Nosko v. O'Donnell

260 Ill. App. 544, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1210
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 23, 1931
DocketGen. No. 34,723
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 260 Ill. App. 544 (Nosko v. O'Donnell) 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
Nosko v. O'Donnell, 260 Ill. App. 544, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1210 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error by defendant to reverse a judgment for $7,000 in favor of the plaintiff, entered on the verdict of a jury in an action on the case for personal injuries, motions for a new trial, to set aside an answer to an interrogatory and in arrest having been overruled.

The declaration was in six counts, in the first of which plaintiff charged in substance that on September 3,1926, defendant owned, controlled and was driving a certain motor truck on Elston Avenue (a public highway in the City of Chicago, running northwest and southeast) and near its intersection with another public highway, Central Avenue, which ran north and south; that plaintiff was a child of 10 years of age and was riding as a guest in a Ford automobile driven and operated by another person in a northwesterly direction along said Elston Avenue and which turned and was driven in a southerly direction over Central Avenue; that plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, and that defendant so carelessly drove and managed the motor truck that the same ran into the Ford car with great force and violence, injuring plaintiff. Other counts alleged negligence of defendant in driving at a dangerous rate of speed, in driving his truck carelessly on the left of the center of Elston Avenue, in failing to diminish the speed as he approached the crossing and in driving at a speed in excess of 15 miles an hour, contrary to the statute.

The sixth count charged that defendant “wilfully and wantonly drove and operated his said motor truck at a high and dangerous rate of speed, to wit, 25 miles an hour, to the left of the center of said Elston Avenue and up to and across the intersection” without diminishing the speed, sounding a horn or giving any warning.

At the close of the evidence and after giving instructions, the court at the request of plaintiff and over the objection of defendant submitted to the jury this interrogatory: “Was the defendant Charles J. 0’Donnell guilty of wanton and wilful negligence?” The jury returned an affirmative answer to said interrogatory.

Defendant insists that there is no evidence to justify the special finding; that the so-called wilful count will not support a judgment; that the interrogatory was improper in form and not supported by the declaration, and that the court erred in giving and refusing instructions. The last is, in our opinion, the controlling question in the case.

In instructing the jury the court proceeded upon the theory that there was evidence tending to support the sixth count of the declaration, which charged that defendant was guilty of wilful and wanton conduct. At the request of plaintiff the court instructed:

11 The jury áre instructed that as to the charge in the sixth count of the declaration, of wanton and wilful negligence, that an intentional disregard of a known duty necessary to the safety of the person and property of others and an entire absence of care for the life, person and property of others, such as exhibits a conscious indifference to the consequences, makes a case of constructive or legal wilfulness such as charges the person whose duty it was to exercise care with the consequences of a wilful injury, but the jury are further instructed that the court does not mean to express an opinion as to whether the defendant was guilty of negligent conduct as charged in the declaration or whether such negligent conduct, if any, amounts to wantonness and wilfulness but those questions as to negligent conduct and as to whether the negligent conduct would amount wantonness and wilfulness are questions entirely for the jury to determine from all the circumstances, facts and evidence in proof in this case. ’ ’

By another instruction, given at the request of defendant, the court told the jury:

“ . . . ordinary care and prudence is the exercise of the care which every person of common prudence bestows upon his or her affairs or concerns, and the prudence and the vigilance which reason and law require a person to exercise for his or her own safety, must be proportionate to the danger and exercise with reference to the situation and position which such person is about to take or in which such person finds themselves or herself, and in this case, if the plaintiff by the exercise of such degree of care on his part at and just before the time of the happening of the accident in question, would have avoided or escaped the injury, then the plaintiff cannot recover in this.case, and your verdict should be not guilty.”

By another instruction, given at the request of plaintiff, the jury was told in substance that although defendant was guilty plaintiff could not recover unless she was in the exercise of care for her own safety.

It therefore appears that the court at the request of plaintiff instructed the jury upon the theory that there was evidence tending to sustain the sixth count of the declaration, which charged wilfulness and wantonness; that thereafter the court at the request of both parties gave instructions which entirely disregarded that theory, and that these instructions having been given, the court, over the objection of defendant, submitted to the jury a special interrogatory upon the theory that there was some evidence in the record tending to sustain the count charging wilfulness and wantonness. There was no instruction which explained to the jury the fundamental differences, from the viewpoint of the law, of a case based upon a count which charged wilfulness and wantonness and one based upon mere negligence. It is error to submit such an interrogatory or to give such an instruction where there is no evidence from which the jury can reasonably find that defendant is guilty under a wilful and wanton count. Chicago City Ry. Co. v. Jordan, 215 Ill. 390; Aurora, E. & C. Ry. Co. v. Gary, 221 Ill. 29.

Are there facts here from which a jury could reasonably have found defendant guilty as charged in the sixth count? The facts which appear are that the accident occurred on September 3, 1926, at or near the intersection of Elston Avenue and Central Avenue. Defendant at that time was driving an empty two and a half ton truck southeast on Elston Avenue. Plaintiff, a child of 10 years, was riding in the rear seat of a Ford automobile driven by her father. Her father and mother rode in the front seat. The Ford automobile was being driven northwest on Elston Avenue, and the evidence for plaintiff tends to show that the father just as he drove on the crossing stopped for a moment at a cement strip of ground on Central Avenue, held out his hand, sounded his horn and then turned south in Central Avenue at a speed of two or three miles an hour; that he made the turn and was going south in Central Avenue and when just at the south edge of the cement paving the Ford automobile was struck on the right side by defendant’s truck; that the wheels were broken and the automobile pushed sidewise a distance of about 35 feet; that about the time the automobile was turned, the truck was something like 150 or 200 feet away and was proceeding at a speed of 20 to 30 miles an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
260 Ill. App. 544, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nosko-v-odonnell-illappct-1931.