221 Wis. 577 | Wis. | 1936
The injury involved herein was sustained by Marian Engstrum while she was walking across East Wisconsin avenue about twenty-five feet east of its intersection with North Fourth street, in the city of Milwaukee, at 12 :30 p. m., on Saturday, October 4, 1930. At that time the vehicular and pedestrian traffic was very heavy at that intersection, which is in a busy retail business district. Mrs. Engstrum was a graduate nurse, thirty-nine years of age, and in good health, and had also been employed as a saleslady.
In passing upon defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, the trial court was required to construe the evidence most favorably to the plaintiffs. Thus construed, it admitted of considering the following facts established: Immediately
The trial court held that Mrs. Engstrum’s failure to yield the right of way to the defendant’s truck while she was
The appellants contend that that ruling was erroneous. They claim that the failure of a pedestrian to yield the. right of way to an automobile in violation of sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., does not constitute negligence as a matter of law, and that, even if it does, the court was not justified in holding that Mrs. Engstrum’s failure was a contributing cause of her injury, as a matter of law.
Sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., which is entitled, “Pedestrian right of way forfeited when jaywalking,” provides :
“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 language used in thus imposing upon every pedestrian crossing a highway elsewhere than at a marked or unmarked crosswalk the duty of yielding the right of way to vehicles is identical with that used in sec. 85.44 (1), Stats., which provides that:
“The operator of any vehicle shall yield the right of way to a pedestrian crossing the highway within any marked or unmarked crosswalk at an intersection. ...”
In so far as identical language is used in those two subsections, the duty imposed thereby upon pedestrians and motorists, respectively, is equally absolute in each instance, and, when either one of them actually violates his absolute duty by failing to yield the right of way as the subsection applicable to him requires him to, there is no' issue of fact as to whether such violation was due to> any failure on the part of the
“. . . This statute imposes upon the drivers of automobiles the absolute duty of yielding to pedestrians on crosswalks, as therein defined, the right of way, and juries will not be permitted to find a compliance with this statute on the part of offending automobile drivers on the ground that such drivers were in the exercise of that degree of care that the great mass of mankind ordinarily exercises when acting under the same or similar circumstances. . . .”
As the corresponding duty of a pedestrian to yield the right of way, when he crosses elsewhere than at a marked or unmarked crosswalk, is expressed just as clearly and positively in sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., his duty to yield the right of way to a motorist under the condition stated therein is certainly just as absolute as is the duty of the latter, under sub. (1), sec. 85.44, Stats., to yield the right of way to a pedestrian crossing at the crosswalk; and the failure of either to perform his respective duty to' yield the right of way conferred by those safety statutes upon the other user of the highway constitutes negligence as a matter of law on the part of the party in default. Even though, as appellants contend, the purpose in requiring a motorist to yield the right of way as'prescribed in sub. (1), sec. 85.44, Stats., was the protection of pedestrians, and it was not the purpose to provide like protection to motorists by enacting sub. (4) of that section, that mere difference in purposes would not warrant disregarding the clear meaning of the identical, unambiguous, and explicit language which is used in each of those subsections.
It follows that in this case Mrs. Engstrum, — as we held in respect to the plaintiff in Doepke v. Reimer, 217 Wis. 49, 258 N. W. 345, — was negligent as a matter of law in failing to yield the right of way to a motorist upon the highway while she was crossing the street elsewhere than at a marked or unmarked crossing.
"At intersections where traffic is controlled by traffic control signals or by traffic officers, operators of vehicles shall yield the right of way to pedestrians crossing or those who have started to cross the highway on a green or ‘GO’ signal, and in all other cases pedestrians shall yield the right of way to vehicles lawfully proceeding directly ahead on a green or ‘GO’ signal.”
Obviously, by virtue of the words “at intersections,” which appear at the outset in that provision, its terms are applicable only to yielding the right of way at intersections. They are not applicable to pedestrians crossing, — as Mrs. Engstrum was, — at a distance of twenty-five feet or more from an intersection. An attempt to construe that subsection so as to hold it applicable to a collision at a point that far from an intersection would result in nullifying sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., in so far as the latter expressly gives motorists the right of way in relation to pedestrians crossing elsewhere than at regular crosswalks. Even if there were any basis for any such conflicting construction, because of an ambiguity in sub. (2), sec. 85.44, Stats., or otherwise, the explicit provisions in sub. (4), sec. 85.44, Stats., which are clearly applicable to an accident at such a place as is involved herein, would control.
The court was warranted in holding that Mrs. Engstrum’s failure to yield the right of way in violation of sec. 85.44 (4), Stats., was a contributory cause of her injury as a matter of law for the following reasons : She claims that, after stepping off the curb onto the roadway at a point twenty-five feet east of the crosswalk at the intersection, she had walked north
The decision in Brewster v. Ludtke, 211 Wis. 344, 346, 247 N. W. 449, is in point. In that case there was a dispute as to whether the pedestrian (who was killed) had kept a sufficient lookout to observe the approaching automobile. As it was her duty to maintain such a lookout as was reasonably necessary to enable her to yield the right of way to the car, we said: “Had she done so she would have seen the car and
By the Court. — Judgments affirmed.