St. Louis, Vandalia & Terre Haute R. R. v. Faitz

19 Ill. App. 85, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 418
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 10, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 Ill. App. 85 (St. Louis, Vandalia & Terre Haute R. R. v. Faitz) 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
St. Louis, Vandalia & Terre Haute R. R. v. Faitz, 19 Ill. App. 85, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 418 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Pilltbury P. J.

The testimony introduced upon the trial,

upon the question whether the appellant was guilty of the negligence charged, and the servant of appellee exercised the care required, is quite conflicting, and as the case must again be tried at the circuit, we do not deem it advisable to enter into any discussion of its weight or credibility.

There was n > claim made in the court below, neither is there here, that the appellee was guilty of negligence in trusting his son to drive the team. So far as appears he was fully competent for such purpose. Having put his son in charge of the team, he became responsible by relation for any negligence of his son contributing to the injury. Three instructions were given for the plaintiff, the first stating the statutory duty of railroad companies in crossing highways, to which no objection is taken. It is urged that the second instruction is open to the objection that it tells the jury that a failure to doth ring the bell and sound the whistle continuously for eighty rods before crossing the highway constitutes a prima facie case of negligence. If the instruction could fairly be said to bear such construction, the objection would be well taken, but while, perhaps, it is not as clearly expressed as it might be in this regard, when considered with reference to the first one defining the duties of railroads, it could not be understood by the jury as containing the idea suggested.

The most serious objection to this instruction is the same as that to the third, which is as follows: “If the jury believe, from the evidence, that the injury com lained of was occasioned by a collision between the team and wagon of the plaintiff and a locomotive engine of the defendant, on a public road, at a place where such road crossed the railroad of the defendant, and that the plaintiff used ordinary care and caution to avoid a collision, and that the collision was owing to the negligent, careless and unskillful manner in which the servants of the defendants managed the locomotive and train of cars attached, as charged in the declaration, then the jury should find a verdict for the plaintiff.”

This instruction substantially ignores the question of contributory negligence upon the part of the driver of plaintiff’s team, by making the test of liability of the defendant depend upon ,ts negligence, and the care of the plaintiff to avoid the injury. As we have said, the plaintiff did no negligent act.1 The most that can be claimed is that the law, under the circumstances proven, charges the plaintiff with the effect of the driver’s negligence upon the alleged liability of the defendant. It is not probable that counsel intended it as a proper statement of the law as to imputable negligence, and it is quite clear that the jury would not so understand it. They would very likely consider it as relieving them of the necessity of passing upon the question of the driver’s care, or want of it, if they found the plaintiff had exercised ordinary care to avoid the collision. The same objection applies to the-second instruction, which leads us to conclude that it was perhaps through inadvertence in writing the instructions that the care of the plaintiff was referred to as the test and not that of the servant; but the result of the error must be the same whatever the reason may have been for so drafting them. Exception was also taken to the action of the court in overruling the application of defendant for a continuance upon the ground of the absence of a material witness, resident of the State of Missouri. The testimony of the witness as shown by the affidavit was material to the issues involved, but in our opinion no sufficient diligence to obtain his deposition or attendance was shown, and no error was committed by the court in overruling the motion. Exception was also taken to the action of the court in refusing the defendant’s request to have the jury polled upon the return of the verdict into court. It appears from the special bill of exceptions, that when the verdict was returned into court there were only eleven jurors present, the other one being absent and reported to be sick, and upon opening and reading the verdict the attorney for defendant requested to have the jury polled, and the court refused the application, on the ground, as stated in the bill of exceptions, “that incase of a sealed verdict a polling of the jury rvas then and there not required,” and against the protest of counsel entered the verdict of record. Italso appears from the record that one of the rules of practice in that court provides that “ an -agreement on the part of counsel to receive a sealed verdict shall be considered and treated as a Avaiver of the right to poll the jury and to take any but substantial objections to the verdict; and it shall authorize the court to put the A'erdict in the proper form; and in all cases where a jury retires Avithout objection to a sealed verdict on the part of either party, a sealed verdict may be rendered.”

It was formerly the practice not to allow the jury to separate until their verdict was publicly announced in open court, and to compel them to agree they Avere frequently deprived of the necessaries of life during their deliberations; and if, before they had agreed, it became necessary for the court to leave the town where the case Avas being tried, the judges were not bound to Avait for them, but might carry them around the circuit in a cart, although, as Blackstone quaintly observes, they are not to be threatened or imprisoned. A much milder and more humane practice has, hoAvever, been adopted by the courts of this country. Here, it is true, we do not permit them to separate until they have agreed, but in the meantime they are furnished with all necessary refreshments, and if in civil causes they agree during a temporary adjournment of the court, they can be directed, and frequently are, to seal their verdict and return with it into open court Avhen it again convenes. This pract:ee is called returning a sealed verdict, Avhieh is nothing more than putting their finding in writing and placing it in an envelope which is sealed, and when the court is again in session the jury come in and give their verdict, in all respects as if it had not been sealed, and a juror may then dissent from it if, since the sealing, he, has honestly changed his mind. Bouvier, title, Sealing of a Verdict.

It is not believed that in thus relaxing the strictness of such ancient rules any inconvenience has been suffered, or the administration of justice been made less satisfactory or less effective or certain. And, personally, I believe that the more confidence we repose in jurors as men of sound sense and capable of appreciating the individual responsibility resting upon them as arbiters in the cause submitted to them, the more we treat them as reasonable men, the better will they understand and perform their duties, and justice and right be advanced thereby. The verdict thus returned by the jury into open court is to be treated in all respects as though they had not separated. It was settled as early as Johnson v. Howe, 2 Gil. 334, that upon a verdict being returned by the jury, a party to the cause had the undoubted right to poll the jury, inquiring of them severally whether they agreed to th& verdict announced, followed by Rigg v. Cook, 4 Gil.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ill. App. 85, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-vandalia-terre-haute-r-r-v-faitz-illappct-1886.