Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Ouska

51 Ill. App. 334 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1894

Hr. Justice Gary

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Just west of State street in the city of Chicago, twenty-one railroad tracks cross 63d street from the northwest to the southeast, and after crossing 63d street curve more toward the east and cross State street very near 63d street.

Shortly before seven o’clock of a bright clear morning on the second day of July, 1890, Joseph Ouska, the husband of the appellee, arrived on State street at 63d street on his way, with several others, to his work at a mill south of 63d. From the evidence it appears that he was stopped several minutes by a train that filled the street. When that moved and Ouska and his companions went on south, they could see another train standing, if not partly in State street, very close to it on the east side, from which one hundred people, more or less, were landing.

In the meantime the whistle of the mill calling to Avork, had blown, and Ouska and his companions were hurrying toivard it. In this condition of things, of which any description can convey but a very imperfect idea of AArhat must have been the noise and confusion by AAdiich Ouska was surrounded, a train of the appellant, from the southeast, came on a track southwest of either of the other trains, at a speed of more than twenty miles per hour across State street and killed Ouska. He left a widoAV and five children,two of the latter groAvn and able probably to take care of themselves; the others of tender years. He was forty-five years old, and supported his family by his Avages, which Avere nine or ten dollars a week when he had work. The verdict is $5,000.

FTegligence and due care are questions of fact for a jury to decide. It does not change the rule that no prophet is needed to foretell the decision. It may well be urged that no man exercising ordinary care would attempt to cross that netAvork of rails; but the appellant can claim no right to shut the citizen from the public street; and if the appellant makes the danger so imminent, nothing can prevent a jury from finding against it, when injury folloAvs. We do not care to comment on the circumstances of the view blocked by other trains, the noises, the throng of people, the train speeding through.

The principle of Pennsylvania Co. v. Keane, 41 Ill. App. 317, is applicable. The fact that the deceased was not intending to be a passenger, as in that case, does not affect the question of carelessness of the appellant.

The damages may not be more than the pecuniary injury to the widow and next of kin. It is impossible to compute them with mathematical exactness. The objection, based on C. M. & St. P. Ry. v. Halsey, 133 Ill. 248, that an instruction limits the exercise of care by the deceased to “ the time of the injury,” is removed by the later case of this appellant v. Johnson, 135 Ill. 641, which construes the words “ at the time” as covering the whole “series of circumstances.” That here the words must have been so understood, is shown by the fact that the fourth and fifth instructions asked by, and given for, the appellant, use the same words in that sense. There is no error and the judgment is affirmed.

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