— Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for loss of services, medical attention and other damages suffered by.him on account of an injury to his son, Charles Quirk. The latter while attempting to get off of one of defendant’s cars on July 4, 1910, fell from the front step thereof, his leg going under the the car causing the same to be cut off about sis inches below the knee.
The facts in this case are substantially the same as those in the case of Charles Quirk, by next friend, Maurice Quirk v. Metropolitan Street Railway Company, No. 13116, decided at this sitting but not yet reported. The two cases are dissimilar however in some respects. Plaintiff in his petition in this case alleged that his minor son was on the front steps of the car in a position of peril which was known to defendant’s servants, and that after seeing him in such a position they failed to .stop said car. There is nothing said in the petition about the boy being ordered from the ear or that he was attempting to alight therefrom when he fell. Plaintiff thus plants himself squarely upon the last chance doctrine. Plaintiff’s instructions followed the petition and submitted the same negligence as alleged therein. A number of points raised in this case were disposed of in the other so ft is unnecessary for us to go into those points a second time.
Defendant urges that the evidence does not prove but disproves the allegation in the petition that plaintiff’s son fell from the steps of the car, in that it proves that he fell not by reason of the continued movement of the car but in an attempt to alight therefrom.
' It is defendant’s contention that there was no duty upon defendant’s servants to stop the car merely, because they saw plaintiff’s son upon the steps, in the absence of any other showing 'that it was dangerous for plaintiff’s son to be upon them, such as a showing that the car.was swaying or jerking by reason of some defect of the track, etc.
That the humanitarian doctrine applies in cases where the circumstances are like those present in the
The court did not err in refusing defendant’s instructions D-l, D-2 and D-31. These instructions were substantially the same as defendant’s instructions D-3, D-4 and D-5 in the other case and as we ruled against defendant in that case our ruling will be the same in this.
Plaintiff’s son was injured July 4, 1910, plaintiff’s cause of action, therefore, was barred five years after that date. The trial was had on May 1, 1917. The original petition asks damages for doctors’ bills, medical attention, medicines, nursing, for an artificial limb, and for money that plaintiff would be obligated to pay out in the future for these things. During the trial of the case plaintiff was permitted to amend his petition by interlineation asking, in addition to the things mentioned, damages for the loss of services of his son. It is the contention of the defendant that at the time the petition was' amended five years had elapsed since plaintiff’s son was injured and that the setting up of the prayer in the amended petition lor loss of services of his son amounted to an additional cause of action being stated, which was barred by the Statute of Limitations.
Two of the tests by which to determine whether a second petition is an amendment or a substitution of a new cause of action are (1) that the same evidence will support both petitions; (2) that the same measure of damages will apply to both. [Scovill v. Glasner,
The gist of the cause of action in a case of this kind is the negligence or breach of duty of the defendant and not the consequent injury resulting therefrom. [2 Wood on Limitations (4 Ed.), section 179; Illinois Steel Co. v. Szutenbach, 64, Ill. App. 642, l. c. 646.] The court in the latter cáse permitted plaintiff-to introduce an additional allegation in his petition after the Statute of Limitations had run, alleging injuries to his mind and memory. It is stated in Van Patten v. Waugh,
The amendment was made during the trial of the case and defendant objected thereto and filed an affidavit of surprise asking for a continuance, which the court refused. The court gave as his reason for refusing a continuance, “I don’t believe that this new
There is nothing in the contention that the doctor’s bill was barred by the Statute of Limitations. We do not find that the point was raised in the lower court but, aside from this, only plaintiff could raise this point against the bill as the bill was not barred unless plaintiff chose to raise it.
The judgment is affirmed.
