Pioneer Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford

135 Ill. App. 417, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 521
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 6, 1907
DocketGen. No. 4,839
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 135 Ill. App. 417 (Pioneer Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford) 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
Pioneer Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford, 135 Ill. App. 417, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 521 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Willis

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was injured by being caught between two cars of appellant on its tram track near its clay pit east of the city of Ottawa, where he was at work for appellant, and sued appellant to recover damages, and he had a verdict and a judgment. The cause was before us at the October term, 1904. Pioneer Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford, 118 Ill. App. 457. After that decision, there was another trial below, and a judgment for appellee. The case was again before us at the October term, 1905, Pioneer Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford, 125 Ill. App. 352, and afterwards this trial below, resulting in a verdict and judgment for appellee for $5,000 and this appeal.

But one important question on the ruling of the court on the evidence is presented, and that was respecting the attempted impeachment of the witness Eugene Myers, by proof of his conviction of an infamous crime. This question is discussed at length in Fire-Proofing Co. v. Clifford, 125 Ill. App., supra. Before the present trial the parties stipulated that the testimony of the witnesses might be read from either of the former records, and the testimony of the witness Myers was read from the record of the first trial and not from the second. It contained no testimony by Myers that he served a term in the penitentiary under a conviction had in the LaSalle county Circuit Court. Appellee offered in evidence in rebuttal of Myer’s testimony, a judgment showing Myer’s conviction of rape, which is an infamous crime. The court admitted it in evidence over the objection of appellant. Appellant now contends that such ruling was erroneous in three respects. First, the return of an indictment should have been shown. Doubtless this would be true if this conviction could be proved only by the record, but under sec. 1, chap. 51, Hurd’s R. S. 1905, as construed by the Supreme Court in Gage v. Eddy, 167 Ill. 102, it may be proved orally, and the witness compelled to testify thereto. Manifestly then, all Myers could have stated if he had been interrogated on the subject was that he was convicted of the crime of rape in the LaSalle county Circuit Court He would not be able to testify to the fact that the grand jury were impaneled and sworn, and returned an indictment against Mm. We tMnk that, under the section of the act above referred to, it was not necessary to show a return of an indictment.

Second, it is said that this judgment does not show of what Myers was convicted, except that he was found guilty as charged in the indictment. The margin of the title of that record says, “indictment for rape,” and in People v. Murphy, 188 Ill. 144, this is held to be sufficient.

Third, it is said there is no proof that the person so convicted was the witness Myers. The Christian name of the person shown to have been convicted by the record introduced in evidence and the name of the witness Myers was the same. The trial and conviction shown in the record was in LaSalle county, and Myers testified that he lived m LaSalle county. The names are identical. We are of the opinion that the legal presumption is that they were one and the same person.

There was only one instruction given for appellee, and that was on the measure of damages.. Appellant complains that it improperly influenced the jury by authorizing a verdict for any sum not exceeding $20,-000, the amount of the ad damnum in the declaration. In East St. Louis Connecting Railway Co. v. O’Hara, 150 Ill. 580, it is said “Although such reference to the amount of the ad damnum in the declaration is not to be commended, still we do not think that it constituted such error as calls for a reversal of the judgment. That the amount of the ad damnum was the maximum beyond which the jury could not go, is unquestionably a correct legal proposition, and we cannot suppose that any jury of ordinary mtelligence would regard such reference alone as any intimation by the court that the damages to be assessed should reach or approximate that sum. ’ ’ This was followed in Central Railway Co. v. Bannister, 195 Ill. 52, and in Kellyville Coal Co. v. Strine, 217 Ill. 516. As the jury in fact assessed appellee’s damages at $5,000, we do not think they could have been misled or unduly influenced by the instruction.

Appellant offered forty-seven instructions. The rules of law governing the rights of the parties were very simple, and the practice of presenting such a mass of legal propositions in so simple a case cannot be approved. Indeed the apparent object was to induce the court to refuse some erroneously. The first instruction given for appellant and that defining fellow-servants and the instruction defining assumed risk covered substantially every proposition to which appellant was entitled, except those relating to the method of judging the weight of the evidence and like questions. The record shows that the trial court instructed the jury at least twice on every proposition involved in the trial, and the subsequent refusal by the court of many other instructions offered by appellant where the same propositions were repeated again and again in different words, meets our approval. Upon a careful examination, we are unable to find that appellant was deprived of any proposition of law which it was entitled to have given to the jury, but if it was, it should be attributed to the course of counsel for appellant in overwhelming the court with legal propositions. Complaint is made because, of several instructions offered by appellant on a given subject, the court did not select the best, but gave others not so well drawn. This we deem the fault of counsel and not of the court.

No good purpose would be served by a statement in detail of the averments of the declaration. It is sufficient, in our opinion, to say that the only material and contested questions of fact appearing in this record are, whether appellee was injured because of a risk which he assumed; whether he was injured because of his own negligence; whether he was injured, because of the negligence of William Foster, also an employe of appellant, in handling cars upon its tracks; and if so, whether Foster and appellee were fellow-servants, so as to relieve appellant from the consequences of Foster’s negligence. - '

Appellee was severely and permanently injured and the amount of the damages is not open to question if the facts appearing in evidence create a cause of action.

It appears from the evidence that appellee was injured on appellant’s tracks at its clay pit east of the city of Ottawa. It had, at the west end of the clay pit, one main track which led up into the clay pit and a switch track on the north side. Cars were loaded with clay and brought down over the north switch track, passed to the end of the west switch, and then were drawn back by horse a short distance on the main track, and more cars were then brought down from the north switch track and taken east on the main track until a train of eight to fifteen loaded cars was made up, when a motor came from Ottawa and hauled them away. On Monday morning, May 18, 1903, appellee had started to pull with his horse two loaded cars east over the switch on the main track. A ear came down slowly by gravity on the north switch track and struck his car. He turned the horse south so that it did not hit the horse, but it "struck the car, which was not yet away from the place where the switch track and the main track rails ran near together.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 Ill. App. 417, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-fire-proofing-co-v-clifford-illappct-1907.