Chicago Union Traction Co. v. May

221 Ill. 530 | Ill. | 1906

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county in favor of appellee for the sum of $15,000, for a personal injury alleged to have been sustained by the appellee in consequence of a street car upon which she was about to take passage being suddenly started, whereby she was thrown backward against the side of the car, and her spine and certain organs of her body were severely and permanently injured.

The declaration upon which the case was tried consisted of three counts. The first count averred, in substance, that the West Chicago Street Railroad Company on May 5, 1901, was the owner of a street railway in Robey street, in the city of Chicago, and allowed the Chicago Union Traction Company to operate its passenger cars thereon, and the plaintiff, on the day and year aforesaid, became a passenger on a car operated by the Chicago Union Traction Company, whose duty it was to so operate its cars on said street railway as to keep plaintiff safe from injury, but said defendant so carelessly and negligently operated its car on which plaintiff was a passenger, that while plaintiff was exercising due care for her own safety she was thrown with great force and violence upon and against the side of said car and was injured, and the spine and nervous system of plaintiff was bruised, wounded, etc., and certain of her pelvic and abdominal viscera were deranged and injured, etc., and she was obliged to and did expend divers sums of money, to-wit, $2000, in endeavoring to be cured, and suffered great pain and agony thence hitherto. The second count, after averring the relation between the appellant companies as in the first count, avers, in substance, that the plaintiff attempted to board and become a passenger on one of the Chicago Union Traction Company’s cars at the intersection of Potomac avenue and Robey street, which car was stationary for the purpose of receiving passengers, and that the said defendant, not regarding its duty in that behalf, and while plaintiff was exercising due care, caused said car to be suddenly and violently started and moved, thereby causing plaintiff to be thrown with great force and violence against the side of said car and injured, etc. The third count avers, in substance, that plaintiff became a passenger on the car when it was stationary, at the intersection of Potomac avenue and Robey street, for the purpose of receiving passengers, and that it was the duty of defendant to afford plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to board said car in safety, but the defendant the Chicago Union Traction Company did not regard its said duty, and caused said car to be suddenly - and violently started and moved while she was in the act of bohrding the same and exercising due care, so that she was thrown with great force and violence against the side of the car and injured, etc. Each of the appellants filed the general issue.

It is first contended that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, at the close of all the evidence, to return a verdict in favor of the defendants. The evidence of plaintiff fairly tended to show that the appellee, on the afternoon of the 5th of May, 1901, sought to board a street car operated by the Chicago Union Traction Company upon Robey street, at Potomac avenue, in the city of Chicago; that the car stopped at the usual place at the intersection of said street and avenue to discharge and receive passengers; that the appellee took hold of the hand-iron upon the car with her left hand and placed her left foot upon the running-board upon the side of the car, for the purpose of getting onto the car, when the car suddenly started with a jerk, and appellee was thrown around backward and her body struck against the side of the car, and her back and the lower portion of her body were severely bruised, twisted and strained; that one Bixby, who occupied a seat upon the car near where appellee sought to enter the car, seeing her perilous situation, reached out and caught hold of her and assisted her to enter the car; that appellee, upon entering the car, became faint, and did not for a time have full possession of her mental faculties; that she remained upon the car until it reached VanBuren street, when, with assistance, she took a car upon that street and rode to Washtenaw avenue, and from there walked about one block to 1160 Jackson avenue, to the home of an acquaintance, Miss Hanna, where she remained until evening, when Miss Hanna assisted her upon a car and she returned to her home at 164 Potomac avenue; that she has been confined to her house and bed and under the care of a physician from the day succeeding that night until the present time; that prior to her injury the appellee was in good health and strong and vigorous; that she has since been in a hospital twice, for several weeks each time,—once in April, 1903, and again in December, 1903,—and that at the time of the trial she was in a weak and feeble condition, and from the testimony of the physicians who testified on her behalf it appears she has sustained a severe injury to the lower part of the spine, and that the probabilities are she is a confirmed invalid. We think the court did not err in declining to take the case from the jurjc

It is also insisted that the court erred in declining to instruct the jury that there could be no recovery under the second and third counts of the declaration, on the ground that there was a variance between the proofs and the allegations of those counts in this: that each of said counts averred the car upon which the appellee sought to take passage was standing still, and that as appellee sought to board the same it was suddenly and violently started, thereby causing appellee to be thrown with great violence against the side of said car, while the proof showed the appellee sought to board a moving car at the time she was injured. The witness Bixby, who assisted the appellee to enter the car, testified the car was standing still at the time the appellee took hold of the hand-iron and stepped upon the running-board, and the conductor who was in charge of the car, and who was called by the appellants, testified that the car came to a stop at Potomac avenue, and that he held it until appellee got on and then he started it. The appellee’s testimony was to the effect that the car was standing still at the time she attempted to board it. There was no variance between the proofs and the second and third counts of the declaration, and the court did not err in overruling said motion.

It appears that the appellee, at each time she was in the hospital in April and December, 1903, underwent a surgical operation;. that at the first operation there was removed a cyst as large as an orange from appellee’s left ovary, and the left ovary, three-fourths of the right ovary and part of the left Fallopian tube were found to be diseased, and those diseased parts and also a small fibroid tumor attached to the fundus outside the uterus were removed; and at the second operation a cyst about the size of the former one and the remainders of the right ovary and the Fallopian tubes were removed. No objections were made by the appellants to the introduction of proof of the conditions found in the lower internal organs of appellee, or the parts removed at the time said operations were performed, at the time the testimony was submitted to the jury. At the close of -the testimony on behalf of appellee, and again at the close of all the testimony, the appellants moved the court to strike out said testimony, on the ground that the evidence failed to show the diseased conditions found in the lower internal organs of appellee which were revealed at the time said.surgical operations were performed, were caused by the injury received by her on the fifth day of May, 1901. This motion the court overruled, and properly so, as the evidence was admitted without objection or without a promise on the part of counsel for the appellee to show that the conditions discovered at the time of the surgical operations in the internal organs of appellee were the result of the accident relied upon as a ground of recovery. (1 Thompson on Trials, sec. 716; Hanford v. Obrecht, 49 Ill. 146.) The question was, however, preserved for review, we think, by an exception to a refused instruction offered by the appellants, to the effect that the jury, in deciding the case, should wholly disregard all evidence as to the condition of appellee’s lower internal organs as disclosed by said surgical operations, also as to any nervous condition or other disability which resulted from such conditions or said surgical operations, as appellee had failed to establish by the evidence that the cysts and ovary and womb troubles of appellee were caused by the accident claimed to have been sustained by appellee through the negligence of appellants.

The physicians who testified for appellee stated that the cause of ovarian cysts was unknown, and they were unable to state that the-conditions found in appellee’s ovaries, Fallopian tubes and womb were the result of an external injury. Dr. Henrotin said: “I cannot take it for granted that trauma forms any portion or element in the origin or development of cysts,—of ovarian cysts.” And Dr. Kolischer said: “If it be true [which was the case with the cyst removed at the first operation] that the condition of the cyst which was operated upon was dark-colored, then I can imagine that an injury led to a hemorrhage into the contents of the cyst.” And Dr. Moore, who was Mrs. May’s regular physician, and who was called the second day after the accident, said: “I do not know whether she had any condition of cystic tumor prior to May 7, 1901. This condition may have been born with her. It is very frequently true that there are congenital conditions of that kind, and that they come into girlhood and from girlhood into womanhood, and that they may progress many years, in fact, before the condition becomes such as to require the attention of the expert and surgeon. They may go through life and never require it.”

The evidence showed beyond all question that prior to her injury Mrs. May was a strong, healthy woman; that she frequently walked from the business district of the city to her home,—a distance of from four to five miles; that she did the household work for a family of three,—her husband, her father and herself,—including the washing and ironing, and earned on an average $300 a year at her trade as dress and waistmaker; that immediately after the injury she had serious pains in her head, back, left leg and in the region of the abdomen; that her genital organs soon became diseased, and within a few weeks she became, and has continued to be, unable to take any physical exercise, or to walk, without great pain in her head, back, left leg and lower part of the abdomen. The physicians who treated and operated upon her did not say that the conditions they found when they operated were not the result of an external injury, but, at most, said they could not say they were the result of such injury. One said he could imagine they were. We think it was a correct practice for the court to permit appellee to prove the condition of her health at and prior to the time she was injured, and then to follow up that proof by showing her physical condition from the time of her injury down to the time of the trial, and to submit the question of the cause of her then physical condition, as a question of fact, to the jury under proper instructions, which was the course of procedure followed in this case. The court gave to the jury, on behalf of the appellants, the following instruction:

“The jurors are instructed that with respect to the ailments and disabilities claimed for the plaintiff in this case, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff in that respect, as it is with respect to the question of liability, to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, not only that such ailments really exist or have existed, but also that such ailments and disabilities are the result of the accident in question. The jury are further instructed that they have no right to guess or conjecture that any ailment complained of by the plaintiff is the result of this accident.”

Under this instruction, unless the jury found that the conditions disclosed in the appellee’s genital organs at the time of said surgical operations were such as were reasonably certain to follow as a result of the injury complained of, they would be bound to disregard them in making up their verdict, otherwise not. (Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Conway, 169 Ill. 505.) The law requires a case should be submitted to the jury if the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, together with the legitimate inferences which may be drawn therefrom, fairly tends to support the cause of action stated in the declaration, and in determining whether the court erred in declining to eliminate from the consideration of the jury the evidence sought to be eliminated from their consideration in this case by the instruction refused by the court, the rule is the same. If, therefore, the testimony of the plaintiff be taken as true, together with all legitimate inferences that may be drawn therefrom,—i. <?., that the appellee was in good health prior to the injury; that she thereafter was in poor health; that she suffered pain in her head, back and left leg and lower part of the abdomen, and her genital organs became diseased, and an examination disclosed a severe injury to the lower part of the spine; that she may have had ovarian cysts from girlhood and suffered no inconvenience therefrom; that within a short time after the injury it was found that she did have ovarian cysts and fibroid tumors, from which she suffered greatly, necessitating two surgical operations to remove them,—might not the jury, from the admitted facts, have legitimately drawn the conclusion that a pre-disposition to those conditions existed in appellee prior to the injury but from which she suffered no inconvenience, and that such pre-existing condition, as a result of such injury, was so aggravated as to make what was a harmless condition prior to the injury a distressingly painful one after the injury? We think they might. If we are correct in so holding, then under the authority of Chicago City Railway Co. v. Saxby, 213 Ill. 274, the appellee was entitled to recover for such aggravated condition.

We are of the opinion the court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury to disregard the evidence of the diseased conditions found in the appellee’s ovaries, Fallopian tubes and womb at the time the surgical operations were performed upon her in April and December, 1903, but think the court properly left the question whether those conditions were the result of the injury which she sustained when she attempted to board said street car, to the jury as a question of fact. City of Mt. Carmel v. Howell, 137 Ill. 91; Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Smith, 208 id. 608.

It is next contended that the court erred in permitting the appellee to testify that she earned on an average $300 per year making waists, dresses, etc., prior to the time she was injured. The declaration averred the plaintiff “was and is hindered and prevented from transacting and attending to her business and affairs, and lost and was deprived of divers great gains and profits which she might and otherwise would have acquired.” Under this averment of the declaration we think the evidence was properly admitted. City of Bloomington v. Chamberlain, 104 Ill. 268; Chicago and Erie Railroad Co. v. Meech, 163 id. 305; North Chicago Street Railroad Co. v. Brown, 178 id. 187; Illinois Steel Co. v. Ryska, 200 id. 280.

Finding no reversible error in this record the judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.

ludgment affirmed.

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