172 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1920
Plaintiff’s assignments of errors are that (1) the court erred in instructing the jury with reference
It is apparent that the first error assigned can become material only in cáse it relates to the question of contributory negligence, because all other questions were answered favorably to the plaintiff. The instruction complained of is as follows:
“On the other hand, every operator of an automobile has the right to assume and act upon the assumption that every person whom he meets on the street will exercise ordinary care and caution, according to the circumstances, to avoid injury, and that he will not expose himself to danger, negligently or recklessly, but will, as is his duty, exercise ordinary care to keep a careful lookout, to listen for approaching vehicles, to avoid a collision, and if he sees or hears a vehicle before it strikes him, or by the reasonable use of his senses could see or hear it in time to avoid the injury, that he will promptly, in the exercise of ordinary care, attempt to avoid the injury.”
The particular language thereof criticised was the expression therein “but will, as is his duty, exercise ordinary care to keep a careful lookout, to listen for approaching vehicles, to avoid a collision.” It is claimed .that this put upon plaintiff the absolute duty of keeping a careful lookout for vehicles and that he must anticipate that vehicles will violate the law and approach from directions where they have no right to be. We think counsel err in saying that it imposes an absolute duty to keep a careful lookout. The instruction imposes upon the person referred to therein only the duty to exercise ordinary care in the use of his eyes and ears. It does not impose an absolute duty to keep a careful lookout, but only the duty to exercise ordinary care in respect thereto.
It is claimed by respondent that the instruction was not intended to apply to the question relating to contributory negligence but to the question of the negligence of the defendant, the driver of the vehicle. Whose contention is
It is further urged that, since plaintiff was not bound to anticipate that a vehicle would come from a' direction or on a side not authorized by law, he was under no duty to look and listen. This contention is negatived in Zimmermann v. Mednikoff, 165 Wis. 333, 162 N. W. 349, where it is held that a failure by one party to obey the law of the road does not exonerate the other from the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety.
There is evidence to show that plaintiff neither looked nor listened as he emerged from in front of the car and had a field of vision to the left. It is true that his safety zone . there, was only 'about three and a half feet, but the jury had a right to conclude that .it was negligence not to look or listen under the circumstances, and that had he done so he could have stepped back a foot or so and avoided the collision, as did the young lady immediately following him. Where there is competent, credible evidence to sustain a verdict, which is also, as in this case, in accord with the ■ facts as shown by practically all the evidence, this court will not disturb it. Had plaintiff looked to the rear as he came beyond the car he could have seen defendant’s truck and have avoided it. He was struck because he did not look when it was his duty to do so. There is also evidence that the driver sounded his horn at least twice before plaintiff was hit, and in time to have enabled him to have avoided the injury had he looked. When the driver saw the plaintiff he put on the brakes and the truck skidded on the snow and plaintiff was struck by the center or rear end thereof, and ' some witnesses testify that plaintiff ran into the truck.
We can discover no perversity or prejudice in the verdict, and the affidavit of a juror to the effect that other jurors referred to plaintiff as a Jew, a crook, and a liar cannot
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.