Wood v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad

183 Ill. App. 543, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1628
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 183 Ill. App. 543 (Wood v. Louisville & Nashville 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
Wood v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 183 Ill. App. 543, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1628 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee brought this suit to recover damages on account of severe personal injuries alleged to have been received by her on July 7, 1907, while she was- riding on one of appellant’s passenger trains near Poindexter, Kentucky. There is but one count in the declaration and it charges that appellant so negligently managed certain of its trains running in opposite directions, on the same track, that they collided and ran together whereby appellee, while being carried as a passenger upon one of said trains, was thrown with great force and -violence on the floor of the car, in which she was being carried, and some heavy object was thrown upon her, seriously injuring her back, stomach, limbs and nervous system. There was a plea of the general issue, a verdict for two thousand five hundred dollars, a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and a judgment for the amount of the verdict.

Appellant urges as reasons why this judgment should be reversed, that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence and that the court below erred in its rulings upon the evidence and in instructing the jury. Appellant does not deny that the collision, in which appellee claims to have been injured, really occurred, but insists that it was of so slight a nature that appellee could not have been seriously injured by reason thereof, and that all the facts and circumstances in evidence show it to be unreasonable that appellee could have been injured at the time and in the manner she claims.

It appeared from the testimony of appellee and other witnesses introduced in her behalf, that on the afternoon of the day in question, she and her mother left Cincinnati on one of appellant’s passenger trains to go to Jeffersonville, Kentucky. Shortly after leaving Poindexter, and while yet moving slowly, a train on which she was riding collided with one coming in the opposite direction. Appellee, who was then thirteen years of age, had left her home in Granite City, Illinois, on the day before, with her mother to visit relatives near Jeffersonville. At the time of the collision, she was attempting to raise the car window and was, by the impact, thrown violently to the floor and the back of one of the car seats fell over on her, bending her forward,so that she could not get up. A passenger or train man came to her assistance and extricated her from the position she was in. Some one bathed her head and face and she was then taken out of the car to the roadside. After a wait of some two or three hours she was led back to the train which proceeded on its way with the same engine, which though injured was able to pull the train. Appellee and her mother testified that windows were broken out and a lamp broken at the time of the collision and that other persons besides appellee and her mother were hurt. A number of witnesses who were passengers on the train at the time, and whose depositions were taken by appellant, testified the impact of the trains at the time of the collision was but slight and that they did not know of glass or the lamp being broken or any one being injured. It was not shown, however, that these witnesses were in the same car with appellee. She and her mother left the train at Mt. Sterling, where they stayed all night and the next day they obtained a conveyance and drove some five miles in the country, to the home of appellee’s aunt, Mrs. Curtis, where they remained visiting about two weeks. During their visit there they made two trips in a buggy to the home of a cousin named Wilson, some two and a half miles distant. Appellee claims that in the collision she received a rupture of the umbilicus and an injury to her spine and that while at her aunt’s she suffered from these injuries and was part of the time confined to her bed. On their way home at the end of the two weeks, appellee and her mother spent two days in Cincinnati, where appellee was confined to her bed and her mother procured medicine for her. Upon her return home she continued to grow worse and a physician who made an examination of her early in September, 1907, found bruises over her back, soreness through the abdominal regions and a rupture of the umbilicus. This physician testified that up to the the time she received these injuries, she was in good health and of normal size but that since then she had been in poor health and that nearly five years later, at the time of the trial, she had not grown any larger and he attributed her stunted condition to the injuries he found. In the fall of 1907 she attended school at home.and while the teacher’s record shows a fairly good attendance, her testimony was that she would go in the morning and the teachers would have to excuse her on account of being sick and send her home, and she said, in explanation of the record, that the teacher often permitted her to go home during the day after the school register had shown she was present. As to whether she was able to be up and about or was really confined to her bed most of the time during the first few months of school there was quite a controversy, but it appears that about Christmas time she was unable to attend school longer and was then confined to her bed for some nine weeks after which, on the advice of her physician, she was sent to Colorado for her health where she remained about three months. When she returned the next fall, her mother sent her to a boarding school in Alton but her health was so poor she was unable to continue her studies so she soon returned home. At the time of the trial she weighed but seventy-two pounds and could wear the same clothes she did at the time of the injury, more than five years before, when she was but thirteen years of age, and during that time she had not been able to attend to her household duties.

The evidence further showed that in October, 1911, appellee was married and that she was living with her husband at the time of the trial. Appellant claims the fact that no physician was called to attend to appellee from the time of the injury in July until the following September, tends to discredit the testimony of appellee and her mother as to the happening of the injury, or that, if it did happen, it was of a serious nature. Depositions of four of the Wilsons, relatives of appellee, visited by her and her mother on two different days while they were in Kentucky, were taken. Two of them testified that they never heard appellee mention being in a railroad wreck while she was at their house. Another testified that appellee never spoke to her of being in a wreck but she heard her speak to another relative of being in a wreck; that witness never heard her complain of being ill. The fourth Wilson testified that she heard appellee say something one evening about being “shook up” but did not hear her say she was hurt.

Appellee and her mother testified that they did talk to the Wilsons about the wreck and about their injuries and that they told them to bring suit against the railroad company and they would help. Appellee’s mother further testified that when she went back the last time, the Wilsons told her they had seen the railroad agent, and they would not help her at all.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Ill. App. 543, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-louisville-nashville-railroad-illappct-1913.