Turck v. City of Chicago

146 Ill. App. 472, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 381
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 4, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,179
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 Ill. App. 472 (Turck 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
Turck v. City of Chicago, 146 Ill. App. 472, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 381 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the city of Chicago from a judgment of the Superior Court against it, for $5,000, rendered on March 16, 1907, in favor of the plaintiff Turck as administrator of Charles Klein, deceased. The action is under the “Campbell Act,” so-called, for causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate by negligence. The negligence charged in the original and amended counts of the declaration in the cause was that of suffering and maintaining a defective sidewalk on the east side of Lock street near Bonaparte street, in the city of Chicago, after notice of its unsafe and dangerous condition, so that by means thereof Charles Klein fell and was so badly injured that he afterward died of the injuries. The various counts of the declaration alleged in due form also the survivorship of a widow of Klein and of three sons and five daughters, for whose benefit the administrator brought this suit under the statute.

The defendant pleaded the general issue. The cause was submitted to a jury, who found a verdict for $5,000 in favor of the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial and one in arrest of judgment were denied and the judgment herein appealed from followed. There is no contention that the sidewalk was not defective at the time of the accident (January 10, 1904), nor that it had not been so long enough to impute notice to the city. Nor is there any claim that the plaintiff’s intestate knew of this defective condition. It is also admitted that he fell into a hole in said sidewalk on the night in question, and that he was taken home in a patrol wagon and was laid up for a time.

But the controversy in the case arises on the question whether this accident, with its resultant injury, was the cause of the death of Klein, which occurred just over four months from the date of the accident from a hemorrhage in the brain resulting in paralysis. At the time of this apoplectic seizure Klein had been working for about two weeks in heavy manual labor (pulling ice at a packing plant).

On his death an inquest was held, and the coroner’s jury, by a verdict which was received in evidence in this case, found that the deceased “came to his death on the 12th day of May, A. D. 1904,” “from injuries received causing paralysis, from a fall on the sidewalk on Lock street south of Archer avenue, some time in February”, etc.

The contention of the city of Chicago is that there is no sufficient evidence that the fall on the sidewalk was the proximate cause of the intestate’s death— indeed, that the evidence proves that the apoplexy or brain hemorrhage was entirely independent of the fall. For these reasons it is insisted that the judgment should be reversed without a remandment of the cause. But if this claim of the appellant is not allowed, it is contended that erroneous rulings on evidence and on instructions were made, which entitle the defendant at least to a new trial. It is also claimed that the verdict is excessive and shows by its size that it is the result of passion and prejudice. It is argued that the sum of five thousand dollars was too great to award as the measure of the pecuniary loss to the widow and children for the death of an unskilled laborer forty-three years old, “ addicted to the excessive use of alcoholic beverages”. We think this last qualification unjustified by the evidence. An effort seems to have been made in the cross-examination of some of the plaintiff’s witnesses and in the direct examination of witnesses for the defendant, to establish this proposition; but it resulted in nothing more than showing the fact that the deceased was not a total abstinent, and that on festive occasions members of the Platt Deutsche Guild had seen him with his countrymen “feeling happy, like the rest of us”, “with a little more than he should have”. None of the witnesses were willing to stigmatize him as a drunkard or even an intemperate man, or given to “over drinking”. He seems from the evidence in the record to have been an industrious man and a healthy one, willing and able, before his injury, by hard work to support his wife and children. His family was large and most of the children under age, several of them very young. We do not think that the verdict was too large if the death was the result of the accident.

Whether the death was the result of the accident was a question left to the jury under the following instructions:

“ Instruction 4.. If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was negligent, as alleged, and that the deceased was injured as a proximate cause of such negligence, yet unless you also believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the death of the deceased was proximately caused by reason of such negligence, if any, you should find the defendant, City of Chicago, not guilty.”

“Instruction 11. The court instructs the jury with respect to ailments claimed by the plaintiff to have caused the death of Charles Klein, plaintiff’s deceased, the law requires of the plaintiff before he can recover that he shall show by a preponderance of the evidence that such ailments were the result of the alleged accident and caused Klein’s death.

“The jury have no right to guess or conjecture that the ailments which produced his death were the result of said accident. Before plaintiff can recover it must appear by a preponderance or greater weight of the evidence, that the injuries sustained, if any, by reason of a defecetive condition of the sidewalk were the direct and proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s deceased.

“The .burden is not upon the defendant to show that the ailments which produced death arose from any other cause, and if the evidence is evenly balanced between the plaintiff and defendant on that question, the jury must find for the defendant, or if the jury believe that the ailments which produced death arose directlv and proximately from any other cause than that alleged, the plaintiff cannot recover in this case, and the jury must find the defendant, City of Chicago, not guilty.”

The fourth instruction, as above given, was exactly as it was tendered by the defendant, and instruction 11, although modified by the court from the original draft, substantially so. The modifications corrected it in patent errors, and are not complained of by defendant.

Under these instructions the jury showed by their verdict that from the evidence they found the fact to be that the injuries sustained by Klein by reason of the defective condition of the sidewalk were the direct and proximate cause of his death.

The appellant declares, through its counsel, that the only ground for this holding must have been “expert conjecture riding a fine-spun theory through the nebulous realm of speculation”. It insists that the testimony of the plaintiff was “speculation grayely offered as evidence”, “mere speculation based upon unwarranted assumptions”.

We concede the case to be a close one, and one in which as jurymen reasonable men might well have come to different conclusions, but it is a case in which a coroner’s jury on an ex parte hearing and a trial jury, after a thorough opportunity for investigation and deliberation, have passed on the question here involved adversely to the contention of the defendant and favorably to that of the plaintiff.

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167 Ill. App. 87 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
146 Ill. App. 472, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turck-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-1909.