112 Wis. 627 | Wis. | 1902
On the former appeal to this court all issues but one were decided, and the decision, right or wrong, must control the present aspect of the case. It is res adju-dicata. Upon that hearing it was decided that the duty of Winterhalter as assignee included due diligence to procure insurance; that he had made no efforts whatever so to do, and was guilty of negligence; and that the circumstances were such that in all reasonable probability due diligence on his part would have been effective to have obtained insurance sufficient at least to have protected the unpaid amounts due creditors,— some $22,300,— and that thereby the plaintiff had established a case of breach of the bond, andprima facie damages up to the amount of the claims, to overcome which the burden was upon the defendants to establish “ either that the assignee’s negligence was not injurious at all, or, if at all, for what part of the loss prima facie resulting therefrom; either that by due diligence he could not have obtained any insurance, or not enough to protect plaintiff from the whole of the loss.” The cause was therefore remanded, in order that the court “ should consider and decide; upon the competent evidence already received and such additional evidence as may be offered, upon the single question whether the assignee’s negligence in making no efforts to obtain any insurance caused less injury to the plaintiff than the amount of the unpaid claims, and, if so, how much less.” The court below, after hearing all such additional evidence, has resolved that question in
In this connection it should be noted that, either through error of the circuit court clerk or misdirection of the appellant, the so-called record does not include the bill of exceptions showing the evidence which was taken prior to the first appeal. That bill of exceptions, when settled, became as absolutely a part of the record as the pleadings themselves (Mead v. Walker, 20 Wis. 518), and the failure of the clerk to transmit it upon the present appeal was a clear breach of his duty. The inclusion in the present bill of exceptions of parts thereof which were read aloud to the court upon the last hearing of the case is mere work of supererogation. That entire evidence was in the case and present for consideration, under the direction of this court. We have endeavored to supply the omission, so far as possible, by consulting the “ case ” and briefs filed on the former appeal.
Some specific assignments of' error are urged upon our attention: First. That the plaintiff was allowed to read to
A further assignment of error is predicated upon an objection to the plaintiff’s reading to the court from the bill of exceptions settled upon the former appeal, instead of from the reporter’s minutes. The only question before the court was what evidence was introduced upon that former hearing. A bill of exceptions had been settled, which both parties had stipulated contained all the evidence. Under the ruling in Wilson v. Noonan, 35 Wis. 321, that document was certainly evidence — and the best evidence — of what those witnesses testified to. The reporter’s certified minutes are no higher grade of evidence than the testimony of the reporter, or any other witness who was present upon the former trial, as to what transpired. Sec. 4141, Stats. 1898, gives to the certified minutes of the reporter the same force as his own testimony that the evidence therein recorded was given, but no more. It is unnecessary to consider
Several assignments of error which are urged by appellant at much length and with much citation of authority in support of trite and well-recognized rules of law certainly indicate a degree of confusion in counsel’s mind as to the situation of the case upon this last hearing. Among such- assignments are the fourth, to the effect that specific instances are not sufficient to prove a general custom; the sixth, that the ultimate burden of proof was on the plaintiff, and the court erred in holding that the burden was on the defendant to disprove liability; also the seventh, to the effect that the court erred in guessing at the amount of insurance that could have been obtained; and the eighth, that a uniform custom of assignees to insure, and knowledge thereof by both parties, was essential to import into the bond an agreement that the assignee should write insurance. Substantially everyone of these positions was wholly immaterial at the stage of the case presented upon the hearing in the circuit court. They had all been decided finally for the present action. The plaintiff had been held .by this court to have been under the duty of due diligence in the care of the property coming to him as assignee. It had also been shown and decided by this court that such : due diligence included efforts to obtain insurance, and that the omission thereof constituted a breach of the bond. It was proved that such efforts would probably have succeeded in obtaining insurance to an amount at least equal to the claims of the creditors,— in such degree of probability, at least, as to prove jprima facte that such amount of damage had been
In order to prove noninjury, the defendant undertook to show a uniform custom against insurance of property in the hands of assignees under circumstances like those here presented. lie produced very many witnesses, some of whom testified to an absolute custom against it, others of whom testified to the possibility of obtaining insurance under various circumstances. lie had already introduced upon the former hearing evidence of insurance agents going so far as to deny that property was ever insured in the hands of assignees. In this situation, the plaintiff, presumably in attack upon the attempt of the defendant to prove such uniform custom, offered evidence, both by cross-examination and by the direct testimony of witnesses called by him, of a very large number of instances where insurance had been obtained in Milwaukee by assignees, receivers, and sheriffs at about the time of the Enger-Kress Company assignment.
Of course, the rule is too well settled to need more than iteration that this court will not reverse a judgment in a case heard by the court without a jury merely because improper evidence has been admitted. Duncan v. Duncan, 111 Wis. 75. Nevertheless, if it is apparent that the error in admitting the evidence necessarily affected the court’s conclusion, that may be ground for reversal. Kelly v. Crawford, ante, p. 368. This testimony of specific instances of the issue of insurance policies to people in situations more or less similar to that of this assignee could have had no effect except as such instances were similar enough and numerous enough to have shown that the asserted custom not to insure was not so uniform but that there was a reasonable probability that the assignee might have obtained some insurance. "We, however, find other witnesses testifying to many such.instances. One of them, called by the defendant, details some fifteen or moré cases of assignments and receiverships within about two years in Milwaukee in which his concern alone placed insurance on the assigned property, and testifies to the issue of a very large number of such policies of insurance, certainly more than a hundred, and perhaps twice that number. That same witness, and others whose testimony is not now complained of, proved the fact of issue of some of the same insurance testified to by the five witnesses above mentioned. So that there was depending upon the testimony of such witnesses but three or four instances of insurance to assignees, while a very large number of instances had been proved without objection. The only effect of such testimony, if considered by the court at all, was to show that the alleged custom had in fact been
The single finding by the trial court that the evidence does not establish that the assignee Winterhalter could not, by ordinary diligence, have either procured transfer of old' or issue of new insurance to an amount equal to the $22,385.89 of creditors’ unsatisfied claims, having been reached upon sufficient evidence, and no prejudicial error having intervened, the conclusions of law and the judgment for plaintiff necessarily result from the law and the facts previously decided by this court.
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.