Ridgway v. Crum

98 N.E.2d 394, 343 Ill. App. 12
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 30, 1951
DocketGen. 9,726
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 N.E.2d 394 (Ridgway v. Crum) 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
Ridgway v. Crum, 98 N.E.2d 394, 343 Ill. App. 12 (Ill. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves an appeal from a judgment for $3,300 and costs in favor of the plaintiff appellee, William Ridgway, and against the defendant appellant, Ocea Crum, entered in the circuit court of Macoupin county, on the verdict of a jury. The case was brought by plaintiff appellee against defendant appellant, to recover for personal injuries resulting from an assault and battery alleged to have been committed by the defendant appellant.

On May 4,1949, plaintiff appellee, William Ridgway, filed in the circuit court of Macoupin county, a complaint in two counts. Count I was a complaint for an injunction concerning the right of way over a road where a barricade had been placed, and Count II was a count at law, which is the basis of this suit, and it was a complaint for the recovery of damages for the assault and battery alleged to have been committed by the defendant appellant, Ocea Crum.

Paragraph 1 of Count II of the complaint charges that on the 28th day of April, A. D. 1949, in Section Five (5) of Township Eleven (11) North, Range Eight (8) West of the Third Principal Meridian, Macoupin county, Illinois, and being South Palmyra Township in said county and State, the said defendant, Ocea Crum, and certain other persons assaulted the plaintiff appellee by striking him, beating and kicking him about the face and body, by throwing him to the ground and by maliciously striking, kicking and beating the plaintiff appellee about the face, head and body while he was lying prostrate upon the ground.

Paragraph 2 describes the injuries sustained.

Paragraph 3 alleges damages in the sum of $10,000 and prays judgment.

The answer of the defendant denies each and every allegation in each paragraph of said Count II.

A decree was entered on Count I of the complaint on July 14, 1949.

The case under Count II being the case at bar, came on for trial on February 23,1950.

At the conclusion of plaintiff appellee’s evidence the defendant appellant moved to exclude all evidence of any injuries except the injuries to the left arm and shoulder for the reason that there was no showing of any connection between such injuries and any act of the defendant appellant, and that motion was denied.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, defendant appellant moved the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant appellant and tendered an instruction. The motion was denied and the instruction refused.

The jury returned a verdict finding the defendant appellant guilty and assessing plaintiff appellee’s damages at the sum of $3,300, and judgment was entered on the verdict for said amount.

The defendant appellant filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a motion for a new trial. Both motions were denied and this appeal followed.

The evidence produced on the trial revealed that on April 28, 1949, the day of the alleged assault, plaintiff appellee William Ridgway resided in a small house in the middle of his 180-acre farm in South Palmyra, Macoupin county, Illinois. The tillable land on his farm was north of his house; the roadway from his farm ran north up through a gate on the north fine of his farm and across 20 acres of land owned by the defendant appellant, Ocea Crum, to the township road leading into the Village of Palmyra about two miles distant from his house.

At about 10:30 in the morning of the day of the assault, the defendant appellant, Ocea Crum, together with Edward Ridgway, Ivan Crum and Alfred Eldredge, had placed two hedgeposts in front of the William Ridgway gate so that the same could not be opened, and erected a fence further north across the roadway as a barricade, in order to prevent William Ridgway from using the same. About 20 acres of land owned by Ocea Crum lay between the public road and the land owned by William Ridgway, and was a pasture.

On March 28, 1949, Ocea Crum leased a half acre of this pasture immediately next to plaintiff appellee’s gate and through which the roadway ran, to Edward Ridgway (who had no farm machinery for putting in any crops on said land, but was going to hire someone to plant corn and beans on the leased land). Edward Ridgway was a brother of William Ridgway, and lived in a three-room house owned by Ocea Crum located along the public road near where William Ridgway’s roadway joined the same.

For a period of two or three weeks prior to the day in question William Ridgway found at different times, various obstructions in the road used by him to reach the county road, which caused him to carry an axe, a crow-bar and a shovel in the trunk of his car to be used in removing these obstructions. Ocea Crum and others had made threats to beat William Ridgway and had made the statement that they were “laying in wait for him. ’ ’

William Ridgway left home about one o’clock p. m. on April 28,1949, after placing a rifle in his car. When he reached the gate he found the posts and the barricade across the roadway crossing the Crum land to the highway on the north. lie removed the axe, spade and crow-bar from his car and started to remove the posts obstructing the gate. Ocea Crum and his daughter, Mrs. Lela May Eldredge, who resided a mile and a half from the scene, then appeared, and a conversation ensued between William Ridgway and Ocea Crum, on the details of which witnesses differ. Edward Ridgway, brother of William, and who was not on friendly terms with his brother, came to the scene from his house, an eighth of a mile away. Alfred Eldredge, a son-in-law of Ocea Crum, and Ivan Crum, a nephew of Ocea Crum, who had been plowing in the field about a quarter of a mile from the gate, also appeared on the scene. Within a few minutes after the beginning of the conversation the fight occurred, and William Ridgway received injuries testified to by Dr. Rutherford, consisting of multiple bruises and contusions over the body, bruises on the left chest, front and back, with a broken rib which punctured the lung cavity, an injury to the left shoulder, and bruises on the face and forehead, and minor abrasions and cuts on the scalp.

At the time of the altercation William Bidgway was a man 60 years of age and weighed between 175 and 180 pounds; Ocea Crum was 46 years old, six feet tall and weighed 200 pounds; Edward Bidgway was 67 years of age, was troubled with asthma and weighed 165 pounds; Ivan Crum was a man 24 years old and had spent two years in the military service, and Alfred Eldredge was 26 years old.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiff appellee, William Bidgway, was furnished by his own testimony, and was to the affect that while he was digging around the posts Ocea Crum approached the place on the run and alone, that his daughter, Mrs. Eldredge, and Edward Bidgway arrived a minute or so later; that then Ivan Crum and Alfred Eldredge came running across the pasture; that Ocea Crum stood there and cursed him and grabbed him by the collar with his right hand and grabbed his forearm and twisted it out of joint, and that he then went down and licks were laid over his head by either Ocea Crum, Eldredge or Ivan Crum. That at that time Mrs.

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98 N.E.2d 394, 343 Ill. App. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridgway-v-crum-illappct-1951.