Overstreet v. Illinois Power & Light Corp.

190 N.E. 676, 356 Ill. 378
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1934
DocketNo. 22240. Judgments reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 190 N.E. 676 (Overstreet v. Illinois Power & Light Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overstreet v. Illinois Power & Light Corp., 190 N.E. 676, 356 Ill. 378 (Ill. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause is here on writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Appellate Court for the Third District affirming the judgment of the circuit court of Vermilion county awarding damages to defendant in error, against plaintiff in error, for injuries arising out of a collision of an automobile in which he was riding as a guest, with the rear of plaintiff in error’s street car, commonly known as a snow-sweeper.

Plaintiff in error argues here that there is no evidence tending to show actionable negligence on its part but the injury arose solely out of negligence on the part of defendant in error. Motions to instruct the jury to find defendant, not guilty were tendered after the hearing of plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence and were refused.

The declaration consisted of one original count and two additional counts. The original declaration alleged that while defendant in error was riding as a guest in an automobile going north on Vermilion street, in the city of Danville, at 1:3o A. M. March 22, 1932, and while he was observing due care for his own safety, plaintiff in error by its servants so carelessly and negligently operated the sweeper that the automobile in which defendant in error was riding collided with it, causing injury. The first additional count alleged that a violent snowstorm was raging to the extent that snow surrounded and obscured the sweeper so that a person approaching it from the south or rear could not see or know of its presence until within five feet thereof, by reason whereof there was imminent danger to persons traveling on the street, which plaintiff in error by its servants knew or could by the exercise of due care have known, and that there was no warning light on the sweeper that would give warning to persons approaching from the rear. It was also alleged that plaintiff in error by its servants carelessly and negligently permitted the sweeper to stand on the track without a warning light, and that by reason of such carelessness and negligence the automobile in which defendant in error was riding ran into the sweeper, whereby he was injured. The second additional count alleged that it was the duty of plaintiff in error to have exercised reasonable care to supply warning by a flagman, light or sound, or to otherwise notify persons traveling north along said street of the presence of the sweeper, and that plaintiff in error negligently failed to provide such warning, whereby defendant in error was injured. Plaintiff in error filed general and special demurrers to each count, which were overruled. It then filed pleas of the general issue.

This court will not examine the evidence to determine its weight but in a proceeding of this character will examine the record to determine whether there is any evidence which, taken with its reasonable intendments most favorable to the plaintiff, supports his cause of action. In other words, under the first assignment of error the question before this court is whether there is any evidence fairly tending to establish negligence on the part of plaintiff in error.

It appears from defendant in error’s evidence that on the night of the accident a very severe snowstorm was raging in the city of Danville. Plaintiff in error’s assistant superintendent and another of its employees were operating an electrically propelled snow-sweeper. This sweeper was a specially constructed street car, with rotary sweepers or brooms under either end, used for the purpose of removing snow from the street car tracks. When in operation the front broom brushed the snow to the right side of the track. Each end of the sweeper was equipped with a broom and headlight, and the car could thus be operated in either direction. When in operation the broom and headlight on the then front end only were used. At about 1:3o A. M. the sweeper proceeded north on the east track on Vermilion street to a point just south of the Big Four railroad crossing. As a train was approaching on that railroad the sweeper stopped about 125 feet south of the track, at a point near the convergence of the two tracks into a single track and just south of the place where the railroad gates were let down. Norman Dale, driving an automobile with defendant in error riding as a guest, was proceeding north on Vermilion street driving astride the east rail of the north-bound track. A few seconds after the sweeper stopped for the railroad crossing Dale ran his car into the rear end of it with such impact as to throw defendant in error into the wind-shield, whereby he received the injuries of which he complains. The automobile was driven under the rear end of the sweeper and its motor was forced back toward the body of the car. The automobile became so lodged that it required the assistance of another street car to pull it out.

Defendant in error testified that he was familiar with Vermilion street at the place of the accident and knew that the Big Four tracks crossed that street north of Davis street. He was on the right side of the automobile as Dale drove north. He testified that he was looking out at the side, paying attention to what was along the curb, so that he might warn the driver of any car that was parked out in the street; that the wind-shield in front of him was partly covered with snow, and that the first he knew of the presence of the snow-sweeper was an exclamation from Dale just before the automobile struck. He testified he did not see any light on the south end' of the sweeper, that if there was any there he did not see it, and that there was no one there guarding the sweeper with a lantern, or a watchman with any lights. He testified that the automobile was not running over twenty miles an hour, and that the sweeper was not more than three or four feet away when he first saw it. He also stated that he did not see any lights in the sweeper until he got outside and could see what they ran into. He testified, also, that as they approached the Big Four tracks he heard an engine; that he did not know whether a cloud of smoke was between them and the tracks, but that they had been able, as they drove along, to see objects as they approached them.

Dale testified in substance the same as to the manner of his driving; that he had seen the light on cars along the street, some of which were forty or fifty feet away, and saw the bodies of the cars when he came within twenty feet of them. He testified, also, that the snow was dry, hard, frozen snow and was not wet so as to adhere-to the wind-shield, and that there was no obstruction to prevent his seeing through the wind-shield. Pie also stated that he • was familiar with Vermilion street and the railroad crossing ; that he was driving fifteen or eighteen miles an hour when he heard what he thought was the steam from an engine, and that he slowed down and supposed he was running in the neighborhood of ten miles an hour when he collided with the sweeper. He testified there were no red or white lights or warning lights on the south end of the sweeper; that the lights were burning on his car, and that he had his dimmers on because he could see better. Fie testified that he did not see any lights inside the back end of the sweeper but that there were some windows there. His testimony also was that he could make out objects about ten feet ahead of the automobile. He stated on cross-examination that when he got out of the car he noticed there were lights on the inside of the sweeper. He stated that he could not see them from the rear but did not know why.

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190 N.E. 676, 356 Ill. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overstreet-v-illinois-power-light-corp-ill-1934.