Wilson v. Chicago Heights Terminal Transfer Railroad

212 Ill. App. 271, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 60
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1918
DocketGen. No. 23,260
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 212 Ill. App. 271 (Wilson v. Chicago Heights Terminal Transfer Railroad) 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
Wilson v. Chicago Heights Terminal Transfer Railroad, 212 Ill. App. 271, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 60 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice McDonald

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $18,725.51, recovered in an action for personal injuries, brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act.

The declaration alleged that plaintiff was injured while employed as a fireman on one of defendant’s locomotives, while engaged in moving cars containing interstate shipments. The negligence, relied upon to sustain a recovery was that defendant had failed to exercise reasonable care to maintain its track and roadbed in a reasonably safe condition and state of repair, and in operating its locomotive at a high and dangerous rate of speed thereon.

Defendant’s locomotive was derailed and tipped over while pulling a train of freight cars around a curve on defendant’s track (referred to by the witnesses as the Montgomery Ward curve), whereby plaintiff was pinned under the wreckage and sustained the injuries complained of.

It is contended, first, that there is no competent evidence in the record tending to show that at the time of the accident any of the cars in defendant’s train were being used in interstate commerce.

The evidence shows that certain of the cars comprising defendant’s said train contained shipments originating in one State and destined to points in another. And while the admissibility of some of this evidence is questioned by defendant, we are of the opinion that the interstate character of defendant’s said train at the time of the accident has been established by competent evidence.

It is next contended that the evidence shows that defendant exercised ordinary and reasonable care in the maintenance of its track and roadbed and in the operation of its said train at and prior to the time of the accident.

On behalf of plaintiff five witnesses—including plaintiff’s brother who for many years prior to and at the time of the trial was also in defendant’s employ as a locomotive fireman—testified as to the condition of the ties at the place of the accident immediately after it occurred. The witness Lneder testified that 25 or 30 of the ties in the said curve were rotten, and that 15 or 20 of them were broken by the wheels of the locomotive in passing over them. The witness Paulsen testified that the rails were spread, ties were rotten for about two rail lengths; that the spike holes were all rotten and that the spikes were loose. On cross-examination he admitted that the breaks in the ties “looked new.” The witness McAtee testified that he saw ties broken with ends sticking up, rails twisted; that whole parts of some ties were rotten; that there were seven or eight of these ties in track where engine jumped; that probably 25 or 30 of the ties had wheel marks; that some were cut nearly through and the better ones were not so deeply cut. The witness La Claire testified that there were about 25 or 30 ties that were cut by the flanges of the wheels; that where the ties were so cut, they looked rotten and spikes were loose. Plaintiff’s brother stated that about 25 or 30 of the ties were rotten and that the spikes pulled out.

On behalf of the defendant, nine witnesses testified as to the condition of the roadbed at said time and place, and particularly as to the condition of the ties which were broken by the wheels of the locomotive in passing over them. The witness Bach, who was in charge of the wrecking crew that removed the wreckage, testified that they replaced 9 broken ties, and that the breaks in the ties removed looked new. Jensen, track foreman for defendant, testified that the broken ties looked “perfectly sound”; that they removed but 6 broken ties; that during March and April, 19Í4, he walked over the track every 2 or 3 days, at which times it appeared to be in good condition; that in 1913 they took out and replaced a great many ties in the curve, which were a “little rotten at the ends and would not hold spikes.” Beaudry, superintendent of the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway, who was at the scene of the accident with the wrecking crew, testified that about 50 feet of track was tom up and lying about a foot out of place; that the ends of perhaps 10 or 15 ties were cut off and about 35 damaged, where the engine ran over them after it was derailed; that the breaks in the ties looked new and that none of the spikes had pulled out. Varga, a member of the wrecking crew, stated that the broken ties were of hard oak and did not look very bad. Kapinus, another member of the wrecking crew, testified that some of the broken ties looked new and some looked old. On cross-examination he admitted that some ties “looked rotten and some did not.” Manno, a section hand, stated that they replaced 6 broken ties; that the broken ties looked “pretty good”; that none were rotten; that the track looked “pretty good” before the wreck. Franze, also a section hand, testified that the broken ties looked good. Nardi, another section hand, testified that the breaks in the ties looked new; that the condition of the track before the derailment was good. • Angella, another section hand, testified substantially to the same effect.

In addition to the foregoing, defendant introduced the testimony of ten witnesses who in the course of their duties had occasion to make a casual observation of defendant’s roadbed. Their testimony was to the effect that it always appeared good—ties apparently sound, etc. One of these witnesses—Eaken, a section foreman employed by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad—admitted on cross-examination, however, that the proper way to inspect ties that looked old and dirty was to drive a pick into them to determine whether ties apparently sound on the outside were decayed and unsound on the inside. None of these ten witnesses claimed to have made more than a casual inspection of the roadbed at any time. Two of these witnesses also testified that they noticed 8 spikes were used to a tie, around the entire curve. This was disproved, however, by photographs admitted in evidence on behalf of both the plaintiff and the defendant. Some of the witnesses also testified that during the spring of 1913 upwards of 130 ties had been put in at the Montgomery Ward curve; that the ties so used were of the highest quality oak. The witness Mueller stated that the ties so used “covered the entire length of the curve,” which he later stated was about seven or eight hundred feet. An examination of the photographs in evidence reveals that at the time and place of the accident but a few of the ties in defendant’s roadbed looked new. And Mueller’s admission that the curve was seven or eight hundred feet long qualifies his statement that 130 or 140 ties “covered the entire length of the curve. ’ ’

Defendant introduced also the testimony of six other witnesses who claimed to have had considerable experience in railroad track construction, who testified that trains could safely pass over defendant’s roadbed at a speed of from 15 to 20 miles per hour. Five of these witnesses based their opinions upon a joint inspection made of defendant’s track in September, 1916—more than 2 years after the happening of the accident. The other witness apparently based his testimony upon the statements of the five who made the inspection just referred to. All this testimony was predicated upon the claim of defendant that the condition of its roadbed was substantially unchanged from the time of the accident to the time the five witnesses made the inspection. 1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 Ill. App. 271, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-chicago-heights-terminal-transfer-railroad-illappct-1918.