51 Wis. 72 | Wis. | 1881
The complaint alleged that the defendant unlawfully took from the possession of the plaintiff, and carried away, certain property of the plaintiff of the value of §1,800, and converted the same to his own use, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff had sustained $4,000 damages.
The answer contained a general denial, and alleged that Francis Meixner was at the time the owner of the property, and that the same was taken by defendant as sheriff of Milwaukee county upon an execution issued to him August 28, 1877, upon a judgment previously rendered against Meix-ner, subject to a chattel mortgage of $375 upon a portion of the goods in favor of Peitseh, which goods had been taken from him upon the mortgage.
Upon the trial, the plaintiff admitted that he obtained the property from Meixner upon a bill of sale, executed, bearing date and delivered June 16, 1877, expressing a consideration of $3,000, covering all the property then used or kept by Meix-ner in his business; that he had thereby assumed the chattel mortgage to Peitseh; that he paid nothing down, but released a chattel mortgage of $700 on the goods, held by himself; that the next day he gave to Meixner his four notes for the balance ($1,925), payable one, two, three and four years from date; and that afterwards, on the same day, he learned that Schmidt also had a chattel mortgage on the goods for $300, which Meixner had forgotten to mention, and so he assumed that also, and one of the notes so given was thereupon destroyed, and another given in its place, so that the final balance to be paid by the plaintiff, as represnted by the notes, was $1,625, payable as above stated.
Thus the issue presented was, whether the sale from Meix-ner to the plaintiff was made with the intent to defraud the then existing creditors of Meixner, including the plaintiffs in
In Hutchinson v. R’y Co., 41 Wis., 552, it was held, per Lyor, J., that, “in the absence of a general verdict, the special findings should include all of the material issues made by the pleadings;” and in the same case it was in effect held, that undisputed questions of fact did not constitute a material issue. Williams v. Porter, 41 Wis., 422; McNarra v. R'y Co., id., 69.
In Davis v. Farmington, 41 Wis., 431, Lyon, J., said that the right to a special verdict under this statute was “ necessarily limited to material and controverted questions of fact.”
In Carroll v. Bohan, 43 Wis., 218, Ryast, C. J., said: “The statute providing for special verdicts is an excellent one, tending to dispel the occasional darkness visible of general verdicts. But special verdicts are worse than useless if courts do not submit for them single, direct and plain questions, and insist upon positive, direct and intelligible answers.”
In Ward v. Busack, 46 Wis., 407, eighteen questions were submitted, and error was alleged because the trial court did not submit one more; but TayloR, J., said: “From our knowledge of the nature of the special verdicts which have come under the consideration of this court, we believe we are justified in saying that the tendency of some of the profession, in making use of the law which requires that a special verdict shall be rendered whenever demanded, to abuse it by demanding that the jury shall answer an infinite series of questions, the object and tendency of which is to confuse, embarrass and confound the jur-y, instead of eliciting the facts upon which the rights of the parties depend, needs the restraining hand of the judges
In Cotzhausen v. Simon, 47 Wis., 103, Orton, J., aptly said: “ It is to be regretted that, in a case of so much importance and so fully and ably tried, the findings are so defective, imperfect and irrelevant.”
In Blesch v. R'y Co., 48 Wis., 168, there were but two questions for the consideration of the jury, one of which was the location and operation of the road, and the other the consequent damages; and yet thirteen qirestions were submitted. Taylor, J., speaking for the court, said: “ Upon the whole record we are satisfied that the case was fairly tried upon the merits up to the point where the same was submitted to the jury; and we regret that we are compelled to reverse this judgment on account of irregularities which occurred in procuring the final verdict of the jury. This case., presents a gross perversion of the statutory right of a party to a special instead of a general verdict. . . . The third question put by the court, and the fifth one put by the plaintiff, covered the whole question of damages. All the others, by both the' plaintiff and defendant, were questions strictly in the nature of an examination of the jury to ascertain what elements of damage they considered in making up the gross damage, and requiring them to fix a definite sum allowed by them for each of these elements. This examination of the jury tended only to confuse and embarrass, without in any manner aiding them or the court in arriving at a true verdict. The result of the process in this case is a clear demonstration of the perniciousness of the practice.” And then, after referring to the statute, he said: “We suggest that the learned circuit judges, in taking special verdicts, should adhere to the directions of this
In Singer Manuf'g Co. v. Sammons, 49 Wis., 316, it was held that there was no error in refusing to submit immaterial questions.
These references to and quotationsfrom the decisions of this court ai’e made, not only because they are applicable to the special verdict iu this case, but by way of remembrance of the position so often taken by this court. Here the pleadings really put in issue but two material issues of fact, and yet the jury were required to answer thirty-seven questions. Several of these questions were undisputed, and hence not “ material issues of faet ” for the jury, within the meaning of the statute, as frequently held by this court. In fact, the word “ only ” in the statute was apparently inserted for the very, purpose of prohibiting the court from submitting any undisputed, immaterial or irrelevant questions. Several of the questions here presented were mere items of evidence, tending to prove or disprove some material “issue of fact.” Of course, in the trial of cases many questions are put to witnesses which are material because the answers may tend to prove or disprove some issuable fact; but it does not follow that every question so put to a witness is in itself a “material issue of fact;” and to submit each of such questions to a jury by way of special verdict would, in many cases, elicit from them nothing more than an abstract of the evidence. “ An issue of fact,” says Blackstone, “ is where the fact only, and not the law, is disputed, and when he that denies or.traverses the fact pleaded
To prove fraud in a given case by direct and positive evidence may be, and frequently is, impossible, and yet in the same case it may be clearly proven by circumstantial evidence. Circumstantial evidence, as defined by Greenleaf (§ 13), is where “the proof ajoplies immediately to collateral facts, supposed to have a connection, near or remote, with the fact in controversy.” To separate the several items of evidence going to make up the chain of circumstances or collateral facts which force the conviction of fraud, in such a case, and to submit to the jury each of such items of evidence or collateral facts as a separate and independent fact, under instructions that such fact, standing alone, did not “ establish ” fraud, but without any instruction that each of such collateral facts was evidence tending to prove fraud, or that such facts combined might prove fraud, would, by inference, be charging the jury that fraud could not be established by circumstantial evidence. We are of the opinion that some of the instructions given are properly subject to these criticisms. By the third instruction, given at the request of the plaintiff, the jury were told that the mere fact that Meixner was largely indebted does not impeach the title of the plaintiff, and does not make the sale
At the request of the plaintiff the jury found that, at the time of the sale, Meixner was “largely indebted,” but that the plaintiff did not “ have knowledge of the fact that Meixner was largely indebted.” The jury having found that Meixner was “largely indebted,” and that the plaintiff discharged his own mortgage of $700, and assumed the Peitsch and Schmidt mortgages, amounting to $675 more, was equivalent to finding that the plaintiff had actual knowledge, at the time of the sale, of $1,875 indebtedness; and yet they find that he did- not know he was “ largely indebted.” Whether the jury intended 'to find that $1,375 was all the indebtedness of which the plaintiff had any knowledge, or whether it was some larger amount, but less than Meixner’s entire indebtedness, it is impossible to tell.
In conclusion, we would state that, (1) we are inclined to the opinion that the “questions in writing relating only to material issues of fact,” to be submitted to the jury under section 2858, R. S., should be limited to the controverted facts put in issue by the pleadings, or such as might properly have been put in issue by the pleadings; but we withhold any decision upon this point, for reasons stated. (2) Even if such is not the proper construction, yet the submission of thirty-seven questions to the jury in this case, only very few of which were put in issue by the pleadings, and most of which were mere items
By the Court. — -The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.