Moore v. Jansen & Schaefer

265 Ill. App. 459, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 795
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
DocketGen. No. 8,517
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 265 Ill. App. 459 (Moore v. Jansen & Schaefer) 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
Moore v. Jansen & Schaefer, 265 Ill. App. 459, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 795 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for damages growing out of injuries causing death to appellee’s intestate.

The declaration, after amendment, consisted of three counts. The first count charged in substance that on September 27, 1930, on hard road route number 95, about one and one-fourth miles southeast of Dallas City, in Hancock county, the defendant was driving and operating a certain truck and trailer attached thereto in a reckless, careless, negligent manner, in that said truck and trailer, with the hopper thereon, were not properly lighted, marked and guarded; that while plaintiff’s intestate, exercising all due care and caution for her own safety, was riding in an automobile upon said hard road number 95, about one and one-quarter miles south and east of Dallas City, by reason of said carelessness, recklessness and negligence, the automobile in which plaintiff’s intestate was riding was struck by said truck and trailer, turned over and knocked off the hard surfaced road and plaintiff’s intestate was then and there injured and died as the result of said injuries.

The second count of the declaration charges in substance that defendant was operating or driving a truck with trailer attached thereto and was moving certain hard road construction equipment and machinery along said highway at one o’clock a. m. in an easterly or southeasterly direction, and that the same was not properly lighted, marked or guarded; that defendant was so carelessly, negligently and recklessly moving said truck, trailer and machinery along said public highway in that they failed to fix proper lights upon said truck, trailer and machinery to warn persons then and there upon said public highway; that said truck, trailer and machinery were large, cumbersome and extended over a large portion of said hard surfaced road and that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to give warning to protect persons then and there driving along said public highway from danger from running into and hitting the same.

The third count of the declaration, after making the same general charges about the hard road, etc., alleges that plaintiff’s intestate was riding as invitee in an automobile operated by one Gibson Strausbaugh, which was being driven in a northerly direction near the residence of the said Leon Vass; that said defendant and the said Gibson Strausbaugh, and each of them, so negligently operated and drove and managed the said motor truck, trailer and road construction machinery and equipment of defendant and automobile of the said Gibson Strausbaugh that by and through said negligence the said motor truck, trailer and road construction machinery and the said automobile collided, and by reason whereof plaintiff’s intestate, while at all times exercising due care and caution, was struck and injured, and as a result thereof died. The declaration also avers the next of kin and the damage in the sum of $10,000.

The particular equipment which appellants were moving on the night of the accident was a large steel hopper used in mixing cement in road construction. When the hopper was in operation it was supported by four steel legs of angle iron six inches by six inches by three-eighths inch thick, and from the ground to the top of the hopper was 24 feet. The hopper at the upper part was 15 feet square. Boiler plates on each side came straight down a distance of four and one-half feet. Below these plates, on the sides, was a steel plate construction which came to a common center or hopper, into which the cement and gravel were gathered for the purpose of mixing. From steel corner post to steel corner post were angle iron braces three inches by three inches by three-eighths inch thick, and also from each corner post were two other braces of angle irons three inches by three inches by three-eighths inch, which went up to the body of the hopper. The hopper was steel construction throughout, was aluminum color and weighed six tons.

What was called in the evidence a “trailer” was devised for transporting the hopper. This trailer consisted of a single axle with two wheels with dual tires. The axle was first made for the semitrailer. Timbers were placed on the semitrailer and fastened to the axle. A part of the legs was taken off the hopper. A red elm tongue eight inches wide and six inches thick was put on the trailer and fastened to an auto truck in front. The hopper was put on these timbers and bolted fast to them. Wheels with dual tires were put on the axle. The hopper was bolted to the tongue and the timbers on the axle. A U-shaped strap iron was put around the rear axle of an autotruck in front, used to pull the semitrailer and fastened to the six-inch by six-inch red elm tongue of the trailer.

The hopper from outside to outside, after it was installed on the semitrailer, was 15 feet wide. From the pavement to the top it was 14 feet high. The axle was as near the center of the hopper as it could be placed so as to keep it balanced. The upper part of the hopper was square. Each face of the upper square was boiler plate, four and one-half feet vertical distance and 15 feet from right to left. The face of the hopper was 15 feet wide in the direction in which it was traveling. From the bottom of the boiler plate the construction ran down into a hopper bottom about six feet long and two feet wide, where the material went through when mixing. There was an angle iron six inches wide on the top edges of the hopper.

When the machine was about to be transported, a running board was devised for men to stand on while in transit. The running board was placed across the front end of the hopper 15 feet in length and about four and one-half feet below the top of the hopper. The body of the autotruck which pulled the semitrailer was nine feet long and the body of the truck was two feet deep. There was no cab on the towing truck. The driver’s seat on the towing truck was on the outside and the body of the towing truck ran the same height from front to back. The height of the towing truck from the top of the body was six feet. The width of the towing truck from the outside wheel to the outside wheel was six feet two inches. From the outside to the outside of the wheels of the semitrailer was 12 feet.

The deceased was riding in a Model “A” Ford sedan at the time the accident occurred, and was returning from LaHarpe and going to. her home, which was near Niota. Two boys, named respectively Strausbaugh and Grigsby, were in the front seat with the deceased and a girl named Wilcox. Strausbaugh was seated on the left side of the front seat, driving •the car. Maggie Moore, the intestate, sat next to him and at her right side sat Grigsby with the Wilcox girl on his lap.

In the back seat there were two other boys and two girls, one boy sitting on the left side of the seat, a girl at his right, a boy at her right and a girl on his lap. Just prior to the time of the accident the truck pulling the hopper was traveling at the rate of 12 miles an hour. The testimony of the witnesses on both sides shows that the car in which the deceased was riding was traveling at a speed of between 35 and 40 miles an hour just prior to the time of the accident:

The facts as recited by appellant are that the Ford truck which preceded the outfit 150 to 200 feet was equipped with ordinary electric lights.

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Related

Graham v. Dressen
10 N.E.2d 843 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
265 Ill. App. 459, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-jansen-schaefer-illappct-1932.