Pittman v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad

83 N.E. 431, 231 Ill. 581
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 N.E. 431 (Pittman v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad) 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
Pittman v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad, 83 N.E. 431, 231 Ill. 581 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On March 18, 1905, Harry M. Pittman was the conductor of a local freight train of the appellant, Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, making trips each week day from Momence north to Dalton and back. He had a crew of an engineer, fireman and three brakemen. On the morning of that day he went north as usual from Momence, and at Grant Park was required to set two cars on the sidetrack,—one, a car of coal, to be set by the side of the boiler room of the Curtis brickyard plant, and the other, a car of wood, to be left at a wood-pile south of the boiler room. The main track ran nearly north and south, and the sidetrack left the main track some distance south of the boiler room and curved to the east and then north and ran by the west side of the boiler room, in which there were windows through which the coal was to be shoveled. The track at the boiler room was elevated three or four feet above the natural surface of the ground and it ended just north of the boiler room, at a bumping-post. The two rails at the north end had been turned up and bent so as to come together, and were fastened to the post. About four weeks before that time the bumping-post had been knocked out of place toward the north-east, which had pulled the west rail from its connection with the rail south of it. The rails had been fastened together at the ends with fish-plates on each side and bolts running through the rails. Pulling the rails apart left a vacant space of three or four feet on the west side, and sticks of cordwood were thrown across the track in that space. Just west of this vacant space in the rail there was a water tank standing on posts near the track. The engine was headed north, and pushed five cars, with the car to be left at the boiler room in front, up quite a steep grade .towards the boiler room. The engine was small and at first was not able to push the cars up the grade. The engineer backed down for a fresh start, and after getting the sandbox to working made a second attempt, using all the force he could. Pittman was standing on the first coal car at the north end, and when about two hundred feet from the bumping-post he gave the engineer a signal to stop. There was not room on the side of the car next to the boiler room for a person to pass through, and he went forward on the coal car and got down on the west side, standing with one foot on the oil-box and holding on to the side of the car. He gave repeated signals to the engineer to stop and a brakeman was also energetically giving such signals, but the cars did not begin to slow down until within perhaps one hundred and fifty feet of the bumping-post, and they were still moving when they passed the boiler room. When the wheel on the west side struck the open space the car left the track and turned toward the water tank on the west. The trucks were stopped and the bumping-post was knocked down, but the body of the car went three or four feet beyond the post. Pittman was caught between the side of the car and a post of the water tank and was killed. He left the appellee, his widow, and a child was born about forty days after his death. Appellee was appointed administratrix, and brought this suit in the circuit court of Kankakee county to recover damages resulting from his death. Upon a trial there was a general verdict finding the défendant guilty and assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $5000, and a special finding that the deceased did not know of the condition of the track and bumping-post before he started to place the cars at the boiler room. On appeal to the Appellate Court for the Second District the judgment was affirmed, and this further appeal was prosecuted.

At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant moved the court to dismiss certain counts of plaintiff’s declaration, and the motion was denied. There were seven counts in the declaration, which.charged the defendant with liability on various grounds, and it is now contended that the court erred in refusing to dismiss all of the counts except those that charged that the track was defective and the rails pulled apart, for the reason that there was no evidence to sustain any of the counts except those making such charges. The only counts which the evidence tended to' sustain were those which alleged that the rails were pulled apart and the track was thereby rendered unsafe, and when the motion was made the attorney for plaintiff stated that the only claim of liability was on account of the track being defective and out of repair for so long a time that the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, could have discovered the defect. The court, in overruling the motion to dismiss part of the counts, said that if, in the judgment of the' attorneys for the defendant, the evidence was insufficient to support any particular count or counts of the declaration they might present instructions raising that question as to such counts, and the attorneys did not present any such instruction. Counsel say that the provision of the Practice act that the defendant may apply to the court to instruct the jury to disregard a faulty count or counts applies only to counts that do not state a good cause of action, but that the court ought to dismiss counts which are not sustained by evidence. The first part of the proposition is correct, but there is no practice by which the court is either authorized to dismiss counts of a declaration or to instruct the jury orally respecting them. A plaintiff may dismiss a suit or withdraw a count or counts, but the court is not authorized to dismiss particular counts, and can only dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction, want of prosecution, disobedience to some order of the court or for some other recognized cause. If there is no evidence fairly tending to prove the cause of action alleged in a particular count or counts, so that a judgment based thereon could not be sustained for want of evidence to support it, the proper practice is to present a written instruction to the court, which it would be the duty of the court to give.' The court did not err in denying the motion.

Counsel next argue that the condition of the track was not the proximate cause of the accident, which is a question of fact finally settled by the judgment of the Appellate Court. If the engineer, as a matter of fact, was guilty of negligence in the rate of speed and the manner in which he handled the cars it would not relieve the defendant from liability for its negligence in respect to the track. Negligence of the engineer concurring with that of the defendant would not bar a recovery. Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Laack, 143 Ill. 242; Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. Gillison, 173 id. 264.

But one instruction was given at the request of the plaintiff, and it directed a verdict finding the defendant guilty if the jury should find the facts therein stated to have been proved by a preponderance of the evidence. The instruction was quite lengthy anti it is criticised by counsel in many particulars. One objection made is, that it stated as one element of the hypothesis of fact that the track was defective or unsafe for so long a space of time as would have enabled the defendant, or its agents whose duty it was to keep said track in repair, to have learned of such defect by the use of ordinary diligence, and did not allow further time to make repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E. 431, 231 Ill. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittman-v-chicago-eastern-illinois-railroad-ill-1907.