Friday, August 13, 1852.Springfield, IL. | In the Sangamon County Circuit
Court, Lincoln files a declaration in the case of
Grubb v. John Frink & Co. Lincoln and
William Herndon represent the plaintiff Samuel Grubb, who is suing Martin
Walker and John Frink. Grubb was a passenger on Walker and Frink's stagecoach
when it overturned during a trip from Rushville, Illinois to Frederick,
Illinois. Grubb suffered "cut[s], bruise[s], and . . . bon[e]" fractures. Lincoln
attributes the accident to the defendants' "carelessness [and] negligence."
Grubb "was . . . prevented from . . . attending to his . . . affairs . . . and
lost . . . great . . . profits." Grubb seeks to recover $100 in medical expenses and
$1,000 in damages. Declaration, filed 13 August 1852, Grubb v. John
Frink & Co., Herndon-Weik Collection, Library of Congress,
Washington, DC. |