Garman v. City of Waverly

166 Ill. App. 399 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1911

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered tlie opinion of the eonrt.

This is an action in case begun by plaintiff seeking to recover damages for injuries sustained by her through falling from a sidewalk into a stairway leading into a shop in a-basementon the south side of the public square, in the city of Waverly, about nine o’clock at night on the evening of August 27, 1910. The declaration avers that the city was negligent in permitting the stairway so constructed to remain unguarded.

A jury returned a verdict in. favor of the plaintiff for $2,500. A remittitur of $500 was entered, and judgment rendered for $2,000. The defendant appeals.

The evidence shows that a stairway six feet wide, leading from the sidewalk down into a basement shop, projected two feet into the sidewalk. The stairway led .to a room, the floor of which is about eight feet below the sidewalk, and was guarded at either end by an iron railing. The stairway had been in that condition for about twenty years. The testimony of ap-pellee shows that she was 52 years of age and had lived in Waverly eight years; that she lived about a quarter of a mile from where the accident occurred; that she passed the stairway frequently; that she did her shopping at the principal dry-goods store in Wa-verly which is located immediately east of the building the stairway complained of is in; that she knew the stairway was there but ‘ ‘ did not know it was out in the walk like it was ’ ’ until she was hurt and that she had been down in this basement shop once. Appellee and her husband went down town the evening of the accident between sunset and dark. She heard there was preaching over at the southwest corner of the square and went to hear it. The preaching was in front of this stairway, where a Mormon preacher spoke for some time in the street and a crowd, through which a policeman kept a passageway open, gathered on the sidewalk. After the preaching was over, and while looking for her daughter, she fell down this stairway and broke her armi.

Various errors are assigned as to the admission and rejection of evidence, but the rulings of the court were correct in that regard. It is only necessary to consider the assignment concerning instructions. The first instruction for plaintiff is:

“The jury are instructed, as a matter of law, that any person traveling upon a sidewalk of a city, which is in constant use by the public, has a right either in the day or night time, when using the same with due diligence and care, to presume, and to act on the presumption, that it is safe for ordinary travel throughout its entire width, and free from all dangerous holes or obstructions. ’ ’

From the evidence of appellee a jury might find that she knew all about the situation of the stairway. She admits she knew it projected into the sidewalk but did not think it projected so far. Knowing the stairway was there, she could not presume it was not. The instruction quoted is correct as a general proposition where a person has no knowledge of a defect, but it is not the law where a person knows that the sidewalk is not safe. A person, knowing a sidewalk to be unsafe, has no right to presume it is safe and -act on such presumption. Concerning such an instruction it was said in City of Spring Valley v. Gravin, 182 Ill. 232: “Had there been any evidence to show that appellee was aware of the condition of the street the instruction would have been improper,” and in City of Sumner v. Scaggs, 52 Ill. App. 551, the case was reversed because of error in giving such an instruction. The giving of abstract propositions liable to mislead a jury has invariably been condemned.

The second instruction is awkwardly worded, and is liable to be construed as assuming that tbe sidewalk was defective. -!-

Tbe third instruction does not refer to tbe evidence and tells tbe jury that if they find that tbe stairway built in said sidewalk was not kept in. such condition as to render said sidewalk safe for pedestrians and plaintiff was injured while in tbe exercise of due care, then they will find for tbe plaintiff. Tbe jury should be limited to tbe evidence 'for tbe source of their belief.

Tbe fifth instruction in defining due care omitted tbe element of knowledge of tbe plaintiff if she has any.

For tbe errors indicated tbe judgment is reversed and tbe cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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