Piechalak v. Liberty Trucking Co.

208 N.E.2d 379, 58 Ill. App. 2d 289, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 806
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 28, 1965
DocketGen. 50,069
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 208 N.E.2d 379 (Piechalak v. Liberty Trucking Co.) 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
Piechalak v. Liberty Trucking Co., 208 N.E.2d 379, 58 Ill. App. 2d 289, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 806 (Ill. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DRUCKER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff appeals from a verdict and judgment in favor of defendants, leave to appeal having been granted pursuant to section 76 of the Civil Practice Act. (Ill Rev Stats 1963, c 110, § 76.)

Plaintiff contends that the verdict was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and that she was prejudiced by trial errors.

The accident took place between 8:45 and 8:55 p. m. on January 18, 1960, about 150 feet south of Archer Avenue on Pulaski Eoad in the northbound lane. The area was primarily commercial and the only structure on the southeast corner was an Oklahoma gas station.

Plaintiff, Jo Ann Piechalak, nine years old at the time of the occurrence, testified that on that evening the weather was “bad . . . windy, cold and snowing”; that she accompanied “my mother, sister (Patricia) and a man friend of my mother” to a bowling alley on Archer Avenue near Pulaski Eoad; that after they left the alley, while her mother and her companion were getting the car, she and her sister went to a nearby telephone booth (on the southwest corner) where “we were playing around”; that she (plaintiff) decided to get some candy. Plaintiff testified that:

I left the telephone booth and started to cross the street. I looked both ways from the curb and started to run across the street. ... I didn’t see any vehicles coming. I started to run across the street. My sister didn’t say anything to me and I don’t remember turning my head back. I’m sure the front of the truck come in contact with my body.

Plaintiff’s older sister (Patricia, age thirteen at the time of the accident) testified that while they were at the telephone booth “my sister then decided to go for some candy across the stréet”; that plaintiff “left the booth and stopped at the curb before she started to cross Pulaski. She then ran across the street.” She further testified that “Jo Ann looked both ways before crossing the .street”; that the “weather conditions . . . were very bad and visibility was rather poor” but that “you could see 2 blocks in either direction.”

Plaintiff’s occurrence witness, Thomas J. Sandlin, testified:

The lighting at the corner was very good. Visibility was pretty good. I was standing on the southwest corner of Pulaski and Archer awaiting a southbound bus and happened to be looking South. I saw these two small girls playing, kind of milling around the phone booth which is approximately 75 feet south of where I stood. The smaller one of the two ran out to the curb and stepped over the curb a couple of steps looking back over her shoulder as though she were in conversation with the other and then she started running across Pulaski Road toward the south entrance to the Oklahoma Station. As she made progress, I observed the big truck coming. When I saw the truck, the little girl was half way across the street. The truck was somewhere between the railroad track and the gas station driveway when I observed him. The truck and girl came in contact. I do not know what part of the girl was struck, but she cleared the left front wheel and fender, about the center of the cab. She went down, the truck went over her and she wound up in a slumping position on the pavement under the dolly wheels. She was a little to the left of the center of the tractor trailer, almost in the center. She was slumping in a heap, like. The driver came to an immediate stop and ran around the front end of the cab to the little girl. I noticed no other traffic around at that time.
The truck was going about 15 to 25 miles per hour. The truck went about 10 to 15 feet after striking the little girl.

Defendant presented Stanley Boucek who testified that while on the east side of Pulaski Avenue:

I observed two little girls running in and out of the telephone booth and the traffic coming down Pulaski. I then heard loud voices from the older girl saying, “Don’t go, don’t go,” as the little one started to run across the street. I then saw the truck coming when the girl was half the way across Pulaski.

However, he testified that he did not see the impact. Defendant’s driver Marvin Lembke testified:

It was misty night with rain and snow. I had my windshield wiper going. When I crossed the tracks I slowed down. I was in second gear. I was going from 5 to 7 miles per hour. ... I proceeded north with a view of the intersection of Archer and Pulaski. I was about 300 feet from the light when it started to change. There was no traffic around me. When I saw the light it had turned red. As I proceeded on I heard a scream and I glanced around to my left and saw the little girl upon the sidewalk screaming. And I turned around back and saw the other little girl running toward my tractor. She was over a foot or two away. At that time I applied my brakes. At that time I was going 5 miles per hour. My windshield wipers were working. My left window was part way down from habit. When I saw the girl I jammed on my brakes. I stopped in 4 to 5 feet. I didn’t hear the little girl collide with the side of the truck. I stopped the truck and ran to underneath the trailer. I saw the little girl. She was approximately between the tractor wheels and the dolly wheels.

Plaintiff contends that the jury verdict and judgment are against the manifest weight of the evidence. In Roberts v. City of Rockford, 296 Ill App 469, 16 NE2d 568, the court, in affirming a judgment for the defendant,, stated at page 472:

A frequent source of accidents arise in cases where children, in response to their childish impulses, attempt to run across a street in front of approaching traffic, when there is neither time nor space enough to enable them to cross or to enable the driver of motor vehicles to avoid running into them. The fact that such an accident occurs, should not of itself create an inference of negligence on the part of the driver, since the fact is just as consistent with the conclusion that the injury took place through the indiscretion of the child as through the negligence of the driver. In such cases to justify a recovery, there must be evidence of negligence, furnished lay the testimony of eyewitnesses, or fairly deducible from the circumstances under which the accident took place. Where a driver appears to have been proceeding in his own traffic lane and in a lawful and orderly manner, he should not be held liable for injuries received by a child who suddenly runs in front of the machine so that the driver is powerless to avoid the injury. Morrison v. Flowers, 308 Ill 189, 197; Zink v. Breese Grain Co., 260 Ill App 281, 283; annotations 65 ALR p 211.

These sensible observations are even more relevant to the street and traffic conditions existing today than they were when written in 1938. And they are particularly pertinent to the case at bar because the likelihood of a child running across a street could hardly have been anticipated in a nonresidential area at nigbt. Applying tbe rule of Roberts, snpra, to tbe instant case we find tbat tbe verdict and judgment are not contrary to tbe manifest weight of tbe evidence. Ulrich v. Rickert, 17 Ill App2d 185, 190, 149 NE2d 341.

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Bluebook (online)
208 N.E.2d 379, 58 Ill. App. 2d 289, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piechalak-v-liberty-trucking-co-illappct-1965.