Village of Warren v. Wright

3 Ill. App. 602
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Ill. App. 602 (Village of Warren v. Wright) 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
Village of Warren v. Wright, 3 Ill. App. 602 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Leland, J.

This was an action on the case by appellee, against appellant, to recover damages for an injury caused by the fall of a sidewalk, through the alleged negligence of the latter.

On the south side of Main street, there was a sidewalk built in 1858 or 1859, by the then lot owner. The portion of the walk which fell was in front of two buildings, and of the space of about eight feet between them, the easternmost called Brand’s and the other Brink’s. There was a depression in the surface of the earth, by reason of which the portion of the sidewalk which fell was about seven feet above the ground. The depression had been filled in the street nearly up to the girders upon which the stringers rested. There was a stone wall parallel to and seven feet distant from the front walls of the buildings. The girders were five feet apart, and about two inches higher at the south ends than at the north, with their north ends resting on the top of the street wall, and their south ends inserted in holes in the walls of the buildings, except that the one girder which was in the space between the buildings, rested upon the top of a post. On the girders and at right angles with them, were four or five, probably four, 2x6 stringers to which the boards were nailed. The stringers were probably not nailed to the girders. Whether the post upon which the girder rested, was set upon a stone, stood upon the surface of the earth or was driven into it, does not appear. Bor does it appear whether the girder was nailed to it, nor whether the post was in any way braced or stayed. The end of the girder resting on the post, and of the one five feet east from it, which was in a hole near the west side of the Brand building, on May 11th, 1877, fell simultaneously, or possibly one of the supports may have given way wholly or partially before the other did, leaving the fallen portion of the sidewalk about fifteen feet in length at an angle of forty-five degrees, with the south side or side nearest the buildings on the ground and the north side on or against the street wall.

There were four persons on it when it fell; three of them near the building, and one, appellee, near the street wall. Those near the building were unhurt. Appellee plunged forward, or slid down the inclined plane, and fell between the two buildings, and was hurt, mainly in the small of the back. It is not easy to determine from the evidence how serious the injury was, or that it was really a serious one at all. One jury thought appellee was injured to the extent of $2,000, and the last one fixed the amount at $3,000. Sympathy, however, is often so strong in such cases that it is difficult to restrain the impulse to be liberally charitable, when the fund to bestowed is another’s. There was a flight of stairs on each side of the space between the buildings, leading up to the second story. The stairs nearly filled the space, and rested on the sidewalk. The stairs of the Brink building had settled at the side farthest from the building, so that the steps were not horizontal, but were lowest at the outer ends. The sidewalk had settled or sagged down between the buildings some few inches, probably about four or five. As there is no other way to account for this, except by the settling of the top of the post or point of support under the girder, we may assume that this was done. It is no matter how it was done. The top of the post was in some way lowered, and the superstructure went down also; the girder by its own weight, if not attached to the stringers, and the latter were sprung or bent down. A mechanic was employed in November, 1874, to repair the Brink stairs, and in order to bring the steps up to the horizontal, instead of putting a post under the end of the girder in place of or near the other, he put a six-inch post, as he says, about five feet from the Brand building and four feet from the Brink building, and placed it under the stringer. This new post of the. stair repairer must have been near to the old post of the sidewalk constructor. When he had the sidewalk and steps raised up so as to be horizontal, or nearly so, with his post under the stringer, the place of support was, of course, transferred from the old post to the new one, unless he had left a wedge, used in raising between the top of the old post and the girder or between the girder and the stringer or all the stringers. And so it would be if the wedge placed there got out.

The mechanic was repairing stairs, not a sidewalk; and it is quite probable that when he got through with his work, there was no very good reason why the girder should remain on the top of the post, or why the post with the girder on it should not go down. The stringer on the new post was not the only one raised. All the others between it and the street wall must have gone up too, some more and some less; and so it might have been with the other girder which fell. The superincumbent weight might have been taken wholly or in part off both girders, leaving them in a condition to be easily moved. It may also be that by not raising the stringer on the new post perpendicularly, but by pressing it street-ward, while the stringers and girder at the Brand corner were still in contact, the latter may have been drawn wholly or partly out of the hole in the wall. And to this result the tapping of the stringers as they rose and fell, might have contributed. If such were the circumstances, it is probable that the walk did shake and teeter some before it fell. The exact time when and manner in which these two girders went down, might be material in enabling us to determine whether the original construction was with ordinary care and diligence, or whether, if the original construction was well enough, and the whole trouble came from setting that new post under the stringer instead of the girder, ordinary care was used by the trustees to ascertain what the matter was, and to apply the remedy. It might be said that it was asking a little too much of the trustees to require them to have done so, when the attorneys and witnesses do not explain how the thing was done. We can imagine now how the sidewalk could have been made safer when originally constructed, or if the trouble came from repairing the stairs, which seems probable how it might have been avoided; but it is often easier to ascertain after the effect is produced, what the cause was, than to discover what nr y be the future effect of an existing cause.

The case at bar is not so clear for the appellee, taking into account the doubt as to the extent of his injury, the magnitude of the verdict, and the question whether appellant has not really exercised ordinary care and diligence, that we can say that there has been that substantial justice done which render’s inaccuracy of ruling by the court below unimportant in an appellate tribunal.

The only question, therefore, about which we propose to express an opinion, is that as to the instructions.

Without considering what would be the effect if the bill of exceptions did show that the five instructions given for appellee were not all that were given for him as claimed by appellee, we think it does substantially appear that he asked for no others. Tire conclusion that there might have been others between those asked for by appellee, and those asked for by appellant, is, we think, fairly excluded by the language of the bill of exceptions.

It is not necessary to investigate whether the appellee exercised proper care. He has been injured without fault on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ill. App. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-warren-v-wright-illappct-1878.