Udwin v. Spirkel

136 Ill. App. 155, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 603
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,479
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 Ill. App. 155 (Udwin v. Spirkel) 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
Udwin v. Spirkel, 136 Ill. App. 155, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 603 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error sued defendant in error in case for negligence. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the court, on the defendant’s motion, peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the defendant, which the jury did, and judgment was rendered against the plaintiff for costs. The facts are few and simple and are substantially as follows:

The defendant is the owner and in control of the building known as number 293 West Twelfth street, in the city of Chicago, which is an apartment building consisting of six flats and a store on the ground floor. At the time of the accideht hereinafter mentioned, the six flats were occnpied by six families. Plaintiff occupied the second flat as a tenant of defendant from month to month, and had lived in the premises four years. There is a small yard in the rear of the building, and, at the rear end of the yard, there are sheds which are used by the tenants of the building.for storing fuel and other property. These sheds were reached by the tenants of the building by means of a board walk eight or nine feet wide, which extended from the building to the sheds. The ground under this walk was excavated to the depth of about six feet, and the space thus made was used as a storage room. About -a week or ten days before July 1, 1901, at which last date the accident occurred, a boy broke through one of the boards of the walk, leaving a hole in it about two and one-half feet long by about one foot wide, and about the middle of the walk and three feet from the foot of the stairs leading down to the walk from the building. The next day after this happened the plaintiff informed defendant of the hole, and told him that it was dangerous. In the forenoon of July 1, 1901, L. Kolmenowitz met plaintiff on Twelfth street, near the building in question, and asked him if he had any boards of a certain kind, and plaintiff said he had, and then Kolmenowitz went down the alley in the rear of the sheds and plaintiff went on Twelfth street to his residence to get the key to his shed. Plaintiff, the only witness to the actual occurrence of the accident, testified: “On July 1, 1901, about 10 o’clock in the forenoon, I was going to my shed in the rear of the house to attend to some business, and, while passing over the walk in the rear of the house, I stumbled over a nail or some obstruction about the edge of the hole in the walk, and I fell with my right foot and leg into the hole. My leg went down clear up to about the hip. I had forgotten about the hole in the walk, and was not thinking of it at the time I fell. I had my mind on the man who was waiting for me at the shed, and upon the business I was about to transact. I did not see the hole. The sidewalk thereabout was partly covered with paper. I do not know how the papers got there. I only used the walk occasionally in the summer time, and I cannot recall that I passed over it or saw it between the time the hole was broken into the walk and the time I fell into it, about a week or ten days.” He further testified that he was wedged in tight in the hole and had to call for help. On cross-examination he testified that there were two or three feet on each side of the hole where there was no paper and where one could have walked, and that he was in a hurry and walking fast, as the man was waiting for him at the shed. Kolmenowitz and Lewis Udwin, plaintiff’s son, both testified that they heard plaintiff’s call for help and went to his assistance and found him wedged in the hole, and lifted him out of it. Kolmenowitz testified that the hole, all around the edge of it, was covered with paper, pressed up tight to the sides, and Lewis Hdwin testified that he looked at the place where plaintiff was lying, and found a lot of paper there on the walk, and paper pressed against the side of the hole where plaintiff’s leg had been wedged in. The day was clear at the time of the accident. The evidence tends to prove that the plaintiff was seriously injured.

The specific ground on which the court took the case from the jury does not appear from the record; but counsel for the parties, respectively, agree that it was on the ground that plaintiff failed to prove that he was exercising ordinary care, at or about the time of the accident, and we think this must have been the ground of the court’s action, as we think the evidence tends to prove negligence on the part of the defendant. Counsel for the defendant contend that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, in walking fast, and in not seeing and avoiding the hole in the walk.

A motion to take a case from the jury “is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, and, except as to technical methods of procedure, is governed by the same rules. The maker of the motion so to instruct admits the truth of all opposing evidence, and all inferences which may be fairly and rationally drawn from it. The motion does not involve a determination of the weight of the evidence, nor the credibility of witnesses.” Offutt v. World’s Columbian Exposition, 175 Ill., 472, 474; Metropolitan El. Ry. Co. v. Fortin, 203 ib., 454.

If the evidence, with all the legitimate inferences which may be deduced from it, tends to support the plaintiff’s case, and if “the jury could without acting unreasonably in the eye of the law, decide in favor of the plaintiff” (Bartelott v. International Bank, 119 Ill., 259, 212), then the court was not warranted in taking the case from the jury. In Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Connell, 74 Ill. App., 447, we said, Mr. Justice Sears delivering the opinion: “And it is seen, from an examination of all the cases, that it is, after all, the test of the possibility of reasonable minds differing upon the question of what conclusion should be drawn from the facts, which must govern.” Ib. 452. In order to sustain the taking of the case from the jury, we must hold that men of reasonable minds could arrive at but one reasonable conclusion from the evidence, namely, that the plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care, and that his failing so to do contributed to the injury. ISTow what are the salient facts bearing on the question whether the plaintiff exercised ordinary care ? A week or ten days before the accident he informed defendant of the hole, and told him that it was dangerous, and defendant said he would fix it right away. The walk ivas made of boards and could have been repaired in a very short time, probably in less than half an hour, and plaintiff was warranted in believing that defendant would, as he said he would, fix it immediately, and, so believing, he probably dismissed the matter from his mind. Kolmenowitz testified: “The hole all around the edge was covered with paper pressed up tight to the sides,” and Lewis lid-win testified that he found a lot of paper on the walk “and paper pressed against the side of the hole where my father’s leg had been wedged in.” We do not think it an unreasonable inference from this that the hole, before plaintiff fell in it, was, at least partly covered and hidden from view by the paper, and that plaintiff, in falling into it, pressed the overhanging paper against the edge of the hole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 155, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/udwin-v-spirkel-illappct-1907.