Ward v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co.

61 Ill. App. 530 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1895

Mr. Presiding Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion op the Court.

Appellant sued appellee and filed his declaration of the cause of action, consisting of eleven counts, in each of which he alleged that he was a passenger on a train of appellee to be carried from Chicago to its station at DeKalb, Illinois, and that he Avas injured by falling from the platform of the train when near the station of DeKalb, but before the station Avas reached or a stop made for the purpose of alloAving passengers to alight. The declaration Avas demurred to generally and specially, and the demurrer was sustained. Appellant elected to stand by the declaration, and judgment was rendered against him for costs.

The declaration is so lengthy that it would be neither proper nor desirable to occupy space with a copy of it; and its statements are so numerous, and so arranged, that it would be very difficult to give them an orderly arrangement, and notice them all in an opinion. On this account we shall have to content ourselves with general statements and conclusions regarding it. In the various counts there were charges of negligence on the part of defendant in the following particulars: Stopping and starting the train at the place where plaintiff fell off before reaching the station; not keeping the vestibule doors on the platform shut and fastened; failing to light the vestibule; failing to maintain lights along the track so as to light the platform and steps of the car; changing the station and the custom of landing passengers from one side of the track to the other, without notice to plaintiff; failing to notify plaintiff that the train was not at the station; placing heaps of gravel along the track so that when plaintiff fell off, he fell on the gravel; failing to properly call the stations between Chicago and DeKalb; in simply announcing when leaving the last station that the next station would be DeKalb, failing to ballast the track, and inducing plaintiff to go to the platform where he fell off.

Each of these things having been charged in some part of the declaration to have been negligently done or omitted, it is contended that the court could not, on demurrer, pass on their sufficiency, but must submit them to the judgment of a jury as to their character. It may be true that where reasonable minds might perhaps disagree as to the character of an act, it must be so submitted; but where there could be no such disagreement, the question of negligence is one of law, and the court may say as matter of law that an act is or is not negligent. Hoehn v. C. P. & St. L. Ry. Co., 152 Ill. 123; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Larson, Id. 326; Wabash Ry. Co. v. Brown, Id. 484. The decision in Andrew, Adm’r, v. C. & N. W. Ry. Co., 45 Ill. App. 269, does not support the contention that every charge of negligence must be submitted to a jury. In that case the declaration averred that the deceased went into the car and deposited his parcels and stepped out on the platform; that the train was moved away and backed and switched; that it was night time and foggy; and that while he was on the depot grounds in the exercise of due care on his part, attempting to take passage, the train was negligently backed without any light or signal on the end of the train or any person to warn persons lawfully on the depot grounds of the movements of the train. The grounds of the decision were that actionable negligence was charged, and that it was not necessary to plead the evidence.

The duties and liabilities imposed by the relation of carrier and passenger are questions of law, but whether there has been a negligent discharge of a duty so imposed is a question of fact or Jaw upon the same conditions as any other question of negligence. Some of the acts charged as negligent, we think, could not be brought within any of the duties created bv the relation, and we apprehend that reasonable minds would not disagree in the conclusion that they were not negligent as applied to the circumstances alleged to exist, and therefore the court might so pronounce them as matter of law. Of this class are charges of negligence in not lighting the railroad grounds where there was no station, merely to illuminate a passing train with its platform, changing the depot and business from one side to tlie other without notifying plaintiff, or allowing gravel piles along the road where there was no station nor the slightest reason to suppose that passengers would fall off or try to get off.

Averments that these things were duties of defendant are of no avail where facts are not stated from which the law will create the duty. The allegation of a duty is a mere conclusion of law, that is not traversable, and will not sustain a pleading. Ayres v. City of Chicago, 111 Ill. 406; McCune v. Norwich City Gas Co., 30 Con. 421.

Other things alleged as duties come distinctly within the range of obligations created by the fact averred that plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s train. Duties to announce the station, and to stop the train at the destination of a passenger, and to give him an opportunity of safely alighting, arise from that fact. But a declaration must show a breacli of the duty. The practice of giving notice of the next station as alleged was in the direction of the discharge of duty, and not of a breach of it, and if plaintiff required another notice when the train reached De-Kalb, there was no failure in that regard, since he fell off before it reached the station. The duty to stop at the station and give plaintiff an opportunity of safely alighting is properly charged, but the breach alleged is in stopping and starting before the train got there,'and not telling him that it was not there. These were not breaches of the duties alleged.

Again, it was necessary to show wherein the defendant had been guilty of a breach of duty, and a declaration against a common carrier which fails to do that is substantially defective. Connecting Ry. Co. v. W., St. L. & P. Ry. Co., 123 Ill. 594. See also C. B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Harwood, 90 Ill. 425. And a declaration is bad on demurrer which does not show- that the negligence averred contributed in some degree to the injury complained of. McGanahan v. E. St. L. & C. Ry. Co., 72 Ill. 557.

Each count of the declaration offended against one or more of the foregoing well settled rules of pleading, and we are satisfied with the conclusion of the court that they were insufficient. It is not asking too much that a plaintiff in seeking redress for an alleged injury should state the basis of his action in plain and intelligible form agreeably to the established rules of pleading. By those rules, the plaintiff was bound to show the duty, the breach, and in what it consisted, and that his injury resulted as a consequence. We think that he has not done so, and the judgment will be affirmed.

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