122 Wis. 337 | Wis. | 1904
The proof respecting where the accident occurred was conflicting. Counsel for appellant insist, it was-conclusively shown that .such place was inore than one hundred feet west of the one designated in the notice. Upon that, theory they strenuously urge that such notice was fatally defective. We shall not discuss the evidence in respect to the-matter. It has been carefully examined, resulting in the conclusion that we cannot agree with counsel’s contention that the verdict of the jury, in effect finding that the place of the accident was correctly stated in the notice, is wholly without support.
Evidence was permitted, against, objection, that the condition of the walk was generally defective, such evidence extending over some three years before the accident and some time thereafter. It was competent on the question of notice-to the village authorities of the defect in controversy, as has been repeatedly held in similar cases. Weisenberg v. Appleton, 26 Wis. 56; Ripon v. Bittel, 30 Wis. 614; Sullivan v. Oshkosh, 55 Wis. 508, 13 N. W. 468; Spearbracker v. Larrabee, 64 Wis. 573, 25 N. W. 555; Shaw v. Sun Prairie, 74 Wis. 105, 42 N. W. 271; Propsom v. Leatham, 80 Wis. 608, 50 N. W. 586; Barrett v. Hammond, 87 Wis. 658, 58 N. W. 1053; Grimm v. Washburn, 100 Wis. 229, 15 N. W. 984; McHugh v. Minocqua, 102 Wis. 291, 78 N. W. 478; Conrad v. Ellington, 104 Wis. 371, 80 N. W. 456; Duncan v. Grand
Complaint is made because witnesses were permitted to •state their conclusions as to whether the general condition of the walk was good or bad. We are unable to find such permission was given. In answer to some proper questions witnesses improperly stated their conclusions, which would probably have been stricken from the record had appellant’s coun■sel moved therefor. They failed to do so. The result is that the improper evidence was permitted by them, not by the •court.
Dr. Harrigan testified, as an expert, he observed that respondent carried herself, as he thought, abnormally as she walked, and was permitted to give his opinion as to what •such abnormal condition might be attributed to. Complaint is made of that upon the ground that the opinion of the doctor was based upon an oral examination of respondent. We cannot discover that such was the case from the record. The witness seems to have given an opinion as to respondent’s ability to control, normally, the action' of her left limb from having observed her as she walked, and given opinion evidence as to the probable cause of such condition. There was no error in that.
The doctor, having knowledge as to what respondent testified respecting her condition before and after the accident, was asked, upon the hypothesis that her testimony was true, whether the injuries she was suffering from “were liable to be permanent.” It is strenuously insisted that such testi
“While it is true that the whole testimony must establish in the minds of the jury more than a mere ‘reasonable probability’ and must amount to proof to a ‘reasonable certainty,’ this ultimate fact is susceptible of proof by items of testimony which do not separately fully establish it. The phrase ‘rear sonable probability’ is equivocal. It was for the jury to give force to the doctor’s testimony in accordance with the intention of the Avords used, rather than with a strict or technical definition of the words.”
In Crites v. New Richmond, supra, a physician was permitted to testify at considerable length as to the probable consequences of a sprain of the ankle. He said: “The joint is liable to be, and will be, weak for quite a long time, probably two or three years, and will afterwards be more liable to injury than a healthy joint, and may trouble the plaintiff, especially in stormy weather.” That was approved as not being speculative or conjectural.
In Filer v. N. Y. C. R. Co., supra, the doctor was asked “as to the probability, from his experience and medical knowledge, of a recurrence of inflammation of the injured muscle.” He answered that he “could not say the probabilities were very strong; that he would feel, speaking from experience, that there was danger of a return of the inflammation.” The evidence was held competent.
In Peterson v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co., supra, it was said, in effect, of opinion evidence in answer to the question, “What in your judgment is the probability of her recovery ?” that the subject of inquiry was wholly a matter of probability; that all any honest witness could say was that recovery was either probable or improbable; that the distinction must be kept in mind between the reasonable certainty of permanent impairment as a fact, and the means of establishing it.
Much confidence is placed by the learned counsel for appellant in Collins v. Janesville, 99 Wis. 465, 15 N. W. 88,
The third ground assigned for a reversal is that the jury failed to pass upon the question of proximate cause, no interrogatory in respect thereto having been included in the special verdict either expressly or in connection with the charge. It has been often held that where the element of responsible •causation appears as a matter of law from the’ evidence and ■other facts found, no specific finding on the subject is necessary. That would probably rule the assignment of error in question in favor of respondent if all the other facts essential to her right to recover were found by the jury or appeared beyond reasonable controversy from the» evidence. Nevertheless, the practice of .relying on such rule is unsafe. The better way is to include in the verdict in every case of this kind a question covering the subject of proximate cause, and to explain it so the jury may not needlessly fail to answer it intelligently. It is a vital matter in every such case. The existence of the fact in respect thereto in plaintiff’s favor is as •essential to his right to recover as that he was injured. A careful trial court, fully appreciating that, will rarely fail to take a finding covering the matter.
Error is further assigned because there was no finding that the defect which caused the injury had existed prior to the accident for a sufficient length of time to enable the officers of the appellant, by the exercise of ordinary care, to discover and remedy it. We can see no escape from counsel’s contention in respect thereto. Both time, by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the municipal officers, to discover the defect, and time to remedy it, were essential to actionable negligence, -as has often been indicated, and is elementary. Mauch v. Hartford, 112 Wis. 40, 54, 87 N. W. 816. The
“This question requires you to determine whether these defects, if there were any, had existed for such length of time that the village in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence ought to have known it.”
Probably the learned court intended by that to have the jury understand that they were to answer whether “these defects,” referring to the general defective condition of the walk testified to, had existed for .such a length of time that the village officers in the exercise of ordinary care ought to have known “it,” the defect in question. It may be that the charge was understood different!y by the jury. We are inclined to-hold that it was fatally misleading.
It is claimed that the court did not confine the assessment of damages for disability which the jury might find plaintiff would be reasonably certain to suffer from permanently. We think otherwise, though the language of the charge might well have been made plainer. The jury were told that in assessing damages up to the time of the trial only physical and mental pain and suffering caused to respondent by the injuries she received could be considered. In close connection therewith they were told that, if they found plaintiff was reasonably certain to suffer impairment in the future by reason of the injury, they might take that into consideration in fixing the damages. It seems they must have understood by that that the recovery for future loss could extend only to the same elements as past loss. The court should have told the jury, not that they might take the future pain and suffering which they should find to a reasonable certainty plaintiff
Error is assigned as to ttat'part of the special verdict covering the issue respecting whether appellant had such knowledge of the defect in the walk which caused the injury prior thereto as to render it liable for actionable negligence. This refers to the eighth question, whereby the jury were asked: “Did the defendant before the injury have notice of the defect in said sidewalk ?” It is about as faulty as it could well be. It does not refer expressly to time in regard to the accident to respondent, and does not include the element of sufficient time before such accident to enable the village officers, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, to remedy the defect. The error in the fourth question was repeated in this one. Moreover, the latter in connection with the instruction given in respect thereto did not necessarily call for an answer as to knowledge of the defect which caused the injury. Obviously, no other was material as an ultimate fact. The jury were told: “The question is, Did the village have notice 'of any defect in the neighborhood of the accident, not off somewhere, but in the neighborhood where the accident happened ?”
The special verdict seems to have been drafted in disregard of the repeated admonitions of this court as to what such a verdict should contain. Instead of its being made up of sufficient direct questions to cover, singly, all material issues of fact raised by the pleadings and controverted on the evidence, each question admitting of an answer in the affirmative or negative, some of such issues were entirely omitted, as we have seen, and several questions were included referring to mere evidentiary matters, several questions were included which were in the nature of mere cross-examination of the jury, and others were included which did not admit of an affirmative or negative answer. It is hoped that the mandate of the statute regarding how such a verdict should be framed,
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.