Wilcke v. Henrotin

89 N.E. 329, 241 Ill. 169
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 N.E. 329 (Wilcke v. Henrotin) 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
Wilcke v. Henrotin, 89 N.E. 329, 241 Ill. 169 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

William Wilcke recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Cook county for $10,000 against Charles Henrotin, as receiver of the Chicago Electric Traction Company, on account of personal injuries received by plaintiff below on September 7, 1903, while a passenger on one of the street cars then being operated by the defendant. The judgment of the circuit court having been affirmed by the Appellate Court, the receiver has sued out a writ of error for the purpose of bringing the record into review in this court.

The errors relied on for a reversal are, that the court erred in instructing the jury as to what constituted ordinary care on the part of defendant in error, and in sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff in error’s plea of the Statute of Limitations.

The suit was instituted on December 29, 1903, by defendant in error against “Charles Henrotin, receiver of the Chicago Electric Traction Company.”' The original declaration, filed on March 11, 1904, contains four counts, and charges that the defendants, “Charles Henrotin, receiver, and the Chicago Electric Traction Company,” were jointly the owners and operators of the street car line and street car upon which plaintiff was' riding at the time o,f the accident; that plaintiff became a passenger upon said street car and that said defendants did not exercise due care in the carriage of said plaintiff, and that while said plaintiff was exercising due care for his own safety said defendants negligently ran, managed and operated said street car, as a result whereof plaintiff was thrown from said street car and was permanently injured and disabled. The second, third and fourth counts of the declaration also alleged the joint operation of the car by the defendants at a high and dangerous rate of speed while passing over a reverse curve, and that said curve was negligently maintained, and that said defendants, by their said servants, negligently ran and operated the street car upon which the plaintiff was riding, over said reverse curve. On September 22, 1904, the plaintiff filed four additional counts to said declaration, of the same general purport as the original counts, except that in the additional counts the location of the accident was more specifically stated. To this declaration the defendants below pleaded the general issue. On August 23, 1906, the plaintiff below obtained leave to amend the declaration and the additional counts, and also the prczcipe and summons, by inserting the word “as” after the name “Henrotin” and before the word “receiver” wherever the same occurred. To the declaration thus amended defendants below again pleaded the g-eneral issue, and Charles Henrotin, as receiver, filed a further plea of the Statute of Limitations, relying on the claim that the amendment to the declaration stated a new cause of action. To this special plea the court sustained a demurrer, and Henrotin, as receiver, preserved an exception, and the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer to this plea is the subject of an assignment of error in this court. At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff below the court ^directed a verdict in favor of the Chicago Electric Traction Company, and afterwards plaintiff again amended his declaration by discontinuing the cause as to the Chicago Electric Traction Company and by substituting the word “defendant” for “defendants” wherever the same appeared in the declaration. The latter amendment was made after the case was tried and after the verdict of the jury had been rendered and while the motion for a new trial was pending.

There is no serious conflict in the evidence. On the day in question, which was Labor Day, about nine o’clock in the evening, defendant in error boarded an open street car in Blue Island with his wife and some friends to go to his home. Defendant in error and a Mr. Benjamin took the first seat in the rear, which afterward they surrendered to their wives, and there being no other vacant seats, the defendant in error stood up on the rear platform, facing toward his wife. While in this position the car, running at a high rate of speed down an incline, encountered a sharp reverse curve, which caused the car to sway so violently and suddenly as to throw defendant in error off the car on to to the pavement, inflicting very serious injuries.

There was some evidence tending to prove that defendant in error took a drink with his friend Benjamin just as they were coming out of the gate to go home, and some of the witnesses expressed the opinion that defendant in error was slightly intoxicated at the time of the accident, although the clear preponderance of the evidence on this question shows that he was not intoxicated. This question is only material in connection with the contention of plaintiff in error in respect to the giving of certain instructions of which complaint is made. The instructions complained of are as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that by ‘ordinary cafe on the part of plaintiff’ the law means such a degree of care under the circumstances and in the situation in which the plaintiff was placed, so far as that may be shown by the evidence, as an ordinarily prudent man would exercise under like circumstances and in the same situation.”
“The court instructs the jury that the degree of care that the plaintiff was required to exercise for his own safety at and before the time of the accident in question was ordinary care, and if the jury believe, from a preponderance of the evidence in this case, that the plaintiff, at the time of and before the accident in question, exercised the degree of care for his own safety that an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under the same circumstances and conditions that the evidence in this case shows surrounded the plaintiff at and before the time of the accident in question, then you should find that the plaintiff, at and before that time of the accident in question, was in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety.”

The criticism made on these instructions is, that they only required the defendant in error to exercise the same degree of care that would be expected of any other intoxicated person; that the expression in the instructions, “under the circumstances,” would be understood by the jury as referring to and including the circumstance, if it existed, that defendant in error was more or less intoxicated. If defendant in error was intoxicated at the time of his injury it neither bars his right to recover nor relieves him from the duty of exercising reasonable care for his own safety. (South Chicago City Railway Co. v. Dufresne, 200 Ill. 456.) There was evidence slightly tending to prove that defendant in error was intoxicated at the time of the accident, although the fair preponderance of the evidence showed that while he had drank two or three glasses of beer, yet he was not perceptibly under the influence of liquor. The instructions complained of should have informed the jury that defendant in error was required to exercise the same degree of care for his own safety as an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised, under the circumstances, who was in the full possession of all of his powers and faculties, thus imposing on defendant in error the same degree of care that would be required of a person who was entirely sober.

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.E. 329, 241 Ill. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcke-v-henrotin-ill-1909.