delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе Appellate Court for the Second District affirmed the judgment for $6000 and costs recovered by defendant in error against plaintiff in error in the circuit court of Will county, and a writ of certiorari was granted by this court for the purpose of reviewing the judgment of the Appellate Court.
The suit was „an action on the case for personal injuries received by plaintiff while a passenger on the car of defendant. The plea was not guilty, and the defendant asked the court to direct a verdict of not guilty, which the court refused to do. The evidence from which the correctness of that ruling must be determined was as follows:
The defendant is a railroad company organized under the general act for the incorporation of railroad companies and operates a railroad from Chicago to Kankakee. The power used is electricity, applied by means of an overhead trolley wire and pole. On August 30, 1909, the plaintiff, with her husband, took passage from Chicago to go to Peotone. After passing Blue Island the car approached a crossing of the Grand Trunk railroad on the same level. The trolley pole became disconnected from the wire and the car stopped on the crossing and stood there from three tо five minutes, as testified to by several of the plaintiff’s witnesses, and there was no contradictory evidence on that question. There were about thirty passengers, who remained seated in the car until a train on the Grand Trunk railroad was seen coming around a curve from the west at a distance of from six hundred to eight hundred feet from the car. The defendant’s conductor ran out on the track and signaled to the approaching train and the engineer made every effort to stop it. . An alarm being given, the passengers made a general rush for the door to get out. A number of them were crowded at the door to the vestibule when the other train reached the car. The train was almost stopped and moving not faster than a slow walk, but it pushed the end of the car around'and stopped beyond the car somewhere from fourteen feet up to the length of the engine, or perhaps forty or fifty feet. As a result of the collision the plaintiff was thrоwn forward into the vestibule, which was considerably lower than the floor of the car, and several other women fell on her. There was a bruise on her hip three or four inches in diameter, where considerable swelling followed, and this was the only external sign of injury. She was treated for some time by a physician and suffered frоm other disabilities which the evidence in her behalf tended to prove had not existed before the accident.
There were five counts in the declaration. The negligence charged in the original declaration was that the defendant carelessly, recklessly, negligently and improperly propelled аnd ran the car and permitted and allowed it to stand on the railroad track on which the train was approaching. The first of four additional counts afterward filed charged as negligence that the defendant did not use due, proper or reasonable care that the plaintiff should be safely carried on thе car. The second alleged that the defendant did not use due care and caution that the plaintiff should be safely carried, but so recklessly and improperly drove and managed the car that it collided with the locomotive and train propelled by steam on the other road. The negligence chargеd in the third was, that the defendant failed to bring its car to a stop at a reasonably safe distance from the steam railroad, and failed to use any reasonable precaution to ascertain whether or not any train or locomotive was approaching thereon, and carelessly and negligently rаn and propelled its car over and upon said steam railroad tracks. The fourth charged that -the defendant so carelessly and negligently managed, conducted and propelled its car that the car was struck and came in collision with the passenger train.
It is not claimed that there was any want of cаre on the part of the plaintiff, but it is insisted that the defendant was entitled to the benefit of the presumption of law that the other railroad would obey the statute and comply with the law which required it to stop within eight hundred feet of the crossing of another railroad on the same level and to positively ascertain thаt the way was clear and that the train could safely resume its course before proceeding to pass over the crossing. Basing their argument on that presumption, counsel contend that the- defendant was not guilty of any negligence in failing to anticipate a disregard of the statute by those in charge of the trаin. The defendant being organized under the general act for the incorporation of railroads, its railroad is a commercial railroad, and we so decided in Bradley Manf. Co. v. Chicago and, Southern Traction Co.
On the examination of the physician who attended the plaintiff he testified to the existence of the bruise on the right thigh which existed for a few weeks, and said that the plaintiff had soreness over the lower part of the abdomen and other physical troubles peculiar to women; that she became depressed, morbid, melancholy and hysterical, and that she had a sense of suffocation, and suffered from a loss of memory, morbidness, brooding, worry, and fear that some calamity would happen. He had received an account of the accident from her and her husband, and he was asked this questiоn: “Have you an opinion whether or not Mrs. Schlauder is or is not permanently injured as a result of that accident?” The question was objected to on the ground that it placed the doctor in the position of the court and jury to determine one of the issues in the case, but the objection was overruled. He answerеd that he had an opinion and that he thought she was permanently injured. The rule is, that a witness cannot be permitted to give his opinion on the very fact which the jury is to determine. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Smith,
The second instruction given at the request of the plaintiff-stated that if she had proved the аllegations in one or more counts of her declaration and was injured as therein alleged, and the injury was caused by or through the negligence of the defendant as alleged in such count, she was entitled to recover. The third told the jury that if they believed the plaintiff was injured, as alleged in some one count of the dеclaration, by reason of the failure of the defendant’s servants, as alleged in the declaration or some count thereof, to exercise the degree of care stated in the instruction, while she was in the exercise of ordinary care and caution, she was entitled to recover and they should find the dеfendant guilty. The fourth stated that if the defendant was guilty of negligence as charged in some one count of the plaintiff’s declaration, and by reason of such negligence the plaintiff was injured while in the exercise of ordinary care, they should find the defendant guilty. It is contended that there was no evidence tending to sustain thе allegations of the second or third additional counts, and therefore the instructions were erroneous. It has always been the rule that it is error to give an instruction telling the jury that if a certain fact exists a certain rule of law applies or a certain verdict is to be returned, if there is no evidence of the fаct. Such instructions must be based upon evidence in the case, and a statement of a hypothesis of fact virtually tells the jury that there is evidence from which they may believe in the existence of the fact, and if there is no evidence the instruction is misleading. (Alexander v. Town of Mt. Sterling,
There was at least one count, however, which alleged a fact and charged it to be negligence which was proved by the evidence but did not entitle the plaintiff to recover or authorize a verdict of guilty. The charge in the third additional count was, that -the defendant failed to bring its car to a stop at a reasonаble distance from the steam railroad and then and there failed to use any reasonable precaution to ascertain whether or not any train or locomotive was then and there approaching on said steam railroad and carelessly and negligently ran and propelled its car over аnd onto said railroad tracks. Witnesses testified that the car did not stop before reaching the tracks of the Grand Trunk railroad, but there was an utter failure to connect the act with the injury to the plaintiff. According to the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses the car stood on the tracks from three to five minutes, and it would have availed nothing if it had been stopped and the conductor had looked for the train, which was from a mile and a half to two miles distant. If he had looked he would have seen nothing, but the failure to stop the car and look was alleged as a fact and charged as negligence, and there wаs evidence to prove the fact. The first point made by counsel in support of the refusal to direct a verdict is that the evidence conclusively established the negligence of the defendant in not bringing its car to a stop before it reached the railroad tracks, and the testimony of witnesses is recited at length to show that the fact was proved. If learned counsel take that view of the liability of the defendant for the accident, it certainly cannot be said that the instructions were not calculated to mislead the jury and induce them to adopt the same theory. Furthermore, the practice of giving instructions referring the jury to the declaration has been repeatedly disapproved. The evidence as to whether there was any substantial injury to the plaintiff,, and the extent of such injury, if there was any, was conflicting, and the errors pointed out were prejudicial to the defendant.
The judgments of the Appellate and circuit courts are reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court.
Reversed and remanded.
