West Chicago Street Railroad v. Brown

112 Ill. App. 351, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 542
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 1904
DocketGen. No. 10,989
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 Ill. App. 351 (West Chicago Street Railroad v. Brown) 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
West Chicago Street Railroad v. Brown, 112 Ill. App. 351, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 542 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Stein

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff was the only witness in her own behalf testifying to the accident. Her account of it is as follows:

“ I was coming up Madison street, and I saw a Rockwell street car, and, as 1 crossed the street, that went around the curve and 1 suppose went on. I then went on in front of Buck & Rayner’s and Streeter’s. I then saw a West Fortieth street car coining up Madison street. That was the car I wanted to take, and as it neared me I raised my hand and motioned the gripman, and he acknowledged it by bowing his head. I then stepped down in the street and he brought the car to a standstill, and I walked west towards the car to get on. I placed my right foot on the first step of the first trailer and took hold with my left hand, when the car suddenly started and threw my foot off the step. I then clung on with my left hand, and of course, the car going around the curve, threw me out in this position (illustrating), and back against the car. When I came back the third time I caught on with my right hand and I held in that position until the car nearly reached a standstill on State street, near the Boston Store, when the conductor from the grip came and assisted me on the platform. I did not see any conductor on the car I took hold of until after I was injured. I saw the conductor on the car on which I was injured about ten minutes afterwards. He came from the rear of the car. The man who assisted me on the car came from the grip; I saw him come. That was the first one I saw. I helped myself a little. He took hold of my arm and helped me up on the platform. I then stepped in the door, it was a closed car, and sat down. I had a small package in my right hand. When I took hold with my right hand and swung out that way, the bundle flew out of my hand and struck the gate. I first took hold with my left hand and then finally caught hold with my right. I sat down in the car. After I had sat there about ten minutes I saw the conductor coming from the rear of the car. He went through and talked to the conductor on the grip; then he came back and spoke to me.”

The train consisted of three cars, the grip-car, a Madison street trailer and an Ogden avenue trailer. Each car had a conductor. The gripman and the three conductors were called as witnesses by appellant. J. C. Stead, the gripman, testified in part as follows :

“ As I was approaching State street going east on Madison street, I noticed this lady coining running to the car. She was on the corner of State and' Madison. I was going around the curve and seen the lady come running. She run and stepped right into the car while the car was in motion. She stumbled a little, and I paid no more attention to her after that. I kept right on going. She got on the front end of the Madison street trailer. , At that time the grip-car was just beyond the cross-walk. That would bring the trailer right even with the cross-walk. The curve commences a little east of the cross-walk. The car was moving on that curve when she attempted to get on. The car was going around there about three or four miles an hour at that time. James Perrin, the conductor of the grip-car, was on the front end of the first trailer behind the grip, taking off the gate. I noticed the girl stumbled, and the conductor steadied her, so, by that, he must have had the gate off. Of course, I turned around to the front end of the car after that; paid no attention to her, as she did not fall off nor fall in any way. I could not say how he steadied the young woman, because I paid attention to the front end of the car after that. I did not stop west of the cross-walk on Madison 'street that morning. I noticed this young lady by her action coming toward the train. I did not nod my head that I remember of. I made a report of this matter. The lady moved naturally, kind óf quick, and drew my attention that she was after the Madison street car. The lady had a package at the time. I could not say how large the parcel was. When I seen the lady get on the car she kind of stumbled and the conductor steadied her. Of course, I did not pay any more attention to that. Of course, I seen that she did not fall off the car, but she kind of stumbled forward on it, and as I had to watch the front end I paid no more attention to it, and went right along around the curve.”

James Perrin was the conductor of the grip-car and not in appellant’s employ at the time of the trial. He described the accident as follows :

“As my car came from the west on Madison street that morning it stopped, on Dearborn street and did not stop after it left Dearborn until it got to State street. I was on the front platform of that first trailer after we left Dearborn street. I got on the front platform to take off the front gate in order that passengers could get on after we came to a stop on State street. After I took off the gate and the train passed north on State street people would get on on the west side. There were no tracks where they got on. On the east side there were tracks of the Chicago City Railway Company. I know where the cross-walk is from the Champlain building to Buck & Rayner’s. I had the gate off, when we reached that place. I noticed this young woman, Miss Brown, before she left the sidewalk. I noticed she was hurrying for the car. When I first saw her she had just about stepped off the sidewalk, about the middle of the sidewalk, I mean the sidewalk of State and Madison. She may have been right on the cross-walk. She was not more than a foot west of the cross-walk. She was walking for the trailer. I did not see her lift up her hand. I did not see the gripman Stead as he was going around the corner nod his head to her. I did not see anything of that kind. She came on a fast walk. When she got up to the car eshe jumped to get on. She went to step on, stepped on the car, the first step, taking hold of the handle at the front end of the car. She made a misstep or slip, or something, and as she did I catched her by the elbow and steadied her. I asked her if she was hurt and she made a retort which I could not understand, and she went in the car. • That is all I had to do with it. The car was in motion when she attempted to get on.”

George T. Brady was the conductor of the Madison street trailer which was immediately behind the grip-car and the one appellee boarded. He had severed his connection with appellant several years before the trial. He testified in part as follows:

“ At the time we came from the west on Madison street, and while the train was moving around the curve, I was on the rear platform of my car. It was a closed car. The platform was open. As the car was about to make the curve I was on the right side of the platform. That would be the south side. The train at that time before stopping on State street did not make any stop west of State on Madison street in the vicinity of Buck & Rayner’s or Streeter’s store. The first stop we made after leaving Dearborn street was on State street facing north. I remember Miss Brown attempting to bedome a passenger on my car. The first I saw of this lady she was about eight or ten feet from the car running towards the front end of my trail car. She had a bundle or package under her arm or hand. We were going around the curve at this time very slow. This young lady stepped up on the front step" of my trail-car, and as the cars swung around she seemed to lose her balance and straighten up. The. conductor on the grip-car was on the front end of my trail-car.

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Related

Chicago & Joliet Electric Railway Co. v. Patton
122 Ill. App. 174 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. App. 351, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-chicago-street-railroad-v-brown-illappct-1904.