Riordan v. Chicago City Railway Co.

178 Ill. App. 323, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1036
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 1913
DocketGen. No. 16,945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 Ill. App. 323 (Riordan v. Chicago City Railway 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
Riordan v. Chicago City Railway Co., 178 Ill. App. 323, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1036 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Browu

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, John Riordan, on April 16, 1910, recovered in the Superior Court of Cook county on the verdict of a jury a judgment against the appellant, the Chicago City Railway Company, for $3,000 as damages for personal injuries received by him through the alleged negligence of the defendant company. Prom this judgment the defendant company has appealed to this court. It here assigns as error various matters, insisting in argument on four propositions, which we will discuss in a different order from that chosen by the appellant.

The first question which we think should he determined by us is whether the appellant is correct in asserting that the court below instead of overruling should have sustained the motion in arrest of judgment on the ground that neither of the two counts of the plaintiff’s declaration stated a cause of action.

The first count of the declaration alleges that on the 9th day of March, 1908, the defendant Company owned and operated a street railway with two parallel tracks a few feet only apart on Root street in Chicago, using one track for east-bound and the other for west-hound cars; that the plaintiff was employed by the city at that time as one of a gang to clean sewers; that the city had a sewer extending longitudinally along Root street beneath the space between said two tracks; that there was a number of - manholes between said two tracks opening into said sewer; that the plaintiff was on said day, with other members of his gang, cleaning and raising dirt out of the sewer up through one of said manholes, a short distance east of Union avenue; that to do this work it was necessary that he and other members of the gang should stand between said tracks in a space too narrow for a person to stand in safety there when cars moving in opposite directions upon said tracks were passing each other; all of which the defendant knew; that the de-fondant was at tins time operating two certain street cars in opposite directions along said tracks np toward and close to the point where the plaintiff and his fellow workmen and the manhole were situated; that in the ordinary and customary prosecution of said work, the defendant was accustomed to stop its said cars before reaching any point where the said gang were so cleaning sewers, and not to attempt to run said cars past each other at such a point until said gang were out of the way; that as the said cars were so approaching said place and each other the plaintiff and his fellow workmen were in plain view of defendant’s servants in charge of the management, operation and control of said cars; that he and his fellow workmen signaled and notified the operatives in charge of the cars to stop said cars until he and his fellow workmen could get out of the way; that the defendant nevertheless by “its operatives so in charge of the management, operation and control of said cars, then and there wrongfully, negligently and improperly ran said cars past each other at the time and place where plaintiff and his fellow workmen were as aforesaid,” and as a direct result thereof, while he was exercising ordinary care for his own safety, he was caught and crushed between said cars and seriously injured.

The second count alleges the same matters with little variation. It says nothing about the customary way of doing things in this situation, but alleges that while the plaintiff and another member of the city’s said gang, with a certain ladder and other appliances, were so engaged in cleaning said sewer through said manhole, and while he and his said fellow workmen were upon one of said tracks and between said tracks in the performance of their work, and while plaintiff was exercising ordinary care and caution for his own safety, and when the defendant’s servants so in charge of the operation of said cars knew of his presence and the presence of his fellow workmen, and although the space between the tracks was so narrow that a person could not stand in safety between said tracks when cars moving in opposite directions passed each other on said tracks, defendant’s said servants so negligently, carelessly and improperly ran, managed and operated said ears np toward and past the place where plaintiff and his fellow workmen were as aforesaid, that as a direct result of the negligent, careless, and improper manner in which the defendant ran, managed and operated said cars, the plaintiff was caught and crushed between said cars as said cars were passing each other, and he was thereby injured.

If the purpose of a declaration is to state the cause of complaint clearly, so that the defendant will know what he has to meet, it would seem that this declaration met the requirement.

The allegations certainly did state what was complained of clearly. If these things did not constitute' a cause of action, the defendant would naturally have demurred instead of pleading. Allegations that might not have been regarded as specific enough before verdict became so after verdict, and we think in this case, had there been any doubt as to sustaining the declaration on demurrer, there could be none on the motion in arrest. But we do not think that the declaration fails to state a complete cause of action or should have been held bad on demurrer. It is true, as appellant argues, that the mere use of an adverb describing an act will not by itself make that act actionable, and that as the Supreme Court has said, “Liability only follows a negligent or reckless act when the party guilty of the act owes to the party injured some duty which is violated by the commission of the negligent or reckless act.” McAndrews v. Chicago, L. S. & E. E. Co., 222 Ill. 232.

But if it is true that the mere use of the word “negligently” does not show that a described act was the violation of a duty, it is also true that the description of a situation may show a duty without the direct allegation of such a duty. "When the plaintiff in the case at bar stated in bis declaration tbat to do bis work it was necessary for bim to stand between tbe tracks in a space too narrow for one to stand when cars moving in opposite directions were passing each other, and tbat tbe defendant knew tbis and was accustomed to stop its cars before reaching tbe sewer cleaning gang to which plaintiff belonged, and tbat at tbis time tbe plaintiff and bis companions signalled tbe operators of tbe cars, who bad them in plain sight, to stop tbe cars until they could get out of tbe way, be stated circumstances tbat showed a duty of which tbe allegation tbat tbe defendant, by its agents, ran said cars past each other at tbe time and place where said plaintiff and bis fellow workmen were located, charged a breach. It did not even require, in our opinion, tbe use of tbe words “wrongfully, negligently and improperly” to make tbis a charge of negligence. It is true tbat under our decisions it was necessary for plaintiff to aver, in order to show a complete cause of action, tbat be was at tbe time in tbe exercise of due care for bis own safety; but tbis be did aver.

Under tbe circumstances shown in tbis case it is mere bypercriticism to say tbat tbe phrase “while the plaintiff was exercising ordinary care and caution for bis own safety” does not refer to tbe time of tbe approach as well as of tbe actual passing or juxtaposition of tbe cars.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Ill. App. 323, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riordan-v-chicago-city-railway-co-illappct-1913.