Walsh v. Chicago Railways Co.

216 Ill. App. 409, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 344
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 28, 1920
DocketGen. No. 24,756
StatusPublished

This text of 216 Ill. App. 409 (Walsh v. Chicago Railways Co.) 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
Walsh v. Chicago Railways Co., 216 Ill. App. 409, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 344 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the. opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in the circuit court on April 7, 1918, for $1,800, in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in an action on the ease brought to recover damages for injuries claimed to have been sustained by the plaintiff on July 10, 1914, when she undertook to get off a northbound Halsted street car at or near the intersection of West 12th and Halsted streets, Chicago.

There are two counts to the declaration. The first count alleges it was the duty of the defendant to use all due care and caution and to safely carry the plaintiff and prevent the overcrowding of its car but that the defendant failed and negligently, carelessly, improperly and recklessly suffered and permitted- the overcrowding of the car and of persons who were then and there on said car, and that while the car was there on Halsted street, at or near the intersection.of West 12th street, and while the plaintiff was using due care, certain persons, who were then and there upon the ear did, by reason of the overcrowding of the car, run upon and against and pushed her out of the car and down to and upon the ground, causing her to be injured.

The second count alleges that it was the duty of the defendant to use all due care in carrying her while a passenger, but that the defendant so negligently, carelessly, improperly and recklessly drove, managed and operated the car in which she was a passenger, that, while she was in the exercise of due care, she was thrown upon divers portions of said car and down to and upon the ground, causing her to be injured. The defendant filed a plea of the general issue.

The plaintiff is a woman, and at the time of the injury was about 57 years of age. She boarded the northbound car in question at 63rd and Halsted streets. At the time she became a passenger there were quite a number of empty seats. She took a seat about a quarter of the length of the car from the rear, being three or four seats from the rear door.

The evidence of the plaintiff concerning the occurrence in question is substantially as follows: That she lived at 3642 Arlington street, was a dressmaker by profession, earning from $12 to $14 a week; that on July 10, 1914, in the latter part of the afternoon she became a passenger of the defendant at 63rd and ITalsted streets, on a through route car, and occupied a seat about three or four seats from the rear; that at that time there were a number of vacant seats; that at 39th and Halsted streets, the car became crowded with men from the' stockyards; that her destination was 12th street, and when the conductor called that street she got up to get off; that when she got up she could not get to the door; that there was such a crowd it pushed her all the way from her seat to the door; that there was no space to walk in; that the crowd was ■ so close they were walking on her and pushed her from her seat to the door; that, when she got to the platform, she had no room, was pushed out from the platform into the street; that she tried to prevent herself from being pushed off the platform by pushing back, but there was no room; that the crowd was nearly all men, trying to push out; that she was trying to get off, but does not remember whether she stepped on the front step before she went down; that she fell or sank to the pavement and was injured.

The defendant called as witnesses the street car conductor, the motorman and the supervisor. It is thA evidence of the conductor, Bush, that the accident occurred about 6:03 in the evening; that he was standing within the railing on the rear platform; that when he reached 12th street there were about seventy-five people on the car; that some were standing up, but none standing up on the rear platform; that the car was stopped at 12th street; that about eight or ten people got on and about the same number got off; that he rang the bell to go ahead; that the ear started across the street; that just as the car was on the crossing the plaintiff came ont and said: “Is this 12th street?” that he told her it was; that she then said, “Stop the car please, I want to get off”; that he rang the bell and the motorman stopped the car on the north side of 12th street; that he let her off and while she was getting off some one jumped on the car; “I don’t know if he pushed against her or not, but the lady fell”; that no one else was getting off at that time; that he got off and picked her up and walked with her towards the sidewalk; that at that moment the supervisor came and took charge of her. On cross-examination he testified that although the passengers on this car were mostly working men they got on all along the street and not at the stockyards.

It is the evidence of the motorman that at the time in question there were about nine people on the front end of the car; that he stopped the car on the south side of 12th street and let off a couple of men from the front end; that he did not know anything about who got off the back end; that after he started up and was about in the center of 12th street the bell rang and he stopped the car on the north side of 12th street; that he got off and went back to where the conductor was talking with an old lady; that the supervisor came and told them to go ahead with their car, which they did.

The evidence of one Madsen, a so-called supervisor, was to the effect that seeing the cars were not going regularly he went from where he was to 12th and Halsted streets and there found the northbound car on the north side of the street, and that the cause of the delay was, the plaintiff claimed that she had fallen down; that she was on the sidewalk with the conductor when he first saw her; that he talked with her and then took her over to the drug store and stayed there until she was taken away.

The cause was tried before a jury and a verdict recovered and judgment entered in the sum of $1,800.

Where a woman becomes a passenger and obtains a seat on an uncrowded street car and when approaching her destination, the car meanwhile having become overcrowded, undertakes to get off and in doing so is shoved and pushed and practically involuntarily carried along and finally, against her will, thrust out on the street and injured, is the carrier liable? We are inclined to answer in the affirmative. In McCumber v. Boston El. R. Co., 207 Mass. 559, the court held that where one “voluntarily and intelligently became a passenger of a car so crowded that she could not get a seat, and knew that perhaps she might be obliged to stand in the vestibule,” that it was not negligence on her part, “but by so doing she assumed whatever obligation or risk was incident to that condition.” The instant case is distinguishable from the McCumber case, supra, and may be said to be somewhat parallel with that of Kordick v. Chicago Rys. Co., 187 Ill. App. 74. The instant case differs from the Massachusetts case in that here, when the plaintiff got on, she was able to get a seat and the car was not crowded but became so afterwards, and before it reached her destination. In the Kordick case, supra, the passenger boarded a crowded street car and stood on the rear platform near the step and the court said: “Whether or not the car in question was so overcrowded as to endanger the safety of the passengers and whether or not appellant was negligent in permitting the car to become so overcrowded, were questions of fact properly submitted to the jury,” etc. In Knaisch v. Joline, 138 N. Y. App. Div.

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Related

Knaisch v. Joline
138 A.D. 854 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)
McCumber v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.
93 N.E. 698 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1911)
Kordick v. Chicago Railways Co.
187 Ill. App. 74 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1914)

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216 Ill. App. 409, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-chicago-railways-co-illappct-1920.