136 Wis. 341 | Wis. | 1908
Among some sixty-nine assignments of error is presented one question the answer to which, as we have determined upon it, is so conclusive not only of this appeal but of the final merits of the case that we shall rest the decision thereon without discussing the other assignments. That question is whether there is any evidence which can. justify the affirmative answers of the jury to the two questions of the special verdict mentioned in the statement of facts, namely, whether the defendant was guilty of negligence in having the bucket upon the side of the car, and whether such negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. This bucket was nine and one-half inches in diameter. The method of attachment was by hanging the loose bail over a hand-rail in the ladder upon the side of the car, thrusting through the bail upon the inside of the round and down into the bucket a long rod of iron, which served to hold the buqket substantially against the side of the car. The ladder projected from the side of the car approximately three inches, and thus the bucket projected six and one-half or seven inches beyond the ladder, and it is very apparent from the testimony of plaintiff’s two witnesses who professed to have seen the bucket that it was upon an ordinary box car, perhaps not the smallest but certainly not one of the unusually large type, such as furniture or refrigerator cars.
Upon this evidence, which is without dispute, we deem it entirely clear that the carriage of such pail under the circumstances cannot of itself constitute negligence. Negligence is a failure of the care ordinarily exercised by the great mass of persons under like circumstances. It was proved without contradiction that the managers and employees of railroads ordinarily carry a bucket as this was carried. How then could it be said that what was the custom of the mass of mankind was so variant from that custom as to constitute negligence ? It has been held in a long array of cases that proof that the conduct of a defendant coincided with the customary method of doing the business by others under similar circumstances excludes the inference of negligence. Boyce v. Wilbur L. Co. 119 Wis. 642, 97 N. W. 563; Yazdzewski v. Barker, 131 Wis. 494, 111 N. W. 689. Such condition was fully established in this case. True, an exception is noted in the authorities, and equally well established, to the effect that a custom which is so obviously dangerous to life and limb as to be at once recognized as such by all intelligent persons cannot be justified under this rule. Boyce v. Wilbur L. Co. 119 Wis. 642, 648, 97 N. W. 563; Yazdzewski v. Barker, 131 Wis. 494, 498, 111 N. W. 689. But the manner of carrying the bucket in question clearly is open
Eor the reason stated the trial court erred in refusing to grant the requests to reverse the answers to the two questions mentioned.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of defendant.