Monroe v. Wear

276 Ill. App. 570, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 298
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 1934
DocketGen. No. 8,793
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 Ill. App. 570 (Monroe v. Wear) 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
Monroe v. Wear, 276 Ill. App. 570, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 298 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Davis

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error, Holland N. Wear, sued out a writ of error directed to the circuit court of McDonough county, to review a judgment of that court rendered against him and in favor of George M. Monroe, defendant in error, for the sum of $15,000 damages assessed by the verdict of a jury finding him guilty of wilful and wanton misconduct which resulted in injury to the defendant in error.

The declaration consists of four counts, the first of which charges general negligence and alleges due care on the part of the plaintiff, but was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, so that the case went to the jury on the three remaining counts, the first of which charged:

That on October 25,1931, the defendant Wear owned a certain Chevrolet automobile and that he invited the plaintiff Monroe to ride with him in his said automobile from the City of Macomb, Illinois, to the City of Davenport, Iowa; that plaintiff accepted, and that they left the City of Macomb in said automobile together with two other persons; that the defendant was driving and operating said automobile upon said journey and that plaintiff was riding as a guest therein; that at a point in Rock Island county upon the route from Macomb to the City of Davenport, and being along State Route No. 3, the said defendant was driving near the town of Reynolds; that said defendant wilfully and wantonly operated, managed and drove said automobile at a place aforesaid so as to cause the same to collide with a certain automobile then and there being driven in a westerly direction upon said State Route No. 3, and as a result of the collision of said automobile, through the wilful and wanton misconduct of the defendant, the plaintiff was thrown with great force and violence and certain parts of his body, to wit: his jaws, arms, shoulders, head, legs and neck struck upon and against certain parts of said automobile and the plaintiff was thrown with great force and violence from said automobile to and upon the highway.

The second of which said counts is similar to the first except that it charges that it was the duty of the defendant in the operation and running of said automobile to use proper care and caution and not to wantonly and wilfully injure the plaintiff, yet the defendant, not regarding his duty in that behalf, wantonly and wilfully and without regard for the safety of the plaintiff ran his said automobile at a speed of, to wit: 60 miles per hour on the left side of the center line of said State Route No. 3 and upon and against a certain other automobile traveling in a westerly direction upon said highway.

The last count, charging wilful and wanton misconduct on the part of the plaintiff in error, is like the first of said counts except that it charges that it was the duty of the defendant to operate his automobile on the right-hand side of the center line of said concrete slab commonly called the right traffic lane, which would be on the south side of said highway, at the place aforesaid, the said concrete slab running in an easterly and westerly direction, and that it became and was the duty of defendant to so operate his said automobile as not to injure the plaintiff through wanton and wilful misconduct, yet the defendant not regarding his duty in that behalf wantonly and wilfully and without regard for the safety of the plaintiff drove his said automobile on the left-hand side of the center line of said concrete slab and onto the left-hand traffic lane thereof ; that at the time and place aforesaid another automobile driven by another person traveling in a westerly direction upon its right-hand side of the center line of said pavement and upon its right-hand traffic lane collided with the said car of the defendant.

Plaintiff avers that, by reason of the collision aforesaid, so caused by the wanton and wilful misconduct of defendant, he was injured, etc.

The parties on the trial of said cause stipulated as to the physical conditions that existed at the time and place of said accident, and which stipulation is in part as follows:

That the collision between the car of the defendant and the car of Virgil Eakman occurred about two and one-fourth miles west of Reynolds, on State Route No. 3, which is a highway paved with concrete of 18 feet in width, with two traffic lanes divided by a black line in the center; that the collision occurred near the west-crest of a depression or swale approximately 1,500 feet wide, from crest to crest, over which said hard surfaced road passed from east to west; that it is approximately 700 feet from the place of the collision to the lowest point on said road at the bottom of said depression or swale and the lowest point of said hard road in said depression is approximately 40 feet below the level of the west crest of said depression; that said Route No. 3 at the place of the collision is on a straight line due east and west from about one mile east of the place of the collision, except for the depression mentioned, and for about one mile west’ of the place of the collision, and the ground over which said road passes is level prairie ground; that an automobile such as a Chevrolet coupe traveling on said road at the lowest point of said depression or swale is out of the line of vision of a person in an automobile on said hard road at a point on said road 200 feet west of the west crest of said depression, so that a person approaching said depression from the west cannot see an automobile on said road at the bottom of said depression from a point 200 feet west of said depression.

It appears from the testimony of the witnesses that the collision between the car owned by Virgil Eakman and the car owned by the plaintiff in error, Rolland N. Wear, and in which the defendant in error was riding, occurred at the west crest of this depression about 700 feet from the lowest point.

At the time of the accident and just prior thereto there were five automobiles within sight of this place, two of these cars approaching from the east, the first driven by Eakman and the other by the witness Swenson, and three of the cars approaching from the west, the first being driven by -the witness Babcock and the next by the plaintiff in error, Wear, and the other being driven by Kathryn Davis. Eakman was alone in his car and Swenson was accompanied by Samuel Moore, and in the car driven by Ben Babcock was the witness Rose, and in the car of the plaintiff in error was his wife, the defendant in error and Zelma Stevens, and in the Davis car there were three persons besides the driver, Mrs. Marietta Davis and a Mr. and Mrs. Morrow.

At the time of the accident the Babcock car was part way down over the hill, the west slope; the occupants of this car did not see the collision but heard the crash. The Davis car was about a block and a half from the scene of the accident and the Swenson car was about a block away and at the bottom of the depression.

Virgil Eakman testified that when I came down the hill on the east side of the depression there were three or four cars coming east and I was going west, and about the time I got to the top of the hill I just passed one car, just got past it and then another car pulled directly in front of me and that is when the accident occurred; that is all I remember until I came to on the bank.

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20 N.E.2d 912 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
276 Ill. App. 570, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-v-wear-illappct-1934.