Sehnert v. Schipper & Block, Inc.

193 Ill. App. 202, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 619
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 9, 1915
DocketGen. No. 6,035
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 Ill. App. 202 (Sehnert v. Schipper & Block, Inc.) 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
Sehnert v. Schipper & Block, Inc., 193 Ill. App. 202, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 619 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Carnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment against appellant, Schipper & Block, Incorporated, in favor of Frances Sehnert, appellee, in an action on the case brought by her to recover for an injury to her person resulting from a collision with a swinging door.

Appellant operates a large department store on Adams street in the city of Peoria, Illinois, the main entrance to which is through a vestibule or lobby extending parallel with the lot and street line about twenty feet, and the other way from the store proper to the street, about fifteen feet including in the inclosure a strip of the street about three feet wide. At each end of this entrance way, on the street, there is a pair of heavy swinging doors equipped with springs. The space occupied by these swinging doors, at rest and in motion, is mostly, perhaps entirely, outside the lot line and in the street. There are two pairs of similar doors in the inside of the vestibule leading to the store proper. The whole entrance way is inclosed, and in cold weather heated, affording a comfortable place for customers of the store to wait for street cars or other conveyances.

Appellee went to the store December 31, 1906, as a customer, and as she was leaving and about to pass out of one of these outside doorways some third person passed rapidly out, opening the one of the double doors nearest the building and letting it loose so that it came back with force and in some way set the other of the pair, the companion door, in motion so that it suddenly came back and struck appellee a violent blow on her right thigh and leg, knocking her down. She was soon able to go home unattended, but later it developed that the injury was very serious, and the result is paralysis, from which she became almost helpless.

This suit was begun April 29, 1910, and was before this court, on appeal, on questions arising on the pleadings. Our opinion is reported in 168 111. App. 245. The declaration before this court at that time charged in 'different counts that the doors were improperly constructed and hung, that appellee was a pedestrian using the streets, and also that the doors were outside the lot line and in the street. We held that the declaration and different counts thereof stated a cause of action, but did not undertake to say what significance, if any, should be given the fact that the doors were in that part of the building1: outside of the lot line in the street. Counsel unite in saying that since the case was remanded it has been three times tried by a jury. The first and second trial each resulted in a verdict for the defendant and a new trial granted by the court because of some error of law. The record before us shows a jury trial with verdict and judgment of $10,000 for the plaintiff. There were two additional counts to the declaration filed just before the last trial, in which the cause of action is based entirely on the charge that the lobby way and doors extended beyond the lot line, and that the plaintiff was about to proceed from the store and through the lobby way and was injured by the swinging door. There is no claim in these last two counts of improper construction or hanging of the doors, and no claim that plaintiff was a pedestrian using Adams street for purposes of travel. The case seems to have been tried in the court below on the theory of these last two counts, and no proof offered by plaintiff of improper construction or hanging of the doors; and there is no evidence that can be construed in support of an allegation that appellee was at the time in question a pedestrian walking along the street. If she had been, and while so using the street one of these doors had swung against and injured her, quite a different case would be presented. Neither is there any room for presumption or inference that the location of the doors three feet over the street line had any influence whatever on the happening of the accident. Appellee argues that if the doors had not been located on the street the accident would not have occurred in the street, which is true, but it would have occurred three feet from the street line, and the inquiry is whether the fact that it occurred in the street is of any importance in determining the issues here.

Appellee’s contention is, that the part of the lobby including the doors extending over the street line is a public nuisance because it is an encroachment on a public street; that it is a nuisance per se; that it was negligence on the part of appellant to maintain it there; that it was negligence, because in violation of the statute; that a nuisance is of itself negligence, and if injury flows from it the author is liable; that in case of a nuisance in a public highway it is not material whether such nuisance is properly or improperly constructed or of what material it is made, the author of the nuisance is liable for maintaining: it whether it is properly or improperly built; and she cites a great number of authorities supporting these statements of the law of nuisance, and says apparently in answer to appellant’s statement that she offered no proof in support of the allegations that the doors were improperly constructed and equipped, that it is immaterial whether, they were.or not, and it is sufficient that appellant was maintaining a nuisance át this time and place, and that had it not been for the presence of this nuisance the accident would not have happened, therefore the presence of this nuisance at that time and place was the proximate cause of the injury.

The general propositions of law stated by appellee are in the main correct and long established, but in our opinion they do not apply to the situation we are considering, and a rule and application such as is contended for by appellee would lead to absurd results. There are a great many examples of public nuisances, among which are numerous cases of buildings encroaching on public streets and alleys. It is perhaps common knowledge that many factories are so built, especially with reference to public alleys in our smaller towns and cities. It is a matter of very common occurrence that barns and outbuildings encroach upon and sometimes entirely obstruct public alleys. Suppose the building in question here had been a factory encroaching on a public street or alley and there had been machinery located in part outside and in part inside of the lot line, it would hardly occur-to anyone that the liability of the owner for accident occasioned by the use of the machinery could depend upon or be in the least influenced by the question whether the accident occurred one side or the other side of the street line over which the building projected. Any building protruding without authority into a public street or alley is, so far as it encroaches, a public nuisance, and the owner while maintaining it there is acting in violation of the statute, and such violation of statutory law is often said to be negligence per se. And any one maintaining a building anywhere on or off the street, with swinging doors at the entrance and between the rooms, may reasonably be presumed to foresee that injury may result to the person of some' one from the use of the doors, either through the carelessness of the person using them, or the carelessness of another, or from pure accident; not probably so serious an injury as here occurred, but quite likely an injury to the hand or fingers, perhaps of a child, caught and crushed in closing the door.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Ill. App. 202, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sehnert-v-schipper-block-inc-illappct-1915.