125 Ill. App. 323 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
Curtis Fike, a boy between sixteen and seventeen years •of age, while driving over appellant’s tracks where they crossed Deer street, in the village of Odell, was struck by a locomotive engine and killed. This suit was brought by Ms administrator to recover the damages to his next of kin, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $3,623.50, from which this appeal is prosecuted. Deceased was engaged in hatding corn to an elevator, which was located near appellant’s tracks and on the southerly side of Deer street crossing. Appellant’s railroad ran through the village of Odell in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction and was crossed by Deer street at right angles. In delivering his load of corn to the elevator, deceased came from the west on Deer street and passed over the tracks of appellant. After unloading the grain he drove around to the scales, which were near the office building of the elevator company and north of and closer to Deer street than the elevator. It was but a short distance from the scales to appellant’s tracks at the street crossing and it was while deceased was attempting to drive from the scales over this crossing after unloading his grain that he was struck. The principal contention of appellant is that deceased was guilty of such negligence in attempting to pass over the crossing ahead of the approaching engine that there can be no recovery. It is insisted that this negligence is so conclusively shown by the evidence that it becomes a question of law and that the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant.' To support this position counsel assume that deceased saw the approaching engine and attempted to pass over the tracks ahead of it. We do not think this position is sustained by the evidence. The proof shows that there were a number of loads at the elevator ahead of deceased, and that when he reached the tracks of appellant, he stopped on the railroad for a few minutes until teams ahead of him had passed out of his way so that he could drive across and to the elevator. The proof further shows that while he was thus standing on the tracks, a train drawn by the engine in question, approached from the south, and it is argued from this that he knew there was a train approaching. The train was a freight and stopped something more than a mile south of the crossing and there is no proof that deceased saw it any closer to the crossing than when it had stopped, south of the town. Some other witnesses who testified, did see it closer, but none, as we understand this evidence, saw it nearer than a block to the Deer street crossing until it struck deceased’s wagon. Some distance south of the crossing the engine was detached from the train and the great weight of the proof shows that it approached the crossing without either ringing the bell or sounding the whistle. There was a box car standing on the side track east of the track the engine was on, and on the side from which the deceased was approaching, which extended out into the street some distance. South of it were other cars, and these could not but obstruct the view of one approaching the crossing from the east, as deceased was. There is no proof that deceased saw the approaching engine until he was on the track and he then attempted to hurry over, but it was too late. It is argued that if deceased had- looked or listened he could have seen or heard the approaching engine, and that, failing to do so was such negligence as to preclude a recovery. Our Supreme Court held in C. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Dunleavy, 129 Ill., 132, that a failure to look or listen even where it affirmatively appears that doing so would have enabled the party exposed to injury to see an approaching train and avoid it, is evidence tending to show negligence, but is not so conclusive that a charge of negligence can be predicated upon it as a matter of law. See also T. H. & I. R. R. Co. v. Voelker, 129 Ill., 540; C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Wilson, 133 Ill., 55. Undoubtedly to sustain a recovery in such a case it must appear that the injured party was in the exercise of due care and caution, and what is due care and caution must depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. The jury affirmatively answered a special interrogatory as to whether, under all the evidence and in view .of. deceased’s knowledge of the circumstances and surroundings, he was in the exercise of the care and caution in approaching the crossing that a Teasonably prudent man would have exercised under similar circumstances. The Supreme Court and this court have often held that a traveler on a public street, which is crossed by a railroad, has a right to rely upon the company’s servants in charge of its trains giving the signals required by a law when approaching the crossing. While there was some evidence of those in charge of the engine tending to show that the bell "was rung, yet it is very, inconclusive and unsatisfactory, and the overwhelming weight of the testimony is that none of the numerous witnesses who testified for appellee on that question heard or knew the engine was approaching the crossing, and that the bell was not rung nor the whistle sounded as required by law. Admitting that deceased knew that there was a train some where south of the crossing, he had a right to suppose that it would not ápproach and attempt to pass over the street without giving warning. It having failed to do so, and this coupled with the fact that the view of its approach was obstructed, we are of the opinion the court properly refused to direct a verdict and properly submitted to the jury to determine whether deceased was in the exercise of fine care and caution, and whether his death resulted from the negligence of appellant as charged in the declaration. The jury having found against appellant on these propositions, we are also of opinion the court was warranted by the evidence in rendering judgment on the verdict.
Some complaint is made of the fourth, fifth and sixth instructions given on behalf of appellee. The fourth instruction told the jury that the law did not require the exercise of extraordinary care by deceased, but only required ordinary care such as a person of ordinary prudence and intelligence would usually exercise under the same or similar circumstances. We fail to see any fault in the instruction. The fifth told the jury that if they found from the evidence that plaintiff was entitled to recover then they should assess the damages merely at the amouñt of the pecuniary loss, if any, that the next of kin had or may sustain by reason of the death of Curtis Fike. It may be the instruction would have been in better form if it had referred the jury to the evidence in fixing the amount of the loss to the next of kin, but we think it could not be misunderstood by the jury, and that appellant was not prejudiced by it. Besides appellant’s thirteenth given instruction upon the same subject contains the same omission. We see no fault with the sixth instruction. It is also said the court erred in refusing appellant’s ninth and fourteenth instructions. The ninth told the jury that the testimony of witnesses that they would have heard a bell or whistle if one had been rung or sounded, and that they heard none, was entitled to less weight than the testimony of witnesses who testified that a bell was rung or whistle sounded. We think it was correctly refused by the court. The fourteenth told the jury that when deceased had attained his majority he would have owed no support to his next of kin, except in the event of their pauperism, and that the deceased was as. likely to have become a pauper as his next of kin. We think this also was properly refused. Besides the record shows it was not presented before the beginning of the closing argument as required by a rule of court, and no reason appears, nor is any excuse offered, for failing to present the instruction in compliance with the rule. Believing there are no errors of law in this record and that the verdict and judgment were warranted and sustained by the evidence,, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed..