Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Dillon

Wilkin, J.

This was an action on the case brought by plaintiff below to recover for a personal injury, and damages sustained by injury done to his horse and wagon through the alleged negligence of appellant’s engineer and fireman in failing to ring a bell or sound a whistle at a public road crossing as required by statute.

The injury occurred at the national stock yards at East St. Louis on a road called “ Avenue F.” Appellee was driving north and about to cross the railroad track when a locomotive of appellant struck his horse and wagon, killing the horse and destroying the wagon, and also severely injuring him. On the west side of the avenue, south of the railroad track and in the angle formed by the two, was a building near to both the avenue and the track, and so obstructing the view, that neither appellee nor the engineer on the locomotive could see the other, nor could appellee see the locomotive until very near the crossing, and it is clear from all the proof that neither did see the other until about the moment of the collision. Three trials have been had in the Circuit Court, each resulting in a verdict for appellee, and the case is before us on a second appeal by defendant below. At our August term, 1885, we reversed a judgment of the Circuit Court for errors in instructions. The evidence then before us and that in the present bill of exceptions is substantially the same, and the error now urged as ground for reversal, going to the substantial merits of the case, were also urged and considered on the former hearing. Our opinion then filed is reported in 17 Ill. App. 355. Having now decided to affirm the judgment, it would be unprofitable to do more than briefly state our reasons for so doing.

Witnesses having testified that they were near the crossing at the time of the accident, stated that they heard no bell or whistle. They were then allowed to answer, over objections by appellant, the question, “state if you could have heard one if it had sounded?”

Whether the ruling of the learned Judge presiding at the trial, as to the competency of the question, conformed to the better rule or not, we think it is sustained by the decision of our Supreme Court in Pennsylvania Co. v. Boylan, 104 Ill. 595, and there was no error in overruling the objection.

In the bill of exceptions this statement appears: “ James M. Bill, attorney for the plaintiff, in the closing argument to the jury, referred to the former verdicts of §875 and §4,000, to which counsel for the defendant objected.” What ruling, if any, the court made upon the objection does not appear. Appellant asked the court to instruct the jury that the comments of counsel in the closing argument, wherein he referred to former verdicts, were improper and should not be considered by the jury, and that the jury should not, in any respect, be influenced by what former verdicts may have been, which was refused. It is now earnestly insisted that there was such misconduct on the part of counsel in commenting on former verdicts rendered in the case as to greatly prejudice its rights, and that such conduct taken in connection with the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as asked with reference thereto, should be held such error as to reverse the judgment. There is nothing whatever in the bill of exceptions to indicate the connection in which the former verdicts were mentioned, nor from which we can determine the object or motive with which the reference was made. All that counsel is shown to have said may have been perfectly proper and said in such connection as to render it harmless to appellant; it might, on the contrary, have been highly improper, and if said in such connection and with the purpose of influencing the jury to render a similar verdict to those referred to, it was improper, and the instruction asked should have been given. With the information furnished us by the record, we can not say that the Judge, who heard all that was said in the argument on both sides, knew what elicited the comments, etc., erred in holding the reference not improper as we must presume ^he did in refusing to give the instruction.

But three instructions were given on behalf of plaintiff below, and they are each criticised by counsel for appellant as tending to mislead the jury. We find no substantial error in either of them, and while, perhaps, more apt language might have been used to express the legal propositions announced by them, we can not believe that, taken in connection with the voluminous and liberal instructions given on behalf of appellant, the jury could have been misled as to the law of the case.'

It is also urged that certain refused instructions, other than the one previously referred to, should have been given, as asked by appellant. As already stated, the court did fully instruct the jury on every theory of appellant’s defense, and, as we think, construed the law most liberally in its favor.

The rules of law applicable to the case, correctly stated in the refused instructions, were announced to the jury in those given, and we think the refusal of those so marked was proper.

The position that “Avenue F” is not a public highway within the meaning of the' statute requiring signals, is not tenable under the evidence of the case. It is shown to have been open to and used by the public as a road for more than ten years. It was one of the most public roads in the County of St. <piair, so far as it could become so by general use and recognition.

Appellant’s employes, as well as those of all other railroad corporations using the various tracks in the stock yards, treated it as a public highway, and, as they swear, habitually gave the signals. It could not have been the intention of the Legislature that See. 68, Chap. 114, R. S., requiring signals at public highways should only apply to roads defined to be public highways in the first section of the chapter on roads and bridges. We think the jury was fully justified by the proofs, under the instructions of the court, in finding that the place of the injury was on a public highway, as alleged in the declaration, and a failure to give the required signal, statutory negligence.

The questions of fact, as to whether or not appellant was guilty of negligence, and appellee in the exercise of due care at the time of the injury, or on the doctrine of comparative negligence, whether or not appellant was guilty of gross and appellee only of slight negligence, seem to have been fairly submitted to the jury.

We can not say that the finding on those questions in favor of appellee is so far unsupported by the evidence as to make it our duty to set it aside by a reversal of the judgment. The fact that repeated trials of the case have already been had with like results can not be ignored in this decision, and on the whole record, as it now appears, we are of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.