Callaway v. Walters

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We can not review the refusal of the court to transfer the case to the United States Circuit Court for the reason the bill of exceptions does not include the petition, affidavit and bond, or show any exception was taken to the ruling of the court upon the motion to transfer the cause. Mer. Des. Trans. Co. v. Joestling et al., 89 Ill. 152.

The declaration contained several counts but the evidence for the appellee applied only to those which proceeded upon the theory the engineer saw the appellee upon the bridge and failed to exercise ordinary care to avoid striking him. •

Whether liability can be legally predicated upon the mere failure of the engineer to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring a trespasser discovered by him upon the track and in danger can not be regarded as an open question in this case for the reason the parties hereto are concluded as to the point by the instructions which they respectively procured the court to give to the jury.

The appellants asked, and at their instance the court gave the following instructions:

“9. You are instructed that if it appears from the evidence in this cause that the plaintiff was a trespasser upon the track or bridge of the defendant receiver, at the time he was struck and injured, then said defendant receiver was not required and the law did not impose any duty whatever upon his engineer to discover the plaintiff’s presence upon the same, but only required him after he discovered the plaintiff and had knowledge that he was in a perilous position, to exercise reasonable care and prudence to avoid collision; and if it further appears that the engineer did exercise such care and prudence and did everything within his power to prevent the train from colliding with said plaintiff after he discovered him, then your verdict must be for the defendants.
10. The defendants are liable in this case only if the engineer failed to exercise ordinary care to prevent the injury, after he became aware of the danger to which plaintiff was exposed, and by ordinary care is meant such care as would be ordinarily used by a prudent person performing a like service under similar circumstances.”

Other instructions given in the same behalf enunciated the same legal principles in different phraseology.

Instructions given on behalf of the appellee were to the like effect but stated the rule more favorably to the appellants in this, that they declared the right of appellee to recover to be dependent upon the exercise by him of ordinary care for his own safety at the time he received his injury.

Having procured the law to be so announced to the jury, the appellants can not be permitted to assign same as for error and thus question the correctness of a rule declared at their request. Con. Coal Co. v. Haenni, 146 Ill. 621.

Moreover the doctrine of the instructions is supported by decisions of our Supreme Courts and by text writers of standard authority. L. S. & M. S. R. R. Co. v. Bodemer, 139 Ill. 605; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Noble, 142 Ill. 587; Deering, Law of Neg., p. 607.

This court so accepted and declared the rule in Wabash R. R. Co. v. Jones, 53 Ill. App. 587, now pending in the Supreme Court on appeal.

Appellee acted with great imprudence in going upon the bridge, more especially as he knew a train was soon due to pass over it.

But this could not be held to relieve the engineer from the duty to use every reasonable effort to avoid injuring him after discovering he was in danger.

It clearly appeared, indeed, the engineer testified he saw appellee upon the bridge.

The vital question then arose whether the requisite care and diligence was exercised to avoid injuring him.

This was a question of fact. We have carefully read the evidence bearing upon it.

It was conflicting, but that tending to support the charge the engineer was derelict, amply justified the court in refusing to grant appellant’s motion to take the case from the jury.

The bridge crossed the stream from north to south. The train was moving south and the appellee and the little girl were walking in the same direction.

They were, when struck by the engine, within twenty or thirty feet of the south end of the bridge. It was 400 feet in length and the engineer saw appellee walking upon it when the engine was at a point 800 feet north of its northern end and nearly 1,200 feet north of the point where appellee was when the engine ran upon him. It appeared the engineer shut off steam from the engine when he discovered appellee upon the bridge, but the evidence tended very strongly to show he failed then to take other effective and safe means within his power to stop the train.

He applied the air brakes, but only in the “ service stop ” which is used for checking up a train when approaching a station where it is designed to stop. The engine ivas provided with an “ emergency stop,” by means of which the full power of the brakes might have been exerted and the motion of the train much more speedily overcome.

He shut off the steam from the engine, but did not reverse the lever which seems would have tended to produce a backward motion of its machinery.

The fireman testified the engine was thus allowed to “ drift ” down to the north end of the bridge or near that point, and then the engine was reversed and the brakes applied in the “ emergency stop.” A passenger on the train testified he did not observe any slacking in the speed of the train except a sudden and severe shock after the train was upon the bridge.

A witness who was traveling on a highway which crosses the railroad 400 feet north of the bridge testified he did not notice any cheeking of its speed until it was upon the bridge. Another witness who was upon the highway approaching the railroad from the west testified the train dashed across ihe highway crossing at a high rate of speed, thirty or forty miles per hour, in his judgment.

There was, therefore, evidence warranting the jury in concluding the engineer failed to use the means provided for stopping the motion of the train until the north end of the bridge was reached. These means were then used but it was too late.

The engineer testified he thought appellee was “ a bridge repairer,” and supposed he would step from the track and stand upon the timbers of the bridge while the train was passing as he said it Avas the custom of such Avorkmen to do, and therefore did not act as promptly as he otherAvise would, but that when he saw the little girl he realized his error, and at once put in operation every appliance provided to stop the train, but could not do so in time to avoid a collision.

Out of this testimony arose a contention of fact whether reasonable diligence was exercised.

It was peculiarly the province of the jury to determine it.

Manifestly, we can not, in view of all the evidence, say their finding was palpably wrong.

Complaint is made the court refused the following instruction asked by appellants:

“ IT. If you believe from the preponderance of the evidence in this case that the plaintiff of his own convenience, and that of Goldie Spurgeon, a child of tender years in charge of said plaintiff, at or before the time the plaintiff was struck, was walking along the track, he was not a lawful traveler thereon, and had no right there, and the defendant receiver was under no obligation to give him or said Goldie Spurgeon the right of way over his track in preference to his train; and if the plaintiff at and before he was struck was walking with said Goldie Spurgeon on or near the track, and in consequence of so walking along or on the track the said Goldie Spurgeon was placed in danger, and the plaintiff tried to rescue her and was hit, you must find for the defendant unless the injury was willfully inflicted.”

It ought not have been given.

Whatever the appellee did toward assisting the little girl to escape could only have been important for consideration in connection with all the other facts and circumstances in proof bearing upon the question whether he exercised ordinary care to secure his own safety.

It was not competent for the court to select one fact and declare negligence therefrom as a matter of law.

Appellee might have “ tried to rescue” the girl without incurring additional danger, and surely the court ought not have directed the jury that as matter of law plaintiff could not recover if he made any effort to assist her.

The court also refused to instruct the jury, an engineer may assume a person trespassing upon the road will leave the track in time to escape, and may continue to run his train until he discovers such person is heedless of danger.

We know of no rule of law thus regulating the conduct of an engineer.

The law is, he must exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring any one discovered by him to be upon the track and in danger.

Doubtless, in most instances, the engineer may as matter of fact assume a person walking on the track will step off before the train reaches him, but we do not think such assumption could have been safely indulged in the instance at bar. Appellee, as the engineer well knew, was upon a bridge; and any assumption that might be indulged in as to a person walking where he could with safety leave the track by stepping upon the ground to the right or left could not be entertained, but rather it ought to be assumed a person on a bridge-must pass along the track until he could reach the end of the bridge.

The fourth instruction asked by appellants, and refused, presented no principle of law not fully and correctly given in other instructions.

The court gave fourteen instructions in behalf of appellants, covering fairly and fully the law of the case.

The complaint that improper evidence was admitted, is based upon the contention that a witness was allowed to answer a hypothetical question which, as it is alleged, assumed facts not proven.

The intendments to be drawn from the proofs, in our opinion, were such as to warrant the court in allowing the witness to answer.

The complaint the court refused to allow the witness Johnson to answer whether it was the “ custom or habit of bridge carpenters to step out on the caps when a train is passing ” is groundless. The witness answered the question fully, so far as it related to the case, and was cross-examined thereon.

We see no reason to regard the damages as excessive.

The objection, the appellants are not jointly liable, was not made in the trial court, and can not be first raised here. The judgment being against Callaway as receiver, and against Kemp as an individual, and awarding general execution against both, is an anomaly. But a misjoinder, and the consequence thereto, if the plaintiff should succeed, was not suggested in the lower court by demurrer or plea in the motion for a new trial, or by motion in arrest, or otherwise, and the irregularity of the judgment is not specifically assigned for error in this court.

We therefore decline to consider any suggestion in relation to the question. Eich v. Severs, 73 Ill. 194.

The judgment must be, and is, affirmed.