VanCleef v. City of Chicago

240 Ill. 318
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 240 Ill. 318 (VanCleef v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VanCleef v. City of Chicago, 240 Ill. 318 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On June 15, 1903, the city council of the city of Chicago, on the application of the business men of the eighth ward, passed a resolution giving permission to use certain streets for a merchants’ carnival and street fair to be held from July 20 to July 26, 1903, with the necessary shows, stands and attractions. Under that authority the streets named in the resolution were occupied with tents, booths and other structures, and at the corner of Ninety-second street and Exchange avenue there were three shows in tents erected in the street intersection. One was an animal show, another a lilliputian, and the third was a show named “Enoch, the Water Man.” The streets were festooned and illuminated by electric lights and the crowds at night were estimated from 40,000 to 50,000 people. The sidewalks and roadways were full of visitors to the street carnival and teams and street cars went around through other streets. The tent in which the show of “Enoch” was conducted would hold three hundred people. In front of it was a platform six feet wide, fifteen or more feet long and four or five feet above the street. A “barker” stood on the platform attracting the attention of the crowd to the show, and there was a place there for selling tickets. A stairway five or six feet wide went up to the platform from the street and a like stairway led down on the other side into the tent. The show lasted about ten or fifteen minutes, and consisted of “Enoch” in a water tank smoking a pipe. The defendant in error, Anna VanCleef, went into the show with her husband about nine o’clock in the evening of July 24, 1903. The performance was attended by one hundred and fifty to two hundred people, and at its conclusion the crowd started to go out on the street. In descending the steps from the platform to the street Mrs. VanCleef was pushed by the crowd, and there being no railing 01-guard along the edge of the stairway she fell to the street and suffered serious injuries. She brought her suit in the superior court of Cook county against the plaintiff in error, the city of Chicago, to recover damages for her injuries, and obtained a verdict for $15,000. The court denied motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment and entered judgment on the verdict. The Branch Appellate Court for the Eirst District affirmed the judgment, and the city sued out a writ of error from this court to bring the judgment of the Appellate Court in review.

The brief and argument of counsel for the city is almost wholly devoted to the general proposition that under the facts of the case the plaintiff was not entitled to re~ cover and the city was not liable for her injury, and is not directed to any ruling of the trial court or any error assigned, and an argument of that kind might very properly be disregarded. On the oral argument, however, the counsel stated that the argument then made and the printed brief and argument were designed to demonstrate that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict of not guilty and refusing to arrest the judgment after verdict, and we are disposed to consider them as applying to the errors assigned on such rulings.

The controverted questions of fact have been settled against the city by the judgment of the Appellate Court, and there is and can be no dispute of the propositions that the city had no power to authorize the use of the street for the carnival and street fair; that the occupancy of the street for that purpose was unlawful and the tent and platform a nuisance per se; that the city having by an affirmative act authorized the creation of the public nuisance, became a participant in creating and maintaining it and was not entitled to any notice of its existence or character, and that although it did not itself put up the structure, it became liable for all injurious consequences to anyone who might be in a position to complain of the breach of duty by the creation of the nuisance. It is admitted that the structure in the street was a public nuisance and the city would be liable for any resulting injuries to persons using the street for street purposes, but it is contended that' to those using the structure it was a private nuisance on account of its improper construction, and that the city was not a participant in creating and maintaining the private nuisance in its aspect as a structure unsafe to those using it. Counsel, repeating the argument in different form, say that the invitation to enter the show was extended by parties in control of it, and while the city would be liable for an injury to anyone using the street for the legitimate purposes of a street, the plaintiff was hurt solely by reason of entering upon the insufficient stairway, and the fact that the street had been made unsafe for use as a street had no connection with her injury. Counsel therefore conclude that the wrong by the city was not the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff.

It is, of course, true that the injury must be the legitimate consequence of the wrong, and, considering the question of proximate cause in the relation of cause and effect, it is clear that the injury was a natural result of the wrongful act of the city. When the city authorized showmen to fill its streets with tents and structures of the temporary character usual in carnivals and street fairs, it was reasonably to be apprehended that unless considerable care was exercised injury might result. It was not necessary that the city should have contemplated or been able to anticipate the injurious consequences to the plaintiff or the precise form of her injury, but it is sufficient that the city might have foreseen that some injury might result from its wrongful act, and when the injury did result, it could be seen that it was the natural consequence of the occupation of the street by structures of the nature of this platform under the permission given by the city. The negligence of the one who constructed the platform would not exempt the city if the permission was also a proximate cause. The city was guilty of a serious wrong and violation of duty by permitting the occupation of the streets for show purposes and creating a nuisance in them, and the expectation was that large numbers of people would go into the shows by whatever means might be provided. The city negligently permitted the structure authorized by it to be erected in an unsafe manner, and the wrong and resulting damage were connected according to the ordinary course of events. This proposition is practically conceded on the part of the city in the admission expressly made that if the plaintiff had gone on the platform voluntarily for the purpose of passing' over it to reach some other place, and precisely the same injury had resulted from the same cause, the city would be liable. The relation of cause and effect would not exist in that case any more than in this. 1

The principal ground upon which counsel'insist that the wrong was not the proximate cause of the injury is, that the city owed no duty to the plaintiff when she went over the platform to see the show and while she was returning from it, and as to her the street was not unsafe, as a street, while she was in that situation.

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Bluebook (online)
240 Ill. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vancleef-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1909.