133 Wis. 628 | Wis. | 1907
“There is no evidence in this ease showing or tending to show that the plaintiff received any permanent injuries by reason of the accident complained of. So, in answering question Uo. 8, you must take that fact into consideration,, and in arriving at an answer to said question nothing must, be allowed for any permanent injuries.”
The bill of exceptions shows this request, its refusal, and due exception to such refusal, and that the court instructed.
On the other hand, we have Jewell v. C., St. P. & M. R. Co. 54 Wis. 610, 12 N. W. 83, where the eighth question of the special verdict was as follows:
“Were the defendant’s agents guilty of negligence either in not stopping long enough to allow the plaintiff to alight from the train or in suddenly starting the train after the plaintiff came upon the platform on her way from the car to the depot platform ? A. Yes.”
The court considered the evidence in order to ascertain the prejudicial effect of this question and answer, and declared the rule that, in submitting special verdicts to a jury, each question submitted should be limited to a single direct and material controverted issue of fact, and in such a way that the answer would necessarily be positive, direct, and intelligible. In Murray v. Abbot, 61 Wis. 198, 20 N. W. 910, the seventh question of the special verdict was as follows:
“Were those in the management, operation, or ordering repairs of the road guilty of negligence in not causing, by general rules or by special instructions, trains to be slackened from their usual speed in approaching and crossing the bridge in question, while men were at work upon it, situated as the bridge was, and of its height and length, and with the approaches to> it such as they were ? A. Yes.”
The court said:
“The seventh question is likewise obnoxious to the criticism passed upon it by defendant’s counsel as being uncertain, in the disjunctive, and not limited to any single fact or issue. As the counsel observes, it is impossible to tell from the question and answer who it was that had been guilty of negligence in failing to adopt rules or to give special instructions for slackening the speed of trains approaching, etc. Was it those who had in charge the general management and*635 operation of the road, or was it those who bad charge of making repairs on the road? If questions of this nature are proper to be submitted to a jury at all, they should be framed in a way to admit .of positive and direct answers. In this case the jury may have found that it was an act of negligence1 on the part of those who had charge of the general management of the road in not enacting proper rules. Or the jury may have thought that those who ordered the repairs of the bridges did not perform their duty, by failing to adopt rules or give special instructions applicable to the case.”
In Klochinski v. Shores L. Co. 93 Wis. 417, 67 N. W. 934, the fourth question of the special verdict read:
“Was the defendant guilty of negligence, or a want of ordinary care, or such care as persons or corporations of ordinary care ordinarily use, which was the proximate cause of plaintiffs said injury? A. Tes.”
The court apparently looked into the evidence to determine the prejudicial character of such a question, and condemned the question as follows:
“The question is compound, and, while calling for an affirmative answer, it is in the alternative. . . . The question was framed in objectionable terms, and the verdict as a whole is fatally defective for uncertainty, and for that it does not extend to and cover a material part of the issue, in respect to which the evidence was-conflicting.”
In Lowe v. Ring, 123 Wis. 370, 101 N. W. 698, question 19 of the special verdict inquired of the jury: “Was there a contract, express or implied, that Ring should receive a salary from the bank as president?” The .jury answered in the affirmative, and the form of question was disapproved. There was a material difference in the right of the parties, depending or turning upon whether the contract was express or implied. The evidence showed there was no proof of an express contract, and a finding of implied contract was not sufficient in the-law to uphold a recovery. It was said that the answer to question 19 of the verdict left it uncertain
Another class of cases will be found in which disjunctive findings of the jury were held not fatal to the judgment, because, although disjunctive in form, both propositions of the question referred to the same person or thing and covered completely the real issue instead of presenting two alternative issues. Patry v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 82 Wis. 408, 52 N. W. 312; Lyon v. Grand Rapids, 121 Wis. 609, 622, 99 N. W. 311.
Still another class of cases is found where the two propositions submitted in one question of the special verdict are so conjoined that an affirmative answer would create no ambiguity, but, on the contrary, establish the verity of both, as in Hebbe v. Maple Greek, 121 Wis. 668, 99 N. W. 442; Shaw v. Gilbert, 111 Wis. 165, 183, 86 N. W. 188 ; Dugal v. Chippewa Falls, 101 Wis. 533, 77 N. W. 878. But in cases like the instant case, where there was evidence from which the jury might have found either actual or constructive notice, or might have negatived either one and affirmed the other, and in all like cases in which, after the question is answered, it cannot be said that the whole jury affirmed either of the disjunctive propositions, the submission of such question constitutes error for which the judgment resting
By the Court. — ‘The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.