Soucie v. Payne

132 N.E. 779, 299 Ill. 552
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1921
DocketNo. 13816
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 N.E. 779 (Soucie v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soucie v. Payne, 132 N.E. 779, 299 Ill. 552 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Joseph P. Soucie, administrator of the estate of Russell Soucie, deceased, recovered a judgment in the sum of $4200 against John Barton Payne, agent under Federal control of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, for the death of Soucie, in the circuit court of Iroquois county. The record has been brought directly to this court for review by writ of error, as the constitutionality of a statute is involved.

Russell Soucie, son of Joseph Soucie, was of the age of nineteen years and lived on a farm with his father near the village of St. Anne, in Kankakee county, which village had a population of about 1400 at the time of the accident. About 11:3o P. M. on August 23, 1919, two persons whose names are not disclosed were riding with the deceased in an automobile, and in attempting to cross the railroad of plaintiff in error at Station street crossing, which is the first street crossing south of the depot in the village, all were killed by a collision of an interstate passenger train of plaintiff in error with the automobile. The railroad there runs north and south and the street east and west, and the parties in the automobile were traveling east. The depot is situated about 115 feet north of Station street crossing and is used by both the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company and the Big Four Railroad Company and is located on the east side of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois railroad. The Big Four runs through the village from the southeast to the northwest and crosses the Chicago and Eastern Illinois about 425 feet north of Station street crossing. At the northwest corner of the junction of the Big Four and Chicago and Eastern Illinois is the tower in. which are located the lever and signal apparatus of the respective railroads. The Big Four intersects Station street about 225 feet east of the crossing at which the accident occurred. There is a small gate house on the east side of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois and north of Station street, from which the gates at said crossing are operated by the gateman during the day time. An automatic gong or crossing bell sits on a post on the west side of the crossing north of Station street, which is operated from the tower to the north. The crossing is a level one at grade with the railroad and is 60 feet wide. As the railroad at this crossing is approached from the west the first track crossed is a switch or house track. The second one crossed, going east, is the main or south-bound track,—the track on which the train was running that killed deceased. The third track so crossed is a north-bound track, on which a freight train of sixty cars was running north across the crossing at the rate of eight or ten miles an hour and making a great deal of noise. The record does not disclose the exact distance between the house track and the south-bound track, but an examination of a number of photographs of this crossing indicates that that distance cannot be over 12 or 15 feet at the outside. While the freight train was crossing the street three automobiles were waiting for some time, the east one standing about 15 feet west of the south-bound track, the next one being about 30 feet west of the southbound track, and the third automobile, in which the deceased was riding, was still further west, the distance not being given, but the evidence shows that it was not far behind the second auto. The first two automobiles crossed the south-bound track safely, but the rear automobile was struck by the south-bound passenger train running at the rate of forty-five or fifty miles per hour, according to the testimony of the defendant in error’s witnesses, and the occupants were thrown about 150 feet south and east onto the north-bound track and killed as aforesaid. None of the occupants of the first two automobiles saw or heard the passenger train while the freight train was passing or as they were crossing the tracks after it passed. Occupants of both cars testified that they looked and listened and could see no train north or south of them as they crossed the tracks. The occupants of the east car saw the passenger train when within about ten feet of the Big Four railroad crossing, and the train was at that time about one-half or three-quarters of a mile north of Station street crossing, according to the evidence. The occupants of the second car saw the light of the train when they were about 30 feet east of the crossing at Station street and the Chicago and Eastern Illinois, and the train was then about 75 feet north of the crossing. According to the testimony of the plaintiff in error’s witnesses the passenger train could have been seen for a distance of a mile north of the crossing by any person standing just east of the switch or house track at Station street, as this train had a very bright headlight, which was giving light as it was approaching this crossing. Just after passing north of the tower house and the Big Four crossing the Chicago and Eastern Illinois, as appears from the photographs, bends very sharply to the northeast, which would be more favorable for one standing on the house track to see the train than it would for one on the south-bound track, as there are some buildings northward tending to obstruct the view from the latter situation. It is also testified by plaintiff in error’s witnesses that the trainmen blew the engine whistle north of the switch tower for the station and also for a road crossing, and that the engine bell and the crossing bell were ringing as the train approached Station street crossing. The witnesses that were in the two automobiles that crossed the crossing safely testified that they heard the signal bell at the crossing as the freight train passed and heard the bell on the freight engine but heard no other signals. It was also proven that at the time of the accident, and just before it, there was no flagman on the crossing and that the gates or upright bars were not operated or thrown across the street to warn travelers from crossing. The evidence shows that these gates have been in existence at this crossing since 1903, and were used and operated by the railroad company in the day time but not usually at night, and that a flagman was also kept at the crossing in the day time to give like warning.

There were ten counts in the declaration, which charged general negligence; that the train was running at a high and dangerous rate of speed; that it gave no warning of its approach by bell or whistle; that the train was running in excess of the speed ordinance of the village; that the gates at the crossing were not operated, and that there was no watchman guarding the crossing, as required by the village ordinance. At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict as to the counts alleging failure to operate the gates and to have 'a watchman at the crossing. The court excluded the ordinance which required the railroad company to provide and keep a watchman and gates at said railroad crossing during all hours trains and engines were running up and down the track and to keep the gates closed when engines and trains of cars were passing or about to pass over the crossing. It also made it the duty of the watchman to signal and warn persons passing in the direction of the crossing when there was danger from the approach of locomotive engines, cars or trains. The court permitted defendant in error to introduce two other ordinances of the village, one of which provided that no passenger train shall be driven, propelled or run upon any railroad track within the village at a greater speed than ten miles an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.E. 779, 299 Ill. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soucie-v-payne-ill-1921.