Walsh v. Chicago Transit Authority

171 N.E.2d 235, 28 Ill. App. 2d 243, 1960 Ill. App. LEXIS 542
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 22, 1960
DocketGen. 48,089
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 N.E.2d 235 (Walsh v. Chicago Transit Authority) 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 Transit Authority, 171 N.E.2d 235, 28 Ill. App. 2d 243, 1960 Ill. App. LEXIS 542 (Ill. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

MR. PRESIDING JUSTICE BURKE

delivered the opinion of the conrt.

Helen Walsh sued the Chicago Transit Authority to recover damages for injuries suffered because of the alleged negligence of the defendant in the maintenance of an exit gate on a stairway leading from the elevated railroad platform. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court directed a verdict for the defendant and entered judgment thereon. She appeals.

Plaintiff, a clerk 50 years of age employed by the Gas Company at 3500 South Pulaski Road, Chicago, the sole witness to the occurrence, had an appointment •with friends to take dinner at Stouffer’s Restaurant at Randolph Street and Wabash Avenue on the evening of September 17, 1952. She drove her car to the Tripp Avenue station, parked it and boarded a loop elevated train. At about 5:30 P.M. she left the train at the Randolph and Wabash station. She was familiar with the station and the exit. When she left the train she was north of the exit and walked about 30 feet to the exit gate. The gate swings to the left. She had her purse in her right hand. She pushed the gate with her left hand, intending to use that hand to reach for the bannister. She was on her way down the stairs from the upper platform to the intermediate platform when the mishap occurred. The gate is a wooden structure. Pour pictures received in evidence are helpful in comprehending her testimony. There are springs in the gate so that as soon as it is released it swings back and strikes against posts which prevent it from going further and tend to cause it to rebound and partially open again. She had taken one or two steps when the gate swung back, threw her off balance and she fell down the stairs. She said it is a swinging gate; that it gains momentum when you push and keeps swinging until it loses its momentum. She remembered that “there was a resistance, pressure of the spring, because the springs are there.” She testified that after she had pushed the gate and taken one or two steps “the gate of course swung back again, hit my back, threw me off my balance” and that she fell down the stairs. She did not see the gate after she passed it. She did not testify that she glanced behind. She said that she did not know of “anybody who was in front of me or behind me as I started to go down the stairs.” She testified that “as far as I know the gate functioned as it normally did before. It functioned as in other stations that I know of.” She was taken in an ambulance to the Passavant Hospital.

By a motion to direct a verdict at the close of plaintiff’s case the sole question presented to the court is whether, admitting the evidence in favor of the plaintiff to he true, that evidence, together with all legitimate inferences, fairly tends to sustain plaintiff’s cause of action. Yess v. Yess, 255 Ill. 414, 418, 99 N. E. 687; Vieceli v. Cummings, 322 Ill. App. 559, 54 N.E.2d 717.

Plaintiff, relying on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, maintains that her testimony established a case which should have been submitted to the jury. Our Supreme Court in Feldman v. Chicago Rys. Co., 289 Ill. 25, 124 N. E. 334, said:

“When a thing which has caused an injury is shown to be under the management of the party charged with negligence and the accident is such as in the ordinary course of things will not happen if those who have such management use proper care, the accident itself affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of an explanation by the parties charged, that it arose from the want of proper care. . . . The rule is that negligence is never presumed, but that the circumstances surrounding the case where the maxim of res ipsa loquitur applies, amount to evidence from which the facts of negligence may be found; that is, in a case within the maxim of res ipsa loquitur, proof of the circumstances of such case and of the injury constitutes a prima facie case of negligence, and will justify a verdict unless such prima facie case is overcome by proof showing that the party charged is not at fault.”

In applying the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur the court in Edmonds v. Heil, 333 Ill. App. 497, 77 N.E.2d 863, said (510):

“The presumption of defendants’ negligence was of course rebuttable and it was incumbent upon them to furnish an explanation of the occurrence of the fire consistent with due care on their part, if they could. Whether the evidence introduced by them in explanation of the occurrence of the fire was sufficient to rebut the presumption of their negligence was a question for the jury to determine.”

See also Siniarski v. Hudson, 338 Ill. App. 137, 155, 87 N.E.2d 137. The doctrine is applied as a matter of necessity and is based upon the theory that the defendant has, within its knowledge and control, evidence which plaintiff does not possess and cannot conveniently obtain.

Defendant asserts that plaintiff’s testimony that the gate struck her in the back described a factual situation that could not have occurred without having violated physical laws, and that the trial judge was under a duty of directing a verdict for the defendant. “Courts will take judicial notice of scientific facts which have been well established by authoritative scientists and are generally accepted as irrefutable by living scientists.” Nicketta v. National Tea Co., 338 Ill. App. 159, 162, 87 N.E.2d 30. Defendant states that it was physically impossible for the gate in and of its own action to have struck plaintiff in the back; that after she passed through the gateway and the gate was swinging away from her it could not have suddenly rebounded toward her midway in its arc before reaching the vertical piece in the doorway; that it has nothing against which to rebound; that it could not have rebounded against the vertical piece in the doorway; that assuming that the gate had springs which did not function properly, such improper functioning would not have caused the gate to rebound; that a door spring because of its very nature will not throw the door in an outward direction away from the center of the doorway; that the only function of which it is capable is to restrain the outward movement of the door; not to throw it outward; and that, according to the testimony of plaintiff, the springs at the time functioned in the only way that springs are capable of functioning by restraining the gate from springing outward.

There is no evidence that the gate was of “light wood” as claimed by defendant. Reasonable men looking at the exhibits could legitimately infer that the gate was of heavy construction. We cannot say from our knowledge of the resiliency of wood how" far a gate of that material would rebound against a wood strip. We assume that the springs on the gate were for the purpose of restraining its outward movement. Jurors could reasonably infer that the force of the springs against the gate would cause it to close with even greater force than that created by its own weight, thus causing a greater rebound.

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171 N.E.2d 235, 28 Ill. App. 2d 243, 1960 Ill. App. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-chicago-transit-authority-illappct-1960.