delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court affirming a judgment of the city court of East St. Louis for the sum of $5000, against appellant and in favor of appellee, as administrator of the estate of Edward O’Connell, deceased. The declaration is a single count, containing three distinct charges of negligence. The first, carelessness and recklessness in running the engine of appellant without looking out for persons upon the track, and especially for the deceased, and without giving any signal of the approach of the train. The second, violation of a city ordinance which required the bell of every engine running upon a track in the city to be rung continuously, and the third, violation of another ordinance which prohibited the running of an engine within the city at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour. A general demurrer to the declaration was filed and overruled. Appellant then pleaded the general issue.
It appears that deceased had been for some time in the employ of appellant as yard clerk and watchman, with the powers of a policeman, at the city of East St. Louis. On the morning of May 2, 1893, one of appellant’s engines was sent to Pinckneyville for purposes of extra work, and deceased rode on the engine as far as the lumo ber yard in East St. Louis, and then alighted from it. He walked some little distance in the direction from which he had come, and then, standing near the track with his back to the engine, was engaged, for the next few minutes, either in taking the car numbers or in loading a revolver. Meanwhile the engineer, finding the main track blocked with cars, backed the engine, by direction of the yardmaster, that he might run upon a side-track and proceed around the obstruction, instead of waiting for the main track to be cleared. The engine backed down the track and ran into the deceased while he was engaged as above indicated, inflicting upon him the injuries from which he died a few hours later.
That the deceased met his death through the negligence of appellant’s servants, while himself in the exercise of due care, has been conclusively established by the judgments below.
At the trial appellee read in evidence, over the objection and exception of appellant, sections 583 and 584 of the ordinances of the city of East St. Louis. Section 583 prohibited the running of passenger trains or cars within the limits of the city at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour. Section 584 required the bell of every locomotive engine to be rung continually while running upon any railroad track within the city. Several reasons are urged why these ordinances were not competent evidence.
First—It is said that there is no proper averment in the declaration that at the time deceased met his death there was in force in the city of East St. Louis an ordinance prohibiting any locomotive engine to be run at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour. There is an averment that the conduct of defendant’s servants in running the engine at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour, in violation of the ordinance of the city of East St. Louis, contributed directly in causing the death of the deceased. Appellee had the right to prove the averments of his declaration. If this averment is insufficient, it is too late now, after verdict and judgment, to complain of it. (Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. O’Conner, 115 Ill. 254.) However, appellant must be considered as having waived any such objection to the admission of the ordinance in evidence, for when offered no objection was made to its competency on that ground. Terre Haute and Indianapolis Railroad Co. v. Voelker, 129 Ill. 540.
Second—It is said that neither of said ordinances applies to this case, because deceased was an employee of appellant, working in the company’s yards. Such is not the law. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Gilbert, 157 Ill. 354.) This objection, however, like the first, must be considered as waived, for it was not interposed at the trial.
Third—It is said that there is no certificate that the ordinances were in force on the day the deceased was killed. The record shows that this is the specific ground upon which appellant objected to the competency of the ordinances as evidence. The ordinances in question were contained in a printed book of ordinances purporting to have been published by authority of the city council. The book contained also the certificate of the city clerk, under the corporate seal, certifying that the ordinances were passed on February 20, 1889, approved by the mayor February 21, 1889, and published March 2, 1889. This, under the statute, proved the passage of the ordinances. It having been shown that the ordinances were passed prior to the day on which deceased was killed, the presumption is that they were still in force at that date, for when a fact or state of things is once shown to exist, the presumption is that the fact or state of things continues to exist, as before, until the contrary is shown or until a different presumption is raised. (Greenleaf on Evidence,—15th ed.—sec. 41.) If either of the ordinances had been repealed by a later ordinance, then, after the plaintiff closed his case, such later ordinance could have been introduced in evidence. Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Gilbert, supra.
The necessary conclusion is, that the trial court committed no error in admitting the ordinances in evidence.
The only objection made to the rulings of the court in giving plaintiff’s instructions is, that the instructions stated the law upon the question of fellow-servants, when, as it is claimed, that question was not in issue on the trial of the case. The question was in issue under the pleadings. The declaration averred that deceased and those who caused his death were not fellow-servants, and the general issue required proof of this averment to-be made. Appellant admits the evidence showed that deceased and the engine crew were not fellow-servants, and does not deny that the instructions stated the law correctly, but contends that the instructions had a tendency to draw the attention of the jury from principal and contested to minor and undisputed points. We do not agree with appellant’s counsel, and find no force in this objection.
But two instructions were asked by defendant, and it is contended that the court erred in refusing to give them, and also in refusing to give the first and second special interrogatories asked by it. The first of said instructions told the jury that the master is not liable, in any case, for an injury to an employee working in a dangerous place, where the injury was not willfully inflicted. The second, that if deceased was loading his revolver when he was struck by the engine he was guilty of negligence, and there could be no recovery for his death. Neither instruction stated the law. (Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. O’Conner, supra.) Deceased was an employee of appellant, and rightfully in its yards. He was a policeman, and, as such, might lawfully load his pistol without necessarily being guilty of' negligence. Whether or not it constituted negligence was a question for the jury to determine, under all the circumstances of the case.
The refused interrogatories were as follows: “Did the deceased know that the place where he was struck was a dangerous place to work?” and “Was the deceased loading his revolver when he was struck?” Both of these interrogatories were properly refused. They called for evidentiary, and not ultimate, facts. If they had been submitted and answered affirmatively, the answers would not have been contradictory to the general verdict. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. Dunleavy, 129 Ill. 132; Terre Haute and Indianapolis Railroad Co. v. Voelker, supra.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.