{
  "id": 5497034,
  "name": "Anna English, Appellee, v. George O. Gordon, Appellant",
  "name_abbreviation": "English v. Gordon",
  "decision_date": "1924-01-22",
  "docket_number": "Gen. No. 28,562",
  "first_page": "316",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T20:11:21.824833+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "Anna English, Appellee, v. George O. Gordon, Appellant."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Mr. Justice Barnes\ndelivered the opinion of the court.\nThis appeal is from a judgment for $5,000 in a personal injury suit brought by Anna English against George O. Gordon, as the result of a collision with his automobile at the intersection of 53rd street and Hyde Park boulevard, Chicago.\nThe declaration is in three counts. The first charges negligent operation of the automobile; the' second, violation of the statute respecting the speed of motor vehicles; and the third, negligent driving to the left or west side of the boulevard while driving north thereon. Defendant pleaded the general issue.\nAt the time of the collision defendant was driving his car northerly on said boulevard across 53rd street, and plaintiff was on the north side of the latter about the center of the boulevard walldng to the east across the same.\nAppellant argues that there should have been a directed verdict, and that the verdict was manifestly against the weight of the evidence. As we cannot concur in the last contention we need not consider the first. We think there was at least sufficient evidence to present for determination of the jury, under the first count, whether plaintiff was exercising reasonable care for her own safety, and whether defendant was negligent in the operation of his car. Unless on these questions we can say the verdict was manifestly against the weight of the evidence, then under well-settled practice we must affirm the judgment if there was no error in other respects.\nThe accident happened shortly after midday. There were only one or two other pedestrians and no other vehicle in the locality at the time. Each party had a clear vision of the other. The only eyewitnesses besides the parties themselves were a pedestrian who preceded plaintiff across the street, and testified in her behalf, and a man who saw the accident from a room on the west side of the boulevard about 150 feet south of 53rd street, and testified for defendant.\nPlaintiff\u2019s testimony was to the effect that she saw the automobile about a block away when she started across the boulevard; that about the time she reached the middle of the street the car was a few feet away, so close that she thought she would not have time to go forward and took two or three steps backwards; that the car was then perhaps five feet away from her; that it followed her to the west and then she went forward and was knocked down by the car. Her witness testified that as he reached the curb he heard a \u201cswishing\u201d sound, looked around, and saw the automobile \u201cshoot to one side and then to the other, and as plaintiff stepped out of the road the machine ran into her.\u201d Defendant\u2019s witness testified that as the car approached the corner plaintiff \u201cseemed to run forward and backward, and as she ran backward the machine hit her.\u201d Defendant testified that as plaintiff crossed the street she looked straight ahead and he concluded to get behind her; that as he approached within 20 feet of her she lifted her head, turned around and ran \"back; that he was then trying to get behind her but immediately switched the car to the east, when she turned again and started quickly to the east; that he then put the power on his brakes and threw on the clutch; that she again started back to the west and he to the east, when she came right toward the machine and was hit by its right side.\nWe are not impressed by this testimony that defendant operated his car with ordinary care for plaintiff\u2019s safety. He apparently waited until he was within 20 feet of her and observed her bewilderment before he took reasonable precaution for her safety. If he was driving only 12 miles an hour, as he stated, it is a matter of common knowledge that he could have stopped the car before reaching her. He did not deny plaintiff\u2019s testimony that immediately after the accident, and again the following day at the hospital, he said to her \u201cI was in a hurry,\u201d and that he also said \u201cdon\u2019t worry, I will take care of you.\u201d The jury may well have deemed these statements as an admission of his negligence and responsibility therefor.\nPlaintiff testified that she was walking fast, and had gone only about halfway across the street when the collision took place. The exact width of the boulevard was not shown, but allowing for an unusually wide street, plaintiff had probably not walked more than 30 feet while defendant was going the entire block, according to her testimony, and at least 250 feet, according to his. If she were walking at the ordinary gait of 3 miles an hour, he was going at least 25 miles an hour, a speed which, if kept up until he was within 20 feet of her, the jury may well have considered was greater than reasonable and proper for one having regard for her safety.\nNor can it be said that it was negligence per se under the circumstances that plaintiff did not look again to see the car until it came suddenly upon her. She might well have assumed that if the car were driven at a reasonable and the ordinary speed for such locality she had ample time to cross ahead of it, and therefore she was surprised and confused when she found it close upon her as she reached the middle of the crossing. We need not discuss the familiar doctrines that each party has an equal right to' passage at a street crossing and that he must exercise reasonable care for his own safety and that of others. Each case, however, presents its own peculiar circumstances, from which it is the particular province of the jury to decide the facts. And it is simply a question in this court whether we can say that the jury\u2019s conclusion is manifestly against the weight of the evidence. In this case we cannot so say. And in view of the appalling loss of life on public streets in our large cities resulting frequently from disregard by motorists of the fact that pedestrians have equal rights at street crossings, we are not disposed to say that when a pedestrian becomes bewildered by such disregard and is suddenly called upon to act for his own safety, his misjudgment of the course the automobile will take is contributory negligence. We think there was ample evidence to justify the jury\u2019s finding that plaintiff exercised reasonable care for her own safety and that defendant was. negligent.\nAfter plaintiff had read in evidence the deposition of a nonresident witness taken upon written interrogatories, pursuant to a commission so directing, under section 26 of the Evidence Act (Cahill\u2019s Ill. St. ch. 51, If 26), defendant offered in evidence the cross-examination of the witness taken upon oral interrogatories without any notice having been given of his. election so to do, as required by section 28 of said Act (Cahill\u2019s Ill. St. ch. 51, f[ 28). The court sustained plaintiff\u2019s objection to the reading of the same.\nAppellant contends that there should have been a motion to suppress before the cause came to trial. This is the usual rule when it is sought to suppress the entire deposition but not always, as we understand, when the suppression of only a part of it is sought. (Stull v. Stull (Neb.) 96 N. W. 201; 18 C. J. 727.) However, this rule applies generally to exceptions which go to form, or the incompetency of the witness, or to objections that could be cured by retaking the deposition. (Moshier v. Knox College, 32 Ill. 163; Kassing v. Mortimer, 80 Ill. 602; Benedict v. Dakin, 243 Ill. 390.) The objection in the case at bar was of a different nature. It went to the right of defendant to appear and cross-examine at all. If a party desires to cross-examine orally he should give written notice of his election so to do, as provided in section 28, in order that the party desiring the testimony may appear to make objections or a redirect examination, which he would have no occasion to do without receiving notice of the intention to cross-examine. The statute evidently does not contemplate the right to cross-examine in such a case without the exercise of election so to do in conformity with its provisions, and had plaintiff, after the opening of the depositions and before trial, moved to suppress the cross-examination and the motion been granted, defendant would have been in no better position, for there was no irregularity in the issuance or return of the commission, and the ruling would have afforded no opportunity to cross-examine the witness under that commission. Under a similar statute it was held in Neeves v. Gregory, 86 Wis. 319, that where a deposition of a nonresident witness was taken on commission and written interrogatories the adverse party could not cross-examine him orally. (See also, Shepard v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co., 85 Mo. 629; 18 C. J., sec. 221, p. 694.) We think, therefore, the court properly sustained the objection.\nThe proper rejection of such cross-examination obviates the necessity of discussing the giving of instruction 3 pertaining to the Motor Vehicle Act [Cahill\u2019s Ill. St. ch. 95a], proper consideration of which appellant contended would have been affected by admission of the rejected testimony.\nInstruction No. 5, given at plaintiff\u2019s request, called for a directed verdict and included among other things that the jury should find \u201cthat under all the circumstances in which the plaintiff was placed she used that degree of care which an ordinary prudent person would use,\u201d etc. It is contended that the quoted clause limits the situation to the precise time of the accident, and that under the ruling in North Chicago St. R. Co. v. Cossar, 203 Ill. 608, 612, it wa,s error to give such an instruction. We do not think the language of the instruction can be reasonably so restricted. The circumstances in which plaintiff was placed included those confronting her from the time she entered upon the crossing and it became her duty to exercise reasonable care in crossing the street. The case at bar is not analog\u2019ous to the one cited, either in the language of the instruction on that subject or in the facts of the case. We do not think there was reversible error in giving the instruction.\nAppellant\u2019s final contention is that the damages were excessive. While we are not convinced from the evidence that all of the conditions of which plaintiff complains were the proximate result of the injury, yet there were two fractures of the pelvis, requiring her to lie on her back in much pain in a fracture bed for six weeks at a hospital, from which she was carried home in a wheel chair, where she remained in bed for four weeks longer. She used crutches for six weeks thereafter, and has never been without pain in her hips since that time. She had never been injured or sick before and claims never to have been well since. In view of the present value of money we are not disposed to disturb the verdict as excessive. The judgment will be affirmed.\nAffirmed.\nGridley, P. J., and Fitch, J., concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Mr. Justice Barnes"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Green, Beverly & Bice, for appellant; Charles E. Green, of counsel.",
      "Novak & Novak, for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Anna English, Appellee, v. George O. Gordon, Appellant.\nGen. No. 28,562.\n1. Highways and streets \u2014 sufficiency of evidence to support verdict for pedestrian injured in automobile collision. A verdict for a pedestrian who was injured in a collision with defendant\u2019s automobile while crossing a street is not against the manifest weight of the evidence where there is evidence showing that plaintiff, before starting to cross, looked for approaching vehicles and saw defendant\u2019s car about a block away, that when half way across she looked again and saw the car within a few feet and after taking several steps backward was struck by the car, and that after the accident defendant made incriminating admissions to plaintiff, tending to show that he was driving at excessive speed.\n2. Highways and streets \u2014 when failure of pedestrian to look for approaching vehicle not negligence per se. It was not negligence per se for a pedestrian, who had looked for approaching vehicles before starting to cross a street and had seen defendant\u2019s car approaching about a block distant, not to look again until she was half way across the street, at which time the car was within a few feet of her.\n3. Depositions \u2014 rwhen motion to suppress not prerequisite to exclusion. The cross-examination of a witness for plaintiff whose deposition was taken by plaintiff under commission properly issued under Evidence Act, sec. 26, Cahill\u2019s Ill. St. ch. 51, If 26, was properly excluded on objection although no motion to suppress was made before trial, where the cross-examination was taken on oral interrogatories by defendant without any notice under section 28, Cahill\u2019s Ill. St. ch. 51, If 28, and the objection was directed at the cross-examination only and raised the right of the defendant to appear and cross-examine at all for failure to comply with the requirements of section 28.\n4. Highways and streets \u2014 when peremptory instruction that pedestrian used due care not reversible. In an action by a pedestrian who was struck by defendant\u2019s automobile as she was crossing the street, it was not reversible error to give an instruction calling for a directed verdict for plaintiff and charging the jury to find \u201cthat under all the circumstances in which the plaintiff was placed she used that degree of care which an ordinary prudent person would use,\u201d since such instruction did not limit the situation to the precise time of the accident but included all the circumstances confronting her from the time she entered upon the crossing.\n5. Damages \u2014 excessiveness of award. An award of $5,000 for personal injuries was not excessive where plaintiff sustained two fractures of the pelvis, was required to lay in a fracture bed, in much pain, in a hospital for six weeks and for four weeks more at home, and was required to use crutches for six weeks thereafter and has never been without pain since, although she had enjoyed good health before the accident.\nAppeal by defendant from the Superior Court of Cook county; the Hon. Hugo Pam, Judge, presiding. Heard in the second division of this court for the first district at the March term, 1923.\nAffirmed.\nOpinion filed January 22, 1924.\nGreen, Beverly & Bice, for appellant; Charles E. Green, of counsel.\nNovak & Novak, for appellee."
  },
  "file_name": "0316-01",
  "first_page_order": 370,
  "last_page_order": 376
}
