by vicious persons, thus imposing on defendant a duty to police its platform for the protection of persons such as plaintiff who were awaiting the arrival of defendant’s trains. The alleged failure of defendant to exercise ordinary care in fulfilling this duty is the basis of plaintiff’s claim.

After selection of a jury, opening statements were made. The court then refused to hear evidence offered by plaintiff relating to previous assaults. It should be noted here that the whole question of an offer of proof is always dependent upon a preliminary ruling by the trial judge that he will not admit evidence which one of the parties is seeking to introduce. Without such a ruling, as in the instant case, neither the necessity nor opportunity for presentation of an offer of proof ever comes into existence. Then, when an offer of proof is made, the generalities become merged into the particulars of the specific evidence offered, and the judge is then in a position to determine the materiality and relevancy of whatever actual evidence may be available to the party to prove the point he seeks to establish.

In this case plaintiff had subpoenaed three police officers who were present and prepared to testify to previous occurrences. Plaintiff’s attorney was thereupon required or given an opportunity to make an offer of proof in the form of a statement describing the testimony he proposed to elicit, a formal offer of proof having been waived by defendant. He stated for the record:

The following offer of proof is being made with a waiver of formal proof by way of a witness taking the stand; 1 that if permitted to proceed . . . the plaintiff would produce (three police officers who were attached to the district wherein the occurrence complained of took place, at that time and prior thereto).
These officers would testify of their own knowledge that there were several complaints received over a period of time prior to 11/25/56 as to assaults, robberies and various crimes in and about the platforms in the area of the subway near Monroe and State Street.
Further, Captain E. J. Barry will testify that at that particular time he was the desk sergeant in the First District, and that prior thereto, on at least one occasion, it was necessary to detail a special task force of police to the downtown subway platforms, said special detail being drawn from the outlying area because of particular complaints in the nature previously described and one complaint in particular, by the secretary to the then Governor of the State of Illinois, Adlai Stevenson, who was assaulted in and about one of the platforms in the area.

Defendant objected to the offer of proof, the objection was sustained, and the offered proof was rejected. Rather than attempt to proceed further in this regard, plaintiff elected to stand on his offer of proof, and it was expressly so stated in the judgment order. Therefore, while plaintiff raises technical points concerning the way in which the case was handled by the trial judge, the essential issue before us is the correctness of the court’s ruling on the particular offer of proof on which plaintiff rested his case.

It cannot be disputed that in this type of action it was open to the plaintiff — in fact, it was necessary for the plaintiff as part of his burden of proof — to show actual or constructive notice to defendant of the existence of a dangerous condition at its State-Monroe station platform at the time of plaintiff’s injury. Absent such knowledge, the alleged duty to police the platform at that location would not have been breached because it would not have arisen.

As relating to the question of defendant’s knowledge of prior disturbances which would raise a duty to police this particular station platform, the trial court was clearly in error in its broad preliminary ruling that no evidence of any prior occurrences would be admissible. If the matter had rested there, it might reasonably be argued that it would have been a useless or futile gesture for plaintiff to pursue the proposition further by urging upon the court an offer of proof through which he would make specific the point which up to that time had been stated only in generalities. For authority bearing on this exception to the general rule see, for example, Giddings v. Williams, 336 Ill 482, 168 NE 514, where the Supreme Court found that the attitude of the trial court had been so extremely hostile as to prevent plaintiffs in error from making an offer of proof and that they were therefore excused from doing so. See also Cleary, Handbook of Illinois Evidence, § 7.7, and ILP, Trial, § 44, and cases there cited to the same effect. The result in such a situation is that the ruling of the court, which would ordinarily not be reviewable without an offer of proof, does become so reviewable, and the absence of an offer of proof in such a circumstance is not permitted to work to the injury of the party who was prevented from following the customarily required procedure.

In the instant case, however, the matter did not rest there, and the attitude of the court obviously did not prevent plaintiff from making the offer of proof which he then proceeded to lay before the court. At the conclusion of the offer of proof, the court (as shown by the judgment order) took “the matter under advisement on offer of proof submitted by the plaintiff.” After the court had sustained defendant’s objection to the offer of proof, “the Plaintiff standing on said offer,” the court proceeded to enter judgment. On this record it appears to us clear that the judge’s preliminary erroneous ruling became academic and of no importance whatsoever when the offer of proof was actually made by plaintiff and considered by the court. The issue which then arose, and is now presented for our decision, is whether or not the court was correct in sustaining defendant’s objection to the offer of proof as made. And if the trial judge’s ruling was correct, it is of no consequence that he may have stated a wrong reason therefor, which we think he did. Platz v. Walk, 3 Ill2d 313, 318, 121 NE2d 483; Murphy v. Lindahl, 24 Ill App2d 461, 468, 165 NE2d 340. Unlike an appellant, an appellee’s argument in this court need not be confined to specific objections or points properly raised by him in the trial court. A judgment may be sustained by any argument and on any basis appearing in the record which demonstrates that the judgment was correct, even though such objection or argument had not been advanced at all in the trial court. Merriam v. McConnell, 31 Ill App2d 241, 244, 175 NE2d 293, citing, among other authorities, the leading case of Becker v. Billings, 304 Ill 190, 205, 136 NE 581.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 N.E.2d 323, 78 Ill. App. 2d 375, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-chicago-transit-authority-illappct-1966.