211 Wis. 344 | Wis. | 1933
The following opinion was filed March 7, 1933 :
Mrs. Ella Brewster was killed by being struck by an automobile on July 5, 1931. The jury found that the driver of the automobile was and that the plaintiff was not negligent. Judgment went on the verdict for the plaintiff. It is conceded that the finding of negligence on the part of the driver of the automobile is supported by
Mrs. Brewster was crossing a street when struck by the automobile. The case turns on whether at the time she was struck she was on the crosswalk. Sec. 85.44 (1), Stats., provides that the operator of an automobile shall yield the right of way to a pedestrian crossing the highway within any marked or unmarked crosswalk, except at those intersections where the movement of traffic is being regulated by traffic officers or control signals. Sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., provides that every pedestrian crossing a highway at any point other than a marked or unmarked crosswalk shall yield the right of way to vehicles upon the highway.
The undisputed evidence of the only eye-witnesses was to the effect that when struck Mrs. Brewster was at least twenty-five or thirty feet north of the center of the crosswalk. This testimony is corroborated by the testimony of another witness who was standing beside his automobile which was parked in the driveway into his residence between the sidewalk and the curb who heard “a thud and the screeching of brakes,” turned immediately, and the automobile was opposite his automobile and Mrs. Brewster was lying beside it not more than fifteen feet from the witness’s car. Skid marks of the automobile that struck her extended from a point half way from the crosswalk to the point where the car stopped. By measurement it was fifty-seven feet from the center of the crosswalk to the walk entering the witness’s residence. No evidence was offered in. any way tending to counteract this testimony but that of a witness who stood beside Mrs. Brewster while she waited at the curb for a car from the other direction to pass, and who testified that when she started across the street and when five or ten feet from the curb she was on the crosswalk. We consider this entirely insufficient to warrant the jury in rejecting all the testimony stated and inferring that Mrs,
By the Court. — The judgment of the municipal court is reversed, with instructions to dismiss the complaint.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on May 9, 1933.