Court Opinion

ID: 8842897
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 16:48:21.468091+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:05:15.586076
License: Public Domain

Mr. Presiding Justice Barnes delivered the opinion of the court. This is a personal injury suit in which the court overruled defendant’s general and special demurrers to the declaration. Defendant stood by the' same, and it was agreed that the court might enter a finding in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,000. The only question to be decided is whether the court properly overruled said demurrers and entered judgment on the finding. The declaration alleges in substance that defendant operated a railroad over and across West 64th street between Lowe and Parnell avenues, Chicago; that on October 23,1899, a certain track elevation ordinance of the City of Chicago' became effective providing for the elevation of the track and roadbeds of divers railroad companies within the limits of the city, including those of defendant referred to; that defendant accepted said ordinance and prior to the accident in question elevated its said tracks and roadbed over said 64th street between said avenues, pursuant to and in accordance with said ordinance; that section 12 of said ordinance required the railroad companies to light the subways authorized to be constructed in the manner prescribed by the ordinance then in force for the lighting, of the portion of their tracks at said street crossings; that there was then in force a certain ordinance of the City of Chicago which required all railroad companies whose tracks crossed any of the streets, of said city above the level of such streets to provide at their own expense proper and sufficient lights and care for the . same at all such crossings underneath the track or tracks of said railroad companies, and penalized said companies for failure to comply with such provisions; that said ordinance was re-enacted in substantially the same language in the Municipal Code of 1905, and that the last-mentioned ordinance was re-enacted in the Chicago Code of 1911 in substantially the same form, and that the ordinances as originally enacted and re-enacted remained continuously in force from 1897 down to January 10,1922, the date of the alleged accident. The declaration then proceeds to aver that on the latter date plaintiff was riding in an automobile on said 64th street, between said avenues and that defendant “carelessly, negligently and wrongfully, and in violation of said ordinances aforesaid failed and neglected to provide at its own expense proper and sufficient lights and to care for the same at the place aforesaid and thereby as a result of said negligence, and in violation of the ordinances aforesaid the subway under the tracks of the defendant over 64th street was inadequately and insufficiently lighted, and the center tier of columns of said viaduct erected at or near the center of said 64th street, constituted a menace to persons lawfully using said street, * * * that while plaintiff was “lawfully and properly riding in said automobile in the exercise of ordinary care,” etc., “because of the negligence of the defendant as aforesaid,” said automobile did “run into and collide with the supporting columns of the defendant’s said viaduct over the said 64th street,” and thereby plaintiff was thrown and injured, etc. The negligence upon which the cause of action purports to rest is the failure of defendant to provide proper and sufficient lights in the subway under its elevated tracks at the place in question. So far as disclosed by the facts pleaded the duty to provide such lights rests upon three distinct grounds: (1) because the company contracted to furnish such lights by accepting the elevation ordinance with the provision therein requiring it to do so; (2) because the company was required to provide such lights by the other ordinances pleaded which provided a penalty for its failure to do so, and (3) because defendant erected near the center of the street underneath the elevated structure a tier of columns which constituted a menace or obstruction to traffic therein. Pleading these three different grounds for recovery renders the declaration duplicitous. Such a defect, however, must be reached by special demurrer, and none was filed presenting that ground. That defect, therefore; must be disregarded. If, however, the declaration states one good ground of action, in the absence of such a demurrer we may treat the other alleged grounds of the action as surplusage. So far as the declaration rests upon the duty of defendant to provide such lights because required to do so by the several ordinances other than the elevation ordinance pleaded it unquestionably is subject to a general demurrer. The provision requiring railroad companies to provide lights under their elevated tracks, in force at the time defendant accepted the elevation ordinance and which was re-enacted in slightly varying language in subsequent provisions of the Chicago Code, was declared invalid in City of Chicago v. Pennsylvania Co., 252 Ill. 185, on the ground that an attempt of the city to impose upon the railroad company the duty to provide such lights did not come within the purview of its police power. That being so, there could, of course, be no validity to the re-enactment of the unconstitutional provision. (8 Cyc. 805.) It follows, therefore, that the provision for such lighting in the several invalid ordinances imposed no legal duty on the railroad company to furnish such lights. The provision, too, being regulatory of a public utility the city now has no power to pass or enforce an ordinance of that character. (Northern Trust Co. v. Chicago Rys. Co., 318 Ill. 402.) Whether the elevation ordinance imposed a contractual duty on defendant to light the subway need not be considered if averments in the declaration to the effect that the columns erected in the street underneath the elevated structure constituted an obstruction against which it was the duty of defendant to protect the public lawfully and properly using the subway, state a cause of action. The demurrer must be held to admit that the center tier of columns in the subway constituted an obstruction to traffic, and as they were placed there by defendant as a part of its structure it became the duty of defendant, even though it were also the duty of the city, to safeguard the public from any danger in using the street. Whether the accident took place in daylight or darkness does not appear, or whether it was necessary to light the subway in the daytime. With these questions of fact we are not concerned so long as the demurrer admits the existence of an obstruction and that it was a menace in the absence of lights at any time, and that in consequence of the subway not being lighted the accident took place. We think, therefore, that the declaration sufficiently states a cause of action with respect to defendant’s liability for maintaining a structure in the street which constituted a menace or obstruction to traffic unless properly lighted and that it neglected its duty in that respect. Affirmed. G-ridley and Fitch, JJ., concur.