Paris & Danville Railroad v. Henderson & Henderson

89 Ill. 86 | Ill. | 1878

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action, brought before a justice of the peace of Crawford county, by appellant against appellees, on this instrument :

“ If the Paris and Danville Railroad shall be built and equipped, and running from Danville, Illinois, by the way of Robinson, Illinois, to the south line of Crawford county, Illinois, on or before the first day of January, A. D. 1876, in consideration of the benefits and advantages that may result to the public in general, and to myself in particular, by the construction of said railroad, on the line aforesaid, I promise to pay to the Paris and Danville Railroad Company or bearer one hundred dollars, the same to become due and payable at the expiration of sixty days from the passage of the first train of cars over the line of said road through said county. If said railroad is not completed on the line aforesaid, and within the time aforesaid, then this note to be void.
April 8, 1874. Henderson & Henderson.”

An appeal was prosecuted to the circuit court, and the defense interposed was, that the road was not built, equipped, and running from Danville, by the way of Robinson, to the south line of Crawford county within the time specified. The jury, under proper instructions from the court, found for defendants, and, after overruling a motion for a new trial, the court rendered judgment in bar of the action, and the company appeals;

On the part of appellant it. ivas shown, that on the 30th day of December, 1875, the company ran an engine and tender, one passenger coach and one or two flat cars from Eobinson to "Vincennes, Indiana, which passed over the portion of the road named in Crawford county; that after June, 1875, passenger and freight trains ran regularly between Danville and Eobinson, and from about the first of August of that year a freight train and caboose ran twice a week south of Eobinson to Flat Eock, three miles north of the south lin.e of Crawford county, and sometimes to within one mile of that line of the county, but regular trains were not run through to Vincennes until in the spring of 1876; that there were heavy floods in the winter and spring of 1876, which damaged the road; that the road was as well built and furnished as new roads usually are; that places on the road were what is called half tied.

It also appears, the county judge, on passing over the road, on the 30th of December, 1875, determined to and did issue the bonds of the county, voted on similar conditions. Joseph Thompson, a supervisor of a township through which the road was built, and which had subscribed for stock of the road on similar terms, on being threatened with a suit, issued township bonds on the work that had been done prior to the 30th day of December, 1875, but in his testimony, on the trial below, he concurs with others that the road was not finished, equipped and running at the time he issued the bonds.

On the other hand, a number of witnesses testify that the road was not. built, equipped and running regular trains before the first day of January, 1876, on the road to the south line of Crawford county; that there were several places where the road was only half tied,—the company were putting in ties during the summer of 1876, when the road was surfaced; that trains did not make regular trips south of Eobinson until about the first of May of that year,—in places the ties were hanging by the rails and the rails were bent; that no trains ran to the south line of the county until after the first of January, 1876, except the train on the 30th of December,previously. The question whether the road was built, equipped and running between the points named, was one of fact for determination by the jury.

Nor can we say, on the evidence before them, that they found incorrectly. The evidence tended strongly to require the conclusion reached. At any rate, we can not say that it does not sustain the finding. The witnesses for the defense lived near the road, and had equal means of information with the witnesses on the part of appellant.

By the instructions, the court gave the proper construction to the written instrument. As to the evidence denying the execution of the note by one partner, or that it was not given in the usual course of business of the firm, it was excluded by instruction, and could have produced no injury to appellant. It may have been immaterial whether or not the road was in the hands of a receiver, but it could, in nowise, influence the finding of the jury, and we will not- reverse because immaterial evidence has been admitted, unless we can see that it may have prejudiced the jury in their finding.

The true construction of the terms of the instrument required that the road be built, and not partly built—a road completed, and not partially constructed. It required a finished road adapted to and capable of being used for the purpose of its construction, and not one incomplete and unfit for use. A house or a bridge is not built until it is finished. A contractor to erect such a structure could not sue and recover if the house was not plastered or the bridge not floored. This would be obvious to all persons, and a railroad is not built until it is so far completed that it may be safely and conveniently used as a railroad, and it is not, nor can it be said to be, equipped until it has the necessary engines, cars and other appliances for its ordinary use. If, as counsel for appellant say, it can never be completely equipped, it should at least be equipped as such roads usually are. That much is at least required by the term “equipped,” and to be running requires more than the passage of one train over a road. It would be a perversion of terms to say a road was being run when but one train had passed over it, and perhaps that at the peril of the lives of all persons thereon. The company, it seems to us, .can not, with any plausibility, contend that the court should have instructed the jury that it was running the road within the meaning of the written instrument, because they had passed one train over it, and, it may be, when the road was in an unfinished and unsafe Condition.'

We perceive no error-in the instructions, and the evidence warranted the finding, and the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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