City of Chicago v. Langlass

66 Ill. 361 | Ill. | 1872

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case was before this court at the September term, 1869. A statement of the facts will be found in the opinion of the court. The City of Chicago v. Langlass et ux. 52 Ill. 256.

The judgment was reversed on the ground that the damages found were excessive. It did not appear that Mrs. Lang-lass had suffered any considerable permanent injury, and it was thought that the jury may have given exemplary damages, hence it was deemed best to submit the case to another jury.

The evidence in this record makes a much stronger ease, and shows that Mrs. Langlass, through the many years that have elapsed since the injuries were sustained, has been a very great sufferer, and it now clearly appears, from the medical testimony, that she has received permanent injuries of a very serious character from which she may never recover, and which will, in all probability, cause her death. Previous to the accident she had been in excellent health, and since that time, although five years have now elapsed, she has been a constant invalid by reason of the injuries received. Her health has been destroyed, and her injuries are such that they may cause her death. Under the circumstances, we can not say that the damages found are excessive.

The same objection is made as was made in The City of Chicago v. Jones, ante, p. 349, that a party can not recover against a municipal corporation for the pain and suffering endured in consequence of injuries sustained. The objection was held untenable, and we there stated our views of what the jury might properly consider in making up their verdict.

It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction, asked on the part of the city:

“The jury are further instructed, as to the law of this case, that, to entitle the plaintiff to recover against the city in this case, the evidence should show, to the satisfaction of the jury, one or the other of the following facts, viz: that the city had actual notice of the defect in the sidewalk which caused her injuries, or that such sidewalk had remained in such defective condition for an unreasonable length of time prior to the accident, and if neither of these facts has been shown by the testimony in this case, the plaintiff can not recover in this action.”

If it be conceded that the instruction states a correct principle of law, its application to the facts of this case may well be doubted. When a sidewalk has been properly constructed with reference to safety, and through long use or natural decay has become unsafe, before a party can recover for injuries sustained, it must appear that the city knew, or could have known, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, its unsafe condition; and sufficient time must have elapsed, after notice, in which to make the repairs. The City of Peru v. French, 55 Ill. 317, and cases cited.

In that class of cases, the principle of the instruction would have its just application. But this is not such a case. The walk where the accident occurred was certainly a dangerous structure. Its width was only four feet, and at its intersection with Lake street it was six feet above the level of'Union street and four feet from the buildings, without any railings or guards whatever. The surveyor, who described the walk minutely, says that, at the time the accident occurred, “there was no appearance of recent changes.” Nothing to the contrary appearing, we must conclude that the walk was in the same condition as when originally constructed. It was gross carelessness to construct a sidewalk on a great thoroughfare, like the one where the accident happened. The most careful person would be in imminent danger in passing over it at any •time after nightfall.

’ In this view of the evidence, even under the principle stated in the instruction, appellant was in nowise injured "by the refusal of the court to give it. If no changes had recently taken place in the walk, as testified to by the surveyor, then, in the view taken by counsel, sufficient time had elapsed in which the city officers, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have discovered its dangerous condition and provided for the public safety by placing railings or guards on it. This was their plain duty, and the omission would render the city liable. The verdict would necessarily have been the same if the instruction had been given. The evidence presents a clear case of gross neglect,- and any verdict that would find the defendant not guilty would not be permitted to stand.

The court, in-the absence of counsel, directed the bailiff in charge of the jury to permit them, when they had agreed on a verdict, to sign the same, seal it up and to separate, and meet the court on the following morning, which they did do, and returned their verdict in open court when it convened the following day. It is said that this is such an irregularity as will vitiate the verdict.

A similar objection, taken in Mains v. Cosner, 62 Ill. 465, was held to be untenable, and that case is conclusive of this point in the case at bar.

Substantial justice has been done, and no error appearing that can affect the merits of the case, the judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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