President & Board of Trustees v. Senger

34 Ill. App. 223, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 231
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 223 (President & Board of Trustees v. Senger) 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
President & Board of Trustees v. Senger, 34 Ill. App. 223, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 231 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, J.

This was an action in case brought by appellee against appellant to recover for injuries she received from falling upon one of the sidewalks of appellant in the night time. The declaration alleges that a certain portion of the sidewalk along the north side of Washington street opposite a lot owned by one Zschaek, was permitted by the defendant to be torn up and to become filled up with loose boards, stones, stumps, brick-bats, etc., and so remained for a long time so as to become dangerous and unfit for use by persons going that way, and that while plaintiff was passing along and on the walk about ten o’clock in the night time, going to her home, using due care, she unavoidably stumbled and fell over some of those obstructions, breaking one of her legs below the knee, from which injury she was, for a long time, confined to her bed and suffered great pain, etc. She alleged the defendant guilty of negligence in allowing the walk to be torn up and remain in that condition without repairing it. The plea was not guilty.

A trial was had, resulting in a verdict for appellee for §1,500, upon which the court, after overruling a motion for a new trial, gave judgment for appellee against appellant. Appellant now brings the case here on appeal, and assigns for error that the verdict is against the evidence and the law, and that the court erred in the admission of evidence and in instructing the jury.

The material facts, as they appeared on the trial and are disclosed in this record, are substantially these:

In the spring and summer of 1886, Mr. Zschack was engaged in building a house on his lot Apposite the place where appellee was injured. In April, he was allowed to take up the board sidewalk in front of his lot and set it up out of the way for the purpose of enabling him to raise the grade of his lot. as well as the sidewalk, which seemed to be somewhat below the surrounding land. After this walk was taken up the grade of the lot was raised, and the place where the sidewalk had been, was filled up with gravel and cinders so as to raise its surface even with the level of the lots. At the time of the injury, the proof is overwhelming, that the whole length of the sidewalk which had been taken up was replaced with gravel and cinders, and that the top of the walk was dressed or covered with cinders and that the walk was about four feet wide and smooth, free from holes or obstructions of any kind, except the ordinary size of cinders and small loose gravel stones, which was a part of the gravel used in-grading the lot and making the bed of the walk. At the corner of the lot at the crossing of Jackson and Washington streets, near the corner of Zschack’s lot, was a lamp-post with two arms, the lamps upon which were burning on the night of the accident and right on the line of the walk, and but a rod from where plaintiff fell and was hurt. At the point where appellee stepped from the street crossing to the sidewalk there is a step down from four to six inches to the level of the walk. Outside of the line of the walk there had been stones and bricks and lumber piled during the progress of building the house and occasionally a brick-bat or small stone would get on this walk when they were carried over it to the house, but the building material was not piled on the line of the walk nor permitted to remain there by the builders. While some of the witnesses testify that at some times before the accident they saw the sidewalk covered with stones and brick and lumber and saw them piled up on the line of the walk, yot the great weight of the evidence is the other way, and to the effect that this wa'k was kept reasonably clear and safe for everybody to walk upon.

On the night of July 26, 1886, appellee, in company with her little girl, was going home from a neighbor’s about ten o’clock, where she had been spending the evening, and as she swears, stepped, as she thought, and tripped her foot against something, and stumbled, and her foot got onto a stone or something of that kind, and her foot doubled under and she fell and broke her leg.

She says she saw no obstruction in the walk; her husband, who came for her to assist her home, does not speak of seeing anything upon the walk that night, although he testifies to seeing stones and brick scattered around there next morning, and in response to a leading question of counsel, he says that such stones and brick-bats were on the walk. When appellee fell she says she was only five or six steps from the corner where the lamp was burning. She says she had not been along that walk before that spring.

This house and those lumber piles, stone, brick and the usual materials used in the erection of the house were in plain sight of her house all summer. She lived on the block next to the one where the accident occurred. She herself admits the street lamp was lighted and burning, though dimly, and she says within a rod of where she stumbled and fell. From her own testimony it is very doubtful whether she was using that degree of care necessary to enable her to recover even if the city had been guilty of negligence. There is not a shadow of proof in this record that there was any obstruction on this sidewalk except a few loose brick-bats and- some small stones not larger than a man’s hand, and the great preponderance of proof is that not even these obstructions were there. At most they were only such obstructions as might be there one hour and off the next. hTor is there any proof that the city put them there or knew they were there or allowed them to remain there. They were at most of the most temporary character as well as the most harmless, and only such at all events as would be likely to get on a walk where buildings are being erected, without any fault of the city. Every one is bound to know and take notice of the fact that the street, as well as the sidewalk in front of new buildings in process of erection, is to a greater or less extent obstructed with the building material while grading and excavating. These hinderances and obstructions are unavoidable in cities and towns, and the public must submit to some inconvenience and must use a higher degree of care when going about obstructed places and using streets and walks which they know to be torn up and unsafe, than they use when going upon walks where no such obstructions are necessary or exist.

There was no kind of necessity of appellant going along that place at ten o’clock at night where she had seen these piles of lumber, brick, stones, etc., all summer. It appears that she had used another walk all summer. She says it was a dark night and she could not see where she was walking. If this were so, then there was the greater necessity for her to take a more familiar sidewalk and keep away from what she now insists was a dangerous walk, made so from the very obstructions which she must have known were there and which she, herself, testifies were there, if in fact, that be so.

There is an entire absence of any proof in this record that the city or any of its officers were guilty of any want of care or attention to this walk or that they had knowledge of any unsafe or dangerous obstruction on the walk, or that any obstructions at all were there for such a length of time as to charge the city with notice of their existence. We think the proof not sufficient to charge a city for an injury resulting from falling over a random brick-bat or rock which may roll or be thrown or dropped on a walk at any moment without any agency of the city and when the walk itself is reasonably safe.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Barrett v. State
23 Ill. Ct. Cl. 149 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1959)
Maxey v. City of East St. Louis
158 Ill. App. 627 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)
City of East St. Louis v. Dougherty
74 Ill. App. 490 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 223, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-board-of-trustees-v-senger-illappct-1889.