Gertz v. Milwaukee Electeic Railway & Light Co.

153 Wis. 475 | Wis. | 1913

Lead Opinion

The following opinion was filed March 11, 1913:

Marshall, J.

The question of practice presented by appellant’s insistence upon the objections to the judgment by either party to the action being considered and the whole mat*480ter closed by one judgment in this court, and tbe opposition thereto by the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company, was a very important one. It seemed plain that the practice contended for by such company would, if approved,, render possible several successive appeals to this court from one judgment and very prejudicial delay. To allow that would sanction an abuse of the jurisdiction here or confess an infirmity of judicial power to prevent it, which the founders-of our system, nor the legislature in regulating it, did not contemplate. From that viewpoint, it was considered that an exigency existed warranting the court, in the exercise of its extraordinary power of superintending control, in establishing a judicial rule on a' logical basis, — one sounding, reasonably, in waiver, as regards any statutory right of the party affected by the regulation, which Avould effectually prevent this jurisdiction from being needlessly and prejudicially used. The court dealt with the matter this way:

“To allow the practice proposed would result in an abuse of the court’s jurisdiction, which cannot be tolerated. It would render possible successive appeals from a judgment, vexatiously and unnecessarily delaying the final determination of litigation. The court possesses inherent authority to regulate the use of its jurisdiction so as to prevent such hindrances. To that end it will conclusively presume, in a case of this sort, that any party affected by the judgment or order who shall have had due notice of the proceedings and does not appropriately challenge such judgment or order, has elected to waive the right to do so and will so dispose of the appeal as to preclude any further application to this court in respect to such judgment other than by the ordinary motion for a rehearing. In this particular case the matter submitted will be held to give the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company reasonable time to enable it to properly present its objections to the judgment—taking an appeal in due form, if necessary, and having the same duly certified to this court, in which case such appeal will be placed on the calendar for hearing and disposition with the appeal al*481ready submitted. Sixty days from the entry of this order is allowed for that purpose.”

That may he regarded as a rule to he observed hereafter, yaried from time to time in the application of it, as the peculiar facts of each case may require, — at all times to the end that in each instance of the jurisdiction of this court being invoked in respect to any controversy, there shall be as speedy and full settlement of all interests involved as practicable, and the entire litigation closable in the action brought to a final determination. Such result with a minimum of public and private expenditure, should be the judicial policy, and there should be steady progress along that line to the highest standard attainable, leaving any infirmity which may remain to be attributable to the lawmaking power rather than to the court.

Were the servants of the receivers who were in control of the car on which plaintiff was riding when injured, guilty of actionable negligence as matter of law? Plaintiff holds the affirmative. On that his counsel faces the necessity of overcoming the judgment of the trial court twice made,— first in refusing to take the question from the jury; second in refusing to change the result so as to be in plaintiff’s favor against both defendants. That difficulty, as has often been said, is great, and necessarily so. Erom the circuit judge’s advantageous position, there is a presumption that his conclusion is right and that presumption cannot be overcome by a mere balancing of probabilities. The decision must appear not only to be wrong, but clearly so, or else prevail. What will satisfy that may vary according to circumstances. The weight of a trial judge’s decision will so vary and individual conceptions as well. As said in Meyst v. Frederickson, 146 Wis. 85, 87, 130 N. W. 960, the rule itself is a just and very valuable one in the administration of justice and is in harmony with the spirit of the Code. But' it is, necessarily, not *482an arbitrary rule. In some circumstances unrecordable characteristics of a trial may be much greater than in another; in some the truth may turn wholly on the credibility of witnesses ; in others, partly on that and partly on evidentiary inferences, and in others wholly on such inferences from circumstances admitted or conclusively established, matters of common knowledge and unquestionable physical elements. Again, different persons in discussing the rule and applying it, though really meaning the same, differ in words selected to express it. That cannot well be avoided. With all efforts to be impersonal, it is impossible to lay individuality entirely aside and, probably, it is best that it should be so and each, within reasonable limitations, be free to illustrate and elucidate principles in his own way using due care not to create room for supposed conflicts in the principles themselves. One way of presenting, a given matter may best appeal to some minds and a different way to others. Indulgence in different ways sometimes leads to propriety of a clarifying discussion as in Slam v. Lake Superior T. & T. R. Co. 152 Wis. 426, 140 N. W. 30.

Probably, as there said in effect, the nearest to an impersonal rule on the subject, — the language which best, in general, meets the judicial view, — is that the trial judge's decision in respect to whether evidence presented a jury question is due to prevail on appeal, unless it appears from the whole record, having regard for his superior advantages, to be clearly wrong. To some, much clarity is added by the explanatory words “reasonable doubts being resolved in favor thereof,” because the very thought of “clearly.wrong” in such circumstances is pregnant with the idea that in case of fair doubt one should incline to maintain the stability of the trial decision, — that a trial'judge should have that encouragement to exercise the greatest practicable care and that aid to appreciate the great responsibility resting upon him. In the judgment of the writer, the exact significance of the rule is no better illustrated than by the language of the chief justice in *483Asserin v. Modern Brotherhood, 147 Wis. 520, 523, 133 N. W. 579, to the effect that an issue of fact having been solved' by a jury and their decision approved by the trial judge, it should prevail “unless’ there is no evidence to sustain” it, “or unless the great weight of the evidence is against” it, “and that weight of evidence is so reinforced by all reasonable probabilities and inferences that it becomes overwhelming.” From my viewpoint, in this case, it is appropriate to again refer to the dignity to be accorded to a trial judge’s decision to the end that it may not be thought that there is any disposition not to give due heed to it in the particular instance.

Here, it is significant that there is no material question about the evidentiary facts. True,- there is some conflict in the statements of witnesses, but the real truth at the points of conflict appears by indisputable or conceded physical facts. In that situation a trial judge’s superiority of opportunity for determining the ultimate element, is at the minimum.

These facts stand out like the noon-day sun in a cloudless sky: It was customary for a car on the Washington street line to be accorded the right of way, when it approached the First avenue line so near the time of approach thereto of a car on the latter that one would reasonably be required to slow up, or stop if need be, to afford opportunity for the other to pass by. The car on the Avenue line was drawing a trailer and the two had passengers aboard making quite a heavy train; requiring considerable time, comparatively, to make the crossing ahead of the single ear on the Washington street line. The Avenue train came to a stop on a level track with the front end about fifteen feet from the Washington street track. The motorman could not resume motion and clear the crossing without delaying a car coming down the grade on the Washington street line, unless it was quite a distance away. His car could not move but a few feet without entering the zone of danger. At the instant he applied the powrer, the oncoming car was in plain sight, moving at considerable speed on a well known down grade, and was but a-*484few car lengths from the point of intersection. There can be no fair donbt about that, since the Avenue train,' though speeded up to seven miles per hour, for the purpose of clearing the crossing ahead of the other car, moved but about a car length before the mischief was done. Not over about two and one-half seconds elapsed between the application of the power and the collision. '

True, as counsel for the receivers contend, the motorman on the Avenue train testified to looking west on the Washington street line the instant before he applied the power and seeing a clear track for at least a block, or some 315 feet. Rut is that credible ? It was a bright July night. One could see west on the Washington street track for several blocks. Could the car on that line haye been coming at a speed of some twelve times that of the Avenue car an instant after the power was applied and yet the former not strike the latter hard enough to badly wreck both? The motorman saw the coming car, as he said, about as he entered upon its track when it was 150 to 175 feet away, and, yet, his car moved but about fifteen feet more before the collision, notwithstanding the vigorous efforts of the motorman on the coming car to check his speed. Is that possible, especially, in view of the result of the blow ? Giving the motorman on the Avenue car the benefit of every reasonable inference, considering the distance covered from the time be applied the power until the collision, the Washington street car could not have been more than 100 feet or so from the point of intersection when the start was made, and in plain sight, coming down the grade with the evident purpose of making the crossing without stopping, and at the instant he said he saw it, 150' or 175 feet away, it was, in fact, but two or three car lengths and the collision inevitable.

There can be but one of two conclusions to be reasonably ■drawn from what has been said: either- the motorman did not look west on the Washington street track before he applied :the power, or did so and saw the coming' car in dangerous *485proximity and thought to speed up and take the chances of clearing the crossing in time to avoid a collision. We have his admission that his car moved but about fifteen feet after he saw the other car before the blow was struck. It seems too clear for any fair doubt that when he saw the latter, as he said, 150 or 115 feet off, it was not half that far and that it was in plain sight, coming down grade and so near as to suggest danger in attempting to cross in front of it, when he applied the power.

In view of that and the admitted custom to afford a car on the Milwaukee line the preference in making a crossing, in ease of reasonable necessity for one to wait for the other, how can it be said that the man in charge of the Chicago car did not, as matter of law, fail to exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of passengers ? It seems rather that he failed to exercise even ordinary care — that it is putting the matter as mildly as the evidence will warrant, when it is said that his conduct may be regarded as within the field of inadvertence.

It follows that the trial court should have held, at the first. opportunity, that there was no question for the jury as to actionable negligence of those in charge of the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railroad Company car, and that, failing in that, it should have corrected the verdict and given judgment to such effect, in accordance with the motion therefor.

The argument for the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company is devoted wholly to the subject of negligence of its codefendant, and with that we fully agree. That gives rise to a question as to costs.

The error in not holding the Chicago Company liable with the Milwaukee Company was remediable on plaintiff’s appeal. The latter company could have united with the plaintiff on that question without the proceedings which led to its doing so. We do not understand that it really raises any other. No other is argued in the brief in its behalf. In any event, it seems the case, without error as to its negligent participa*486tion in thq accident, was submitted to tbe jury and closed by the verdict. Had the court instructed the jury as requested, and that been followed by a finding against the Chicago Company, possibly, the Milwaukee Company might have been acquitted; but, in view of the circumstances which characterized the approach by the latter company’s car to the vicinity of the crossing, it is most likely that the jury would have found such company culpably contributed with the Chicago Company to produce the accident.

As we understand the presentation made by counsel for the Milwaukee Company, no serious contention is made in its behalf, if any at all, contrary to the view above expressed; but, if it be otherwise, the further contention must be regarded as without efficient merit. It looks here as if the Milwaukee Company, in practical effect, joins with the plaintiff against the Chicago Company, though the former’s appeal is, in form, adverse to the plaintiff.

Under the cost statute, sec. 2949, Stats., costs in this court go to the prevailing party, not, necessarily, to the prevailing person. Such party, within the meaning of the statute, has reference to prevailing interest. Those wholly united in interest in challenging a judgment, though by several appeals, constitute one party, and in case of success are entitled, ordinarily, to a single bill of costs. Harrigan v. Gilchrist, 121 Wis. 127, 449, 99 N. W. 909. In the outcome here,’plaintiff will obtain all the relief it seeks and the Milwaukee Company will be likewise successful. Why then should plaintiff have judgment for costs against the one which supports it in securing the relief it seeks against the Chicago Company? If that be -answered in favor of the Milwaukee Company, should it have judgment against the party adverse to it, that is, the Chicago Company, against which it did not, in form, take any appeal ? On the whole, it seems that the result as to the Milwaukee Company, may logically be treated as a part *487affirmance and part reversal, within the broad spirit, if not the letter, of the statute. The judgment must be affirmed as to that part which it, in form, challenges, but reversed on its real ground of complaint. That leaves the matter of costs wholly to the discretion of the court. It is considered best to exercise such discretion by not granting costs either for or against the Milwaukee Company, and requiring it to pay the clerk’s fees in this court on its appeal.

By the Court. — The judgment in favor of the receivers is reversed, with costs against them in favor of plaintiff. The judgment against the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company is affirmed without costs for or against it, except it will pay the fees of the clerk of this court on its appeal. The cause is ordered remanded with directions to grant a motion, when made by the plaintiff or the Milwaukee Company, for a re-entry of the judgment so as to be against the receivers as well as against such company.

The following opinion was filed March 20, 1913:






Concurrence Opinion

Wixslow, O. J.

(concurring). I concur in the result reached in this ease. I add this note simply to say that in my judgment the rule quoted from the Asserin Case has no bearing on the question of the weight to be given to the decision of the trial judge on a motion for nonsuit or directed verdict. That question was not under consideration in the Asserin Case, but simply the question of the effect of the verdict of the jury. The familiar rule was laid down that the verdict will not be set aside unless there is no evidence in its support, or unless the great weight of evidence is against it, and that weight is so reinforced by all reasonable probabilities and inferences that it becomes overwhelming.

This rule has no bearing on the initial question, namely, the question whether there is any evidence to go to the jury. *488That question must be decided by itself. It gets no help from the verdict, because the verdict cannot make evidence where there was none before.






Concurrence Opinion

Timlin, J.

I concur in the result only.

A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on May 31, 1913.

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