Stone v. Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Ry. Corp.

2023 IL App (1st) 220529-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 20, 2023
Docket1-22-0529
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 220529-U (Stone v. Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Ry. Corp.) 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
Stone v. Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Ry. Corp., 2023 IL App (1st) 220529-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 220529-U No. 1-22-0529 Order filed December 20, 2023 Third Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ DEWANNA STONE, Independent Administrator of the ) Appeal from the Estate of Lateasha K. Phillips, Deceased, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) No. 18 L 3076 THE NORTHEAST ILLINOIS REGIONAL ) COMMUTER RAILWAY CORPORATION, ) an Illinois Corporation d/b/a METRA, ) ) Honorable Defendant-Appellee. ) Marcia Maras, ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE LAMPKIN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Reyes and Justice R. Van Tine concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The judgment of the trial court, granting summary judgment in favor of defendant on the basis that defendant owed no duty of care to decedent, is affirmed.

¶2 Plaintiff Dewanna Stone, the administrator of Lateasha Phillips’s estate, brought a survival

and wrongful death action against defendant Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Railway No. 1-22-0529

Corporation d/b/a METRA (Metra) after Phillips was struck and killed by a Metra train. The trial

court granted summary judgment in favor of Metra, and plaintiff now appeals.

¶3 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.1

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 Metra is a governmental entity organized pursuant to the Regional Transportation

Authority Act, 70 ILCS 3615/1.01 et seq. (West 2018). It owns and operates multiple passenger

service train lines in the Chicago, Illinois area. One such line runs from downtown Millenium Park

to University Park, a southern suburb of Chicago. The 47th Street Station (Station) lies along this

University Park line. On January 15, 2018, Phillips was waiting at the Station when she was struck

and killed by an express train passing through the station at 60.9 miles per hour.

¶6 Plaintiff’s first of two counts alleged a survival action, claiming that defendant owed

Phillips the highest degree of care as a passenger and that defendant: (1) operated the train at

excessive speed; (2) failed to apply the brakes or stop the train to avoid hitting Phillips; (3) failed

to maintain safety devices at the Station that would have prevented the accident; (4) failed to

adequately sound the train’s horn to warn Phillips; and (5) failed to notify Phillips that a train was

approaching the inside track. Plaintiff’s second count alleged wrongful death and cited the same

five failures on the part of defendant.

¶7 Defendant answered and asserted affirmative defenses that: (1) Phillips was trespassing at

the time she was struck by the train; (2) excessive speed claims were preempted by federal law;

(3) Metra was entitled to tort immunity pursuant to 745 ILCS 10/1-206 et seq.; and (5) a moving

1 In adherence with the requirements of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 352(a) (eff. July 1, 2018), this appeal has been resolved without oral argument upon the entry of a separate written order.

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train was an open and obvious hazard. Plaintiff ultimately voluntarily dismissed the survival

action.

¶8 Following extensive discovery, defendant moved for summary judgment on July 23, 2021,

and attached a number of deposition transcripts, affidavits, photographs, and other evidence. One

of these affidavits, that belonging to Corinna Gallardo Jerbis, a manager in defendant’s customer

communications department, averred that Metra used a communication system to broadcast the

status of trains, including warnings that alert passengers a train is approaching. Jerbis’s affidavit

further averred that the system made two announcements at the Station on January 15, 2018, one

at 11:13:34 a.m., and another at 11:29:14 a.m. The former told passengers that a train bound for

Chicago was arriving and warned passengers to remain behind the yellow lines. The latter

informed passengers that the next approaching train was an express train and would not stop.

¶9 Plaintiff moved to strike Jerbis’s affidavit on September 9, 2021, on the basis that Jerbis

was not present at the Station on January 15, 2018, and had no first-hand knowledge that those

announcements were made at the Station, or if they were, whether they were audible. Instead,

plaintiff claimed that Jerbis’s affidavit was based purely on data from Metra’s computer system.

¶ 10 On November 17, 2021, the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion to strike in part, striking

only the paragraph which averred that the two announcements were made at the Station on January

15, 2018.

¶ 11 On December 21, 2021, plaintiff filed a response to defendant’s motion for summary

judgment. That response included the affidavit of Charles L. Culver, a private railroad operations

consultant, which offered a number of opinions. First, Culver stated that Phillips would not have

been struck by a train if a gate had been in place at the ground level of the Station at 47th Street,

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and that the Station itself obstructed the view of Phillips as she stood on the ground next to the

tracks. He also opined that the train engineer, Todd Thompson, failed to apply the brakes in a

timely manner and failed to reduce his speed. Culver opined that yellow markings on the stairs at

the Station were confusing and de-emphasized the importance of the yellow lines that demarcated

areas where individuals should not stand. Finally, Culver opined that Phillips was not trespassing

and that defendant owed Phillips the highest duty of care. On defendant’s motion, the trial court

struck Culver’s affidavit in its entirety on February 22, 2022.

¶ 12 The following is a summary of the remaining relevant evidence with which the trial court

evaluated defendant’s motion for summary judgment.

¶ 13 The Station is elevated and accessible via 47th Street, which runs underneath the Station.

Once up the stairs, passengers find themselves on a landing at ground level with the tracks with

chain-link fence on either side of them. Openings on either side of the fence, marked by a yellow

line, allow for access to the tracks themselves. A chain is sometimes in place across these openings,

but it could be removed at times such as during snow removal. Another small set of stairs leads to

an elevated platform from which passengers can board trains. Yellow lines run the length of the

platform on either side. Individuals must remain behind these lines until approaching trains have

come to a complete stop. Metra stations ordinarily play automated announcements that alert

passengers to approaching trains and remind them to stay behind the yellow line, or that the next

inbound train is an express train that will not stop. However, there was no first-hand evidence

available that either of those messages were audible at the Station on the morning Phillips was

struck and killed. The record contains a number of photographs depicting the Station and its

surroundings in addition to testimony describing the Station. Overhead photographs also show that

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Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (1st) 220529-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-northeast-illinois-regional-commuter-ry-corp-illappct-2023.