254 Ill. 595 | Ill. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant in error, Maud Neice, administratrix of her deceased husband, L. B. Neice, recovered a judgment in the city court of Granite City against the plaintiffs in error, the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, for $3500 damages suffered by her, as widow, by the death of her husband, which was caused by a train of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company on March 8, 1910, and the Appellate Court for the Fourth District affirmed the judgment. A writ of certiorari was granted to bring the record into this court for review.
At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the defendants asked the court to direct a verdict of not guilty, and the attorney for the plaintiff then admitted that at the time Neice was killed he was not a passenger, as had been alleged in the declaration, and the declaration was amended by leave of court. When the plaintiff had finished amending the declaration and filing additional counts and making the amendments permitted on the trial the declaration contained six counts, in which it was alleged that Neice was on the platform at the depot of the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company, between the tracks in the city of Venice, where he had gone for the purpose of obtaining information in reference to being carried and to be carried by the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company from the city of Venice to the city of Roodhouse, and that he was struck and killed by an engine of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company. The first count charged, in general tenns, negligent operation of the Burlington train. The second charged negligence in exceeding the speed limit of an ordinance. The third charged negligence in operating the train without a headlight and without blowing a whistle or ringing a bell. The fourth charged negligence in the violatidn of an ordinance requiring a bright light to be displayed conspicuously on the front end of the train. The fifth (or first additional) count charged the defendant with willfully and wantonly, and in reckless disregard of the safety of persons who might be upon the platform, driving the engine at a dangerous rate of speed without ringing a bell or blowing a whistle and without having a sufficient headlight on the engine. The sixth (or second additional) count made a similar charge of wanton or willful conduct in running the engine past the depot and crosswalk, in the night time, at a high rate of speed without a headlight and without ringing a bell or blowing a whistle. The court denied the motion for a directed verdict and the defendants waived the right to assign error on the ruling by' introducing evidence in their own behalf, but renewed the motion at the close of all the evidence, when it was again denied and an exception taken.
The Chicago and Alton Railroad Company maintained a depot in the city of Venice, and on the east side of the depot building there were three tracks, running north and south. The track next to the building was called the running or storage track. The next track belonged to the Alton, and was used for south-bound traffic by the two defendants and the Big Four Railroad Company. The third track belonged to the Big Four Railroad Company, and was used for north-bound traffic by that company and the defendants. There was a board walk extending east from the depot building across the running track and south-bound track to a platform about fifty feet long, running north and south between the second and third tracks, which were used for traffic. The walk and platform were used in going to and from trains and by persons having business at the depot. On the controverted questions of fact the evidence for the plaintiff to be considered by the court was to the following effect: L. B. Neice was a railroad employee who had worked for the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company at Roodhouse for a number" of years and for a short time prior to his death had been a bralceman for the Wabash Railroad Company. He was on a sixty days’ leave of absence from the latter company and was looking for a more satisfactory job. His wife was staying at the residence of her parents at Granite City, two or three miles north of Venice. He obtained employment as a car repairer for the Alton at Roodhouse, and on March 8, 1910, came to the place where his wife was staying and helped to pack up their goods, which were stored there, intending to move to Roodhouse. The usual supper hour was between five and six o’clock and it was somewhat earlier that evening. Some time before six o’clock he ate his supper and talcing a railroad lantern started for Venice. It is uncertain at what time he reached the depot at Venice, but he made inquiries there as to who was the conductor of the Chicago and Alton freight train which was due from the south between 7:3o and 8 :oo o’clock P. M. and asked if it would stop at Venice. He was' told that it was not customary to stop, but the train would stop because they had a stockman to pick up. The Alton kept a ticket agent at its depot, whose hours were from 6:4o A. M. to 7 ¡07 P. M., and he was absent from the depot at the noon hour and at his supper hour, which was from 6 :oo to 6:4o. The ticket office was closed and the lights put out at about 7:2o, but the waiting room was left open and that part of the office used by the yardmen was also open, and the depot grounds were dark. Freight trains did not carry passengers, and, besides the train crew, carried none but men in charge of stock and employees who had passes stamped on the face, “Good on freight trains.” There was no evidence that Neice had any transportation entitling him to ride on the freight train and he made no inquiry for a ticket. The freight train on the east track reached the station between 7:3o and 8 :oo o’clock. John Pease, a stockman who had stock on the train which was loaded at East St."Louis, had missed the train there and had come to Venice on an intemrban, car. The trainmen had been notified to stop at Venice and take him aboard, and he had been staying about the waiting room for an hour or more. As the train approached he walked east from the depot across the walk to the platform between the second and third tracks. Neice followed him and asked if the train was going to pick up anything, and Pease said nothing he knew of, except himself. Pease asked Neice if he was going up, and he said he would like to go. The train was then passing them, and before it came to a stop a freight train of the Burlington, consisting of an engine, freight car and caboose, ran past the platform, going south, at a rate of between twenty-five and forty miles an hour without any headlight and without ringing a bell or blowing a whistle. The end of the pilot beam struck Neice and threw him twenty-five feet, causing his death. Neither the fireman nor engineer saw Neice, although they testified that they were in their places, and the fireman said he was sitting on the seat on the left side of the cab,—the side Neice was on. The train did not stop and the fireman and engineer did not know until the next morning that there had been an accident. There was an ordinance of the city of Venice prohibiting the running of passenger trains at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour and freight trains at a greater rate than six miles an hour, and requiring a bright light to be conspicuously displayed in the night time on the front and rear ends of all trains while in motion. There was contradictory evidence for the defendants as to the rate of speed, the ringing of the bell and the existence of a headlight, but it could not be taken into account on the motion to direct a verdict.
The grounds upon which it is contended that the court erred are, that Neice was conclusively shown by the evidence for the plaintiff to have been a trespasser; that he had not brought himself into any such relation- with the defendants' that they owed him any duty except to refrain from willfully or wantonly injuring him after having ascertained that he was in a perilous position, and that they violated no duty owing to him under that rule. But one conclusion can be drawn from the evidence as to the relation between Neice and the defendants, and it must necessarily be that he intended to obtain a ride to Roodhouse, unlawfully and contrary to the' established rules of the company, by means of a train designed for carrying freight and not for passengers. Conductors on freight trains have no authority to accept passengers for carriage in the absence of a rule or practice to the contrary, (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway Co. v. Best, 169 Ill. 301,) and there was not only no such rule or practice but taking passengers on freight trains was forbidden, and the rule was necessarily known to Neice, who had been in the employ of the company. It was expressly admitted at the close of the evidence of the plaintiff that he was not a passenger, anfl the amendments to the various counts then made changed the allegations to averments that he went on the platform for-.the purpose of obtaining information with reference to passage, and to take passage, to Roodhouse. The evidence showed that the infonnation he was seeking was about an unlawful passage, and the passage which he hoped to take was contrary to the rules of the company. He was a trespasser, and if it had been a mere question of negligence on the part of those in charge of the Burlington train there could have been no recovery. If the injury had been due to a negligent omission of duty, it was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that he was rightfully on the platform at the time he was struck, and she failed to make such proof. There was no relation existing between him and the defendants which created a duty or obligation toward him as a passenger or one intending to take passage or transacting any other lawful business on the depot grounds, and it is true that ordinarily in the case of a trespasser the obligation of care to avoid injury arises at the time that his perilous position becomes known to those in charge of the train. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. O'Connor, 189 Ill. 559; Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Eicher, 202 id. 556; Thompson v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway Co. 226 id. 542.) Upon the right of way of the railroad where the public are not invited or authorized to go for the transaction of business with the railroad company, those in charge of the train must have knowledge both of the presence of the trespasser and of his dangerous situation, but depot grounds and platforms provided by the railroad company for the use of the public in the transaction of its business, where persons have a right to be for legitimate purposes and where they may reasonably be expected, are quite different. If they are there for a legitimate purpose in connection with the business of the company they have a right to demand the exercise of reasonable care for their safety. If they are simply idlers, loiterers or trespassers the duty of the company is only to abstain from willfully or wantonly injuring them. But the duty is owing to an indeterminate part of the public generally, and if there is a disregard of that duty, one of the general public who happens to be in such position as to be the sufferer from the violation of the duty will have a right of action for any injury he sustains. To run a train in the night time over unlighted station grounds without a headlight, and without any warning by bell or whistle, along a platform where persons may reasonably be expected to be, is evidence tending to prove a wanton and reckless disregard of the safety of such persons. In such a case it is not necessary that there should be specific knowledge of an individual on the track or platform or specific ill-will toward or an intention to injure an individual. In East St. Louis Connecting Railway Co. v. O’Hara, 150 Ill. 580, it was considered unnecessary, in order to raise an inference of wanton and willful negligence, that there should be ill-will directed specifically to plaintiff or to have known that he was in such a position as likely to be injured, where the servants of the company were running its engine in the dark without a headlight or a bell ringing, and at a high and dangerous speed, where persons were likely to be passing. In Wabash Railroad Co. v. Jones, 163 Ill. 167, it was said: “The fact of general use by the public of a track, so as to create a probability of their presence, might make an act which would otherwise be merely negligent so reckless as to indicate a disregard for life or a general disposition to do injury.” Considering alone the evidence offered by the plaintiff, it would justify an inference of such a reckless disregard of the safety of persons who might be on the cross-walk and platform at the depot as would amount to wanton and willful conduct, and on that ground the court did not err in submitting the issue to the jury.
There were some erroneous rulings by the court in the course of the trial. The plaintiff was permitted to testify to a conversation with her husband when he left her in the evening, in which he said that he was going to Roodhouse to talce a position which had been given him; that he was going to talce the train from Venice, and that she should come to Roodhouse on the following Thursday. The objection was specifically made that she was not competent to testify to any conversation with her husband during the existence of the marriage relation, and the court erred in the ruling. Section 5 of the act in regard to evidence and depositions in civil cases only permits a husband or wife to testify to any admission or conversation of the other in suits between such husband and wife. (Goelz v. Goelz, 157 Ill. 33; Geer v. Goudy, 174 id. 514; Sloan v. Sloan, 184 id. 579; Wickes v. Walden, 228 id. 56.) The fact that Neice intended to talce the train for Roodhouse if permitted to do so was otherwise proved, and the fact that he was inquiring whether the train would stop and who the conductor was, and that he wanted to go on that train, was proved by the defendants. The fact was not in dispute and the ruling did no harm.
There was a track of the Wabash Railroad Company about seventy-five feet east of the three tracks above described, and between the Wabash and the Big Four tracks there was a foot bridge, with railings extending within a few feet' of the eastern rail of the Big Four track. There was a sign on the bridge, “Not a Public Way.—Dangerous.” The plaintiff was permitted to prove that some people living on Weber street, east of the depot, were in the habit, during the day, of taking a short cut' over this bridge and across the depot grounds, and this evidence was improperly admitted. The Alton train was going north over the crossing, so that people could not have been crossing even in defiance of the notice, and there was no such use of the way as would justify an inference of a wanton disregard of the safety of individuals who might be taking that way across the tracks, but we do not think that there was any such prejudicial effect as would justify reversing the judgment.
Error is assigned on the giving of five instructions at the instance of the plaintiff, each of which contained a hypothesis of fact applicable only to particular counts of the declaration and directed the jury to find the defendants guilty if the -evidence established the facts stated. The objection is that these instructions authorized a finding of guilty on all of the counts although applicable only to particular counts. Each instruction stated facts which would require in the law a verdict of guilty, and there was no direction to -find the defendant guilty on counts alleging other or different facts. The instructions were not erroneous. As to one of them it is said that it omitted the elements of contributory negligence and due care by Neice, but it required a finding, from a preponderance of the evidence, that the engine was driven in wanton disregard of human life, and the question of contributory negligence or care of Neice was not involved.
Complaint is also made that the court refused six instructions which the defendants asked to have given to the jury. They either directed a verdict of not guilty or advised the jury that the plaintiff could not recover if the jury believed in the existence of certain facts which would make Neice a trespasser. The court did not err in refusing to give these instructions, because the fact of Neice being a trespasser, as he undoubtedly was, would not preclude a recovery if those in charge of the Burlington train were guilty of willful and wanton conduct which caused his death. There was evidence for the plaintiff tending to prove such conduct, and the instructions omitted a necessary qualification.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.