99 Wis. 455 | Wis. | 1898
This case is ruled by the well-settled principle that where the trial court decides that there is no evidence which will support a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, and grants a nonsuit or directs a verdict accordingly, the decision cannot be disturbed on appeal unless the record shows that it was clearly wrong. Powell v. Ashland I. & S. Co. 98 Wis. 85.
It appears that the way on which plaintiff was driving when injured was clear as the horse approached the railway track; that the engine was in plain sight some distance from the line of travel, and was about to move westward, away from the crossing, to the knowledge of the driver of the horse. Such being the case there was no occasion for any warning being given by the flagman. Whatever danger existed was as well known to the driver and to plaintiff as to the flagman. Moreover, the danger, of which it was the flagman’s duty to warn travelers about to cross the railway
The driver testified that when the engine started, it made a slight exhaust or puff, that steam and smoke escaped, but that there was nothing unusual as to noise, smoke, or steam; that there was a strong wind blowing which carried the steam and smoke directly towards the horse, whereby it was frightened and caused to make the movement which threw plaintiff to the ground and injured him; that witness was uncertain just what sound was made, or whether steam came from the cylinder cocks, but said he did not think anything unusual occurred. Another witness testified that she observed the engine at the instant of the accident; that she saw steam escaping from the lower part of the engine in front, and that it made a pretty loud noise. Plaintiff testified that steam escaped from the engine back of the cowcatcher with a loud noise; that the wind was blowing very hard from the west. From this, at most, it appears that the engine was started in the ordinary way, and that the exhaust of steam was either into the smoke-stack or through the cylinder cocks, in either case nothing out of the ordinary way of operating a locomotive under the circumstances. In this we are unable to see any evidence of negligence on the part of defendant’s servants. They had a right to move the engine in pursuit of defendant’s business in which they were engaged, and without responsibility on defendant’s part for the consequences of any of the ordinary noises which the operation of the engine caused, or such incidents as the ordinary escape of smoke and steam. If such were not the case, railway companies would be greatly embarrassed in the performance of the duties they owe to the public. There appears to have been an utter failure to show any excessive or unreasonable blowing off of steam, or any unusual noise, or anything not ordinarily attendant upon the usual movements of a locomotive. That where injuries result from the frightening of-
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.