210 Wis. 536 | Wis. | 1933
Counsel for appellants claim that (1) the motion of defendant Curtis for a nonsuit should have been granted and the action dismissed as to him because under the evidence Booth was not the servant of Curtis but of the paving contractor; and (2) the action should be dismissed as to Booth because he was not negligent and because the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; that (3) if the action be not dismissed as to both defendants a new trial should be granted for errors on the trial in (a) rejecting evidence offered by the defendants; and (b) for errors in the instructions given by the court to the jury.
(1) We are of opinion that under the undisputed evidence Booth must be considered as the servant of the contractor rather than of the defendant Curtis. Under the facts Curtis was merely hiring his truck to the contractor. He did not furnish or hire or pay the driver or control the movements of the truck. The work being done at the time the plaintiff received his injury was manifestly the work of the contractor, and the contractor, not Curtis, is the one upon whom the rule of respondeat superior throws the responsibility for the driver’s negligence. Liability of Curtis, if any, would have to be grounded on some insufficient condition of the truck that proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury. The absence of a rear-view mirror, if that could be considered a cause of the plaintiff’s injury, might subject him to liability. But manifestly a rear-view mirror would not disclose the presence of any one so 'close to the rear of the truck as was the plaintiff. Absence of efficient brakes
(2) We are of opinion that the negligence of Booth and contributory negligence of the plaintiff were for determination by the jury and that the defendant Booth is not entitled to a dismissal of the case.
(3) (a) The defendants propounded to one of the contractors the question whether the plaintiff had not applied to the Industrial Commission for compensation from the contractor under the workmen’s compensation act, and objection to the question was sustained. . Counsel claim this was error because, that being the fact, the contractor was really a party, to the suit under sec. 102.29, Stats., and the defendants therefore had the right to examine the contractors and their employees adversely under sec. 325.14,
(3) (b) The case seems to have been submitted to the jury on the theory that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the operation of an automobile upon the highway and that the question of the driver’s negligence was to be determined under the law of the road and the rule that it is the positive duty of a driver of an automobile on the highway to observe a lookout in the direction he is going for the protection of other users of it. This is not a proper conception of the case. While the hopper stood within the limits of a dedicated highway, the placing of the hopper thereon, obviously with the consent of the city authorities, withdrew the portion of the highway occupied by the hopper from public travel and made the operations there conducted subject to the same rules that would have applied had the hopper been placed upon private property. Thus the question “Was the defendant Booth negligent in respect to keeping a proper lookout?” was improper in absence of instruction that he was not under duty to keep a lookout unless he knew or ought to have known that the plaintiff or some one else was likely to be passing behind the truck. The instructions complained of were quoted from the statutes governing the use of automobiles on the highway, respecting brakes, rear-
For the reason here given the judgment against the defendant Booth cannot be sustained, and a new trial must be granted as to him.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with directions for dismissal of the complaint as to the defendant Curtis and for a new trial as to the defendant Booth. .