79 Ill. App. 53 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant has argued three points : first, that there was error in overruling its motion in arrest; second, that the verdict is not sustained by a preponderance of the evidence; and, third, that appellant should have, a new trial because of improper remarks of appellee’s counsel in his closing argument to the jury.
1st. The contention as to the motion in arrest is, that the first count of the declaration does not allege sufficient facts to show any duty of appellant toward appellee and the violation of any duty by appellant. It may be conceded that this count was bad on demurrer, but after a plea of not guilty, trial had thereon and verdict, we are of opinion that any defects pointed out by appellant were cured by the verdict. Barker v. Koozier, 80 Ill. 206; C. & E. I. R. R. Co. v. Hines, 132 Ill. 165.
It is unnecessary to consider the second count, inasmuch as it is based upon a city ordinance; and as the ordinance was not admitted in evidence, it follows that the judgment can not be sustained on that count. The violation of the ordinance was the gist of that count, and to recover under it the ordinance should have been proven.
2d. After a full and careful consideration of the evidence relating to the circumstances of the accident, we are of opinion that appellee failed to establish her case by a preponderance of the proof. In this regard she ivas the only witness in her behalf,"and she is positively contradicted by two disinterested witnesses, Ilrieger and Lorenz, the flagman and gateman, respectively, at the crossing of Archer avenue, near which the accident happened. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Alexander, 46 Ill. App. 505; Peaslee v. Glass, 61 Ill. 94; Belden v. Innis, 84 Ill. 78.
The declaration alleges that the train of appellant was run at a high and reckless rate of speed, to wit, at twenty miles per hour, without giving plaintiff any notice of its approach, and in such close proximity to plaintiff that the horse thereby became greatly frightened and alarmed, and suddenly wheeled and turned, thereby causing the buggy to tip over.
Plaintiff testified that as she approached the crossing she heard no bell ringing and heard no signal of any kind, but says the flagman grabbed the horse as she was getting across the tracks, and he had some kind of a light in his hands; that “ the horse got scared from the train, I expect; when we came off the track the horse started to run;” that the horse Avas going about eight or nine miles an hour, until Ave came near the tracks—about, may be, ten or fifteen feet away; that she looked to see if any train was coming when they were coming near the tracks, from nine to fifteen feet; that the train was going at about twenty miles per hour, at about the same rate of speed that other freight trains pass there sometimes; that as compared to other freight trains she saw passing that crossing, it seemed to her to be going fast; that was simply her judgment, but that she hadn’t had an)r experience which would enable her to judge the speed of a railroad freight train, no more than any other person passing over that crossing.
Iirieger and Lorenz were experienced railroad men. Krieger had been on that crossing eight years and Lorenz six years. They said the train was going about eight miles per hour. Krieger says that at the time of the accident the train was 200 to 220 feet away, and to the north of the crossing; that it was not very dark. Lorenz says that when the buggy tipped over, which was seventy-five to a hundred feet from and east of the crossing, the train ivas about 100 feet away from the crossing. They both say that the gate-man’s bell was rung. Krieger says there were bells on the gates which ring by the operation of the gates five times as they go down, and that the watchman standing on the crossing swung his lantern as the horse and buggy came down the street toward the crossing, Lorenz says when the horse was twenty-five feet from the crossing, and Krieger says when the horse was eighty feet away, and when it came closer, he swung his lamp faster; that the man who was driving took the whip and whipped at his horse; “ it was going very fast then, and then I hollered at him to stop, and swung the lamp and jumped out, run out from the tracks under the gate; tried to keep him -back; ” that when he (the driver) “ found I would not let him go, he jerked his horse around, and in going around, the first two wheels got about one-half over the first rail, and in going around ran back at a distance of about eighty feet from the crossing, struck the sidewalk and the buggy upset.” They both say that the gatera an did not grab the horse, as plaintiff testified. From the whole evidence, we think it fails to appear from a preponderance that the horse was frightened by the train, and we are inclined to the opinion that the accident was the result of the buggy striking the sidewalk, by reason of reckless and rapid driving, and that a far more serious accident was averted by the watchfulness and strict attention to their duties of the flagman and gateman.
3d. Counsel for plaintiff, in his closing argument to the jury, by inference, if not directly, stated to the jury that the “ flagman was asleep or drunk,” of which there was no evidence. After an exception to the remark, he stated, “ I withdraw, then, the remark.” Also in his argument he used the following language, to which there was an objection by attorney for appellant and a ruling by the court, viz.:
“ Mow, gentlemen, my time is drawing very close. When you consider this case, and after considering it you come to the conclusion the plaintiff is entitled to some damages for the injury she received, against this company, and that those damages are such as will repay her for her loss of time and compensate her for pain and suffering she endured as the result of that injury, I want you, gentlemen, if you come to that conclusion, when you are off this panel, to go out to the corner of Archer avenue and Stewart avenue, and stand there and watch those tracks for about fifteen minutes, as I have done; if you will do it, gentlemen, you will go home to your wives and sisters and will say there is one good thing you did while on the jury in Judge Ball’s court; you know for certain you did justice where it belonged; you gave the little girl who was thrown into their dirty deathtrap at the corner of Stewart avenue and Archer avenue, and was injured—”
“Mr. Lee: I object.
“ Mr. Chadbourne: I will withdraw the remark.
“The Court: I think it is uncalled for. It will be stricken out, gentlemen.
“ Mr. Chadbourne: I will withdraw that remark, gentlemen.” .
A ruling of the court not being asked or made as to the first remark of counsel, and the court having sustained counsel’s objection to the latter remarks, with the statement that they were uncalled for and stricken out, we are not prepared to hold, in this state of the record, that for these remarks alone, while very improper and calling for a severe rebuke to counsel from the court, a new trial should be awarded by this court. E. J. & E. R. R. Co. v. Fletcher, 128 Ill. 619; Marder v. Leary, 137 Ill. 323; W. C. St. R. R. Co. v. Sullivan, 165 Ill. 304.
If the court was of opinion, as it stated on the hearing of the motion for new trial, “ that for the alleged improper remarks of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury, said verdict should be reduced $400,” then a new trial should have been granted, for it seems impossible that the learned trial judge could have determined to what extent the verdict was induced by counsel’s remarks.
Because the verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.