Schulk v. Joliet & Southern Traction Co.

154 Ill. App. 108, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 627
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 11, 1910
DocketGen. No. 5179
StatusPublished

This text of 154 Ill. App. 108 (Schulk v. Joliet & Southern Traction 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
Schulk v. Joliet & Southern Traction Co., 154 Ill. App. 108, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 627 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in case commenced in the Circuit Court of Will county by Christopher Schulk against the Joliet & Southern Traction Company and the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway Company, to recover • for injuries received by plaintiff in a collision between a locomotive of the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway Company, upon which plaintiff was employed as a fireman at the time of the accident, and an interurban car of the Joliet & Southern Traction Company. Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $5,500 against both defendants. The court required a remittitur of $1,500 to be entered before it overruled the motion for a new trial and rendered judgment against the defendants for $4,000. Both defendants appeal and file separate assignments of error and briefs.

The declaration contains five counts. The first count avers that the Joliet & Southern Traction Company (hereinafter called the traction company) was engaged in the management of a street railway system, with cars propelled by electric power, upon a certain public highway in the township of Lockport, between the city of Joliet and the village of Plainfield, and that the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway (hereinafter called the railway company) was possessed of a railroad which extended through the township of Lock-port intersecting the tracks of the traction company, and avers that it was the duty of the defendants to manage and operate their respective cars, trains and engines with all reasonable care so as not to injure the plaintiff, then an employe of the railway company working as a fireman on one of its engines; that it was the duty of the traction company to operate and manage its cars with reasonable care so as to prevent a collision with the engines and cars operated on the tracks of the railway company, and it was the duty of the railway company to operate its locomotives so as not to collide with the cars on the right of way of the Joliet & Southern Traction Company, and avers that the defendants notwithstanding their duties negligently and wrongfully, when plaintiff was working as a fireman on one of the locomotive engines of the railway company, in the exercise of reasonable car,e for his own safety, permitted a car on the tracks of the traction company to collide with, or be struck by a locomotive engine on the tracks of the railway company, by reason whereof plaintiff was permanently injured, and avers that the injuries did not result from an assumed risk and were not caused through the negligence of a fellow-servant.

The second count after averring the intersection of the railway and street car systems of the defendants, avers that the defendants provided a certain appliance on the tracks of the traction company for the purpose of derailing cars running on the tracks of the traction company at a distance of, to wit,- 200 feet from the tracks of the railway company and that it was the duty of the defendants in laying out, constructing and operating said derailing tracks for the purpose of derailing cars on the right of way of the' traction company, to use reasonable care to make said tracks of sufficient length or distance from said inter section to prevent cars on the traction company’s tracks from stopping on the tracks of the railway company, when derailed, whereby cars thereon would not come in contact with engines in motion on the tracks of the railway company; yet the defendants carelessly and negligently constructed and maintained said derailing system by making the same of insufficient length from the tracks of the railway company and of improper grade to prevent the cars of the traction company when derailed from running upon and over the tracks of the railway company, by reason whereof when plaintiff, an employe of the railway company, was working as fireman on one of its locomotives, and a car upon the tracks of the traction company was running at a high rate of speed, and when an engine, on the right of way of the railway company on which plaintiff was working in the exercise of due care, was proceeding in a northerly direction, a car on the tracks of the traction company was derailed and ran into and upon the intersection of the railway company’s tracks, whereby said car was there struck by said engine on the track of the railway company, whereby plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable care was permanently injured, etc., and avers the injury was not the result of an assumed risk nor caused through the negligence of a fellow-servant.

The third count is similar to the second but avers a system of signals which it was the duty of the defendants to observe and that the defendants neglected to operate said system with reasonable care.

The fourth count avers that it was the duty of the traction company and the railway company to use reasonable care to provide and operate a reasonably safe and efficient system of signals but that the defendants negligently failed to maintain and operate such a system.

The fifth avers negligence in the speed at which the engine and street car approached the intersection.

The evidence shows that the Plainfield road runs from Joliet to Plainfield in a northwesterly direction. On the northeast side of this road is located the track of the traction company. The railway company has a branch road which runs around the outside of the city limits of the city of Joliet to reach certain mills and crosses the tracks of the traction company about three miles from Joliet where the railway company’s tracks run in a southwesterly and northeasterly direction. The tracks of the railway company from the southwest are down grade to the tracks of the traction company and the tracks of the traction company are down grade for a distance of about 1,700 feet from the southeast to within about 400 feet of the intersection with the railway company. Both tracks descend towards that point and rise after they leave it. On the day of the accident, about seven o’clock in the evening of June 4, 1908, appellee was a fireman making his third trip over this railroad on a freight engine with a train of cars of the railway company going northeast. The traction company’s line was built first. When the railroad was built the officials of the railway company and the traction company consulted with reference to the intersection and the railway company, with the consent and approval of the traction company, erected semaphores and a derailing apparatus on both lines. At or near the intersection there were four levers which could only be thrown in a certain order. The first operated a semaphore danger signal on the tracks of the traction company 1,700 feet from the crossing near a place called the Five Corners; the second placed a signal against the traction company 300 feet from the crossing and opened a derail on the rails of the traction company 100 feet from the crossing, which would throw the car off the track and on the ground astride of one of the rails; the third closed a derailing apparatus on the tracks of the railway company 300 feet from the crossing; the fourth dropped a danger signal which stood against the railroad some distance further from the crossing. As the traction cars ran often, and the railway company’s track was used but seldom and was built last, it was arranged between the two companies that these signals should regularly remain at safety to the traction company and at danger to the railway company, and when the railway company wished to cross the traction company’s tracks the men of the railway company should change the signals.

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Bluebook (online)
154 Ill. App. 108, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulk-v-joliet-southern-traction-co-illappct-1910.