Stokes v. City of Chicago

775 N.E.2d 72, 333 Ill. App. 3d 272, 266 Ill. Dec. 510, 2002 Ill. App. LEXIS 660
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 31, 2002
Docket1-01-2607
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 775 N.E.2d 72 (Stokes v. City of Chicago) 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
Stokes v. City of Chicago, 775 N.E.2d 72, 333 Ill. App. 3d 272, 266 Ill. Dec. 510, 2002 Ill. App. LEXIS 660 (Ill. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

JUSTICE WOLFSON

delivered the opinion of the court:

William Stokes sued the City of Chicago (the City) for injuries he said he sustained when his foot caught in a hole in the sidewalk at 656 North Green Street. Throughout the trial the City insisted it had the right to impeach Stokes’s credibility with his three prior burglary convictions. The trial court was equally insistent that the City had no such right.

The jury found in favor of Stokes, awarding him $30,000 in damages. The single issue in this appeal is whether the trial court committed reversible error when it refused to allow the City to impeach Stokes.

We reverse and remand.

FACTS

Because the City raises only the impeachment issue, we merely sketch the evidence presented at trial.

At the time of trial, in February of 2001, Stokes was an inmate at the Vienna Correctional Center in Vienna, Illinois. The trial court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus permitted Stokes to appear at trial, where he was allowed to wear civilian clothes.

He had been convicted of burglary three times: (1) August 23, 1993; (2) April 7, 1998; and (3) July 5, 2000. In a pretrial ruling, the trial court granted Stokes’s motion to bar any impeachment use of his burglary convictions. The trial court found — before, during, and after trial — that there was no issue concerning Stokes’s “honesty.” That is, said the court, “that’s saying he’s testified to something, and then there was an observer, another fact witness who testified to something else.”

The trial court rejected the City’s suggestion that there are other ways a party’s credibility can be brought into question, concluding: “The Court finds that its prejudicial effect outweighs its probative value.”

At trial, Stokes testified that on September 15, 1993, he was living at 467 West Oak Street with Martha Sallay and their five children. During the day, the children were at school, Sallay was at work, and Stokes was at home because he was laid off from his job at a fast-food restaurant.

After the children returned home from school, Stokes went to a basketball court to play with friends. Sallay met him there some time later, then they went home to eat dinner. After dinner and after putting their children to bed, just after 9 p.m., Stokes and Sallay went for their regular walk in their neighborhood. They walked at a strolling pace. Stokes was wearing low-top gym shoes.

After Stokes and Sallay had been walking for about 25 or 30 minutes they were on North Green Street. Although Stokes saw there were no streetlights in the area, he and Sallay continued to walk down the 600 block of North Green Street. The street was dark; neither the moon nor the buildings in the area offered any illumination. Stokes said he never walked down North Green Street before that night.

Sallay held Stokes’s right arm as they walked down North Green Street. As they walked, some people came near them on the same side of the street. Stokes did not see the people until they were very near to them. When the people got close to Stokes and Sallay, he jerked Sal-lay close to him and moved over and away from the people. He did not know the people who were coming close to them.

As the strangers passed Stokes and Sallay, Stokes’s foot caught in a hole in the concrete of the sidewalk. Stokes’s foot went into the hole up to the bottom of his ankle bone and his heel hit something hard. When he tried to pull his foot out, he fell over. As he fell over, he heard something crack in his foot.

After Stokes fell, he tried to stand but could not. The pain was too much. Sallay left to get help and Stokes moved himself to some steps that were about 20 to 25 feet away from where he fell. Before Sallay returned, an ambulance arrived. The ambulance took Stokes to Northwestern Hospital for treatment.

Sallay testified that during the day on September 15, 1993, she stayed home with her two youngest children and Stokes went to work. In the early evening, Stokes played basketball with some friends while Sallay cooked dinner. Sometime later, at about 7 p.m., Sallay left the house to watch Stokes play a game. After the game, Stokes talked to his friends, then he and Sallay walked home to eat dinner. After dinner, Stokes and Sallay spent some time at home putting their children to bed. Then they went for a walk.

Stokes and Sallay took their walk between 9 and 10 p.m. While they were walking, they encountered some of Stokes’s friends. One of them gave Stokes a basketball. After stopping to talk to his friends, they headed back home. They walked at a normal pace to North Green Street. Stokes and Sallay were passing the basketball back and forth to each other as they walked.

Sallay was not familiar with the area of North Green Street. Although the street was dark, she and Stokes played with the basketball as they walked on the sidewalk. Stokes was either bouncing the ball or passing it to Sallay when his foot fell into a hole in the sidewalk. When Stokes’s foot fell through the hole, they were between the 600 and 700 block of Green Street.

After Stokes’s foot fell through the hole, he began twisting his foot, trying to get it out of the hole. In trying to get his foot out of the hole, Stokes fell over in Sallay’s direction. He told her he could not get up or walk. Stokes looked to be in a lot of pain.

Stokes told Sallay to call an ambulance. So Sallay walked to Chicago Avenue to find a phone and call an ambulance. Sallay called 911 on a pay phone and asked for an ambulance. By the time she returned to the scene, Stokes had been put in the ambulance. Sallay then walked to Northwestern Hospital to be with him.

Stokes’s lawyer read into evidence the evidence deposition of Dr. Cordes. Dr. Cordes treated Stokes in the emergency room at Northwestern Hospital. He diagnosed Stokes with a calcaneus (heel bone) fracture of the left foot. Dr. Cordes’s records list the cause of injury as a “trip and fall.”

According to the doctor, when Stokes was admitted in the emergency room, he said he had fallen in a pothole in the street. Dr. Cordes opined that “it requires a fairly exertional amount of energy to fracture that calcaneus ***. Typically we see these from falls from [great] heights ***.” Dr. Cordes said he would have to know the depth of the hole and the speed of the foot entering the hole to determine whether it could have caused Stokes’s injury. Although he could not determine what caused Stokes’s heel to break, he “supposed it could” have happened if the twisting of the body generated enough torque to break the bone.

Dr. William Dobozi, an expert in orthopedic trauma, testified for the City. Based on Stokes’s X rays, the doctor opined Stokes suffered a depressed “complex” fracture of his calcaneus. Because the fracture was “complex,” Stokes’s broken heel bone must have been caused by a high energy force.

Generally, said the doctor, this type of injury occurs as a result of a fall from great heights or a high-speed auto accident. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
775 N.E.2d 72, 333 Ill. App. 3d 272, 266 Ill. Dec. 510, 2002 Ill. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-2002.