195 Wis. 637 | Wis. | 1928
Upon the undisputed facts in this case we are of the opinion that judgment should have been entered in favor of defendants dismissing the complaint.
At the time of the accident the state law of the road, sub. (1) and (2), sec. 85.13, forbade — from thirty minutes after sunset until thirty minutes before sunrise — any automobile or motor vehicle to be driven upon or occupy any public highway in this state unless such motor vehicle is provided “with sufficient lights, of such design and so adjusted and operated as to render the use of the highway by such vehicles safe for all the publicand
“(2) The minimum requirements for head lamps on any automobile or other similar motor vehicle, except motorcycles, while being driven upon the highway, shall be such as to enable the driver to clearly distinguish a person, vehicle or other substantial object two hundred feet ahead, and the design, adjustment and operation of such head lamps shall be such as to avoid dangerous glare or dazzle.”
By sub. (3) of sec. 85.22, Stats., prescribing penalties in the same chapter, it was provided that a person violating
Not here determining whether the driver of defendants’ truck violated the provisions of sec. 85.02 prohibiting the parking on highways so as to interfere with the free passage of vehicles on such highways except when making absolutely necessary repairs; or sec. 85.12, prohibiting the unreasonable obstructing or impeding by one of the right to travel on the same highway by another; or some cómmon-law duty towards the plaintiff, we are compelled to hold that the plaintiff’s own conduct was a violation on his part of the duty imposed upon him by law and that it had a direct causal connection with the injury so as to prevent his’right to recover.
We are so holding upon what we consider has been for some time the public policy of the state based upon the many precise and particular statutory regulations and the rules of law as declared in former decisions of this court, which, though often and vigorously challenged to be overruled or repudiated, we must still decline so to do and feel still bound to follow.
The rule under which we are reversing this case and directing the judgment for the defendants is that very distinctly and squarely declared in the case of Lauson v. Fond du Lac, 141 Wis. 57, 123 N. W. 629. In that case the plaintiff drove his automobile at 10 o’clock on a dark, rainy night, the car carrying but one headlight, so arranged at that time that the driver could not see objects more than ten or twelve feet ahead of him, and proceeding at a speed not over eight miles per hour, but such that he could not bring the machine to a standstill within less than fifteen or twenty feet. The injury was caused by his driving into an opening on the highway nine feet long and eight feet wide, dug for a culvert ; no lights were placed there, and it was protected only by a single sixteen-foot fence board extending across and
The Lauson Case was decided in December, 1909. It was cited and recognized in Anderson v. Sparks, 142 Wis. 398, 125 N. W. 925 (April, 1910), as controlling on the question of the exercise of ordinary care by the defendant there, in driving his automobile, where he ran into the plaintiff who had stopped his horse a short distance ahead, the defendant claiming that even with his lights he could not see the plaintiff within stopping distance (p. 405). It was referred to in Brown v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 148 Wis. 98, 103, 133 N. W. 589 (Jan. 1912). It was expressly the ground for a similar holding in Pietsch v. McCarthy, 159 Wis. 251, 254, 150 N. W. 482 (Jan. 1915). In Raymond v. Sauk County, 167 Wis. 125, 128, 166 N. W. 29 (April, 1918), it was cited as stating the recognized rule. It was cited and distinguished
The judicial doctrine so announced by the Lauson Case has been in constant accord with the legislative declarations on the same subject.
So the statutory progress during all these years has been consistently towards more stringency in the requirements as to such lights as well as an increase in the penalties provided for violations of such regulations.
It may well be noted that, as pointed out in Yano v. Stott Briquet Co. 184 Wis. 492, 494, 199 N. W. 48, supra, such statute has been held to be without any exceptions in its application on account of atmospheric or any other unusual con-' ditions surrounding traffic, for not until by ch. 478 of the Laws of 1927, where there is a substantial rewriting of ch. 85 of the law of the road, are there any statutory suggestions as to whether or not the regulations concerning lights are to be determined under any limited or designated standard, and by what is sec. 85.13 (3b) it is now provided that certain motor vehicles of a width in excess of eighty inches shall carry two clearance lamps on the left side, one in front and one at the rear, displaying a light visible “under normal atmospheric conditions” for a distance of 500 feet, etc.
It is also noteworthy that in Clemens v. State, 176 Wis. 289, 308 et seq., 185 N. W. 209 (March, 1922), in which there was a review of a conviction for manslaughter in the
An examination of decisions outside the state on this general subject discloses that the Lauson Case, supra, has been often cited and in some jurisdictions vigorously criticised, and what has been suggested as another form for stating our rule, namely, that the driver of an automobile in the nighttime must be able to stop within the radius of his own lights, has been held not to be a proper rule. Some, as for instance Morehouse v. Everett, 141 Wash. 399, 252 Pac. 157 (1926), quoting at length from the Lauson Case, supra, and suggesting that that case should be construed to accord with the rule they there declared as meaning no more than that the driver must see any object which an ordinarily prudent driver would have seen, and that such is generally a question for a jury. The doctrine that such a situation as here presented makes a question of fact for a jury under the emergency doctrine is held in Hardware Mut. Cas. Co. v. Union T. & S. Co. 205 Ky. 651, 266 S. W. 362. In Kaufman v. Hegeman T. & L. Terminal, 100 Conn. 114, 123 Atl. 16, refusing to follow the range of vision doctrine, it was held that a driver in the nighttime might travel on the presumption that the highway was not obstructed.
It has, however, been held that it is negligence per se to
Cases on both sides of this proposition may be found in 14 A. L. R. note at p. 794; 37 A. L. R. note p. 587; 40 A. L. R. note p. 1243; 44 A. L. R. note p. 1403.
Among recent discussions of this troublesome question, see Skaug v. Knappins, 241 Mich. 57, 216 N. W. 403; Rhoades v. A., T. & S. F. R. Co. 121 Kan. 324, 246 Pac. 994; Day v. Cunningham, 125 Me. 328, 133 Atl. 855.
We deem it unnecessary to further consider what is said for and against the rule of the Lauson Case in other jurisdictions. We feel that it is such a rule of law governing so many present-day conditions on our crowded highways that we shall not now change it so far as our decisions are concerned. While it may work hardship in many cases, at the same time it must not be overlooked that it is for the protection of the general public who may occupy the highways as well as for the particular automobile drivers. Thus adhering to the rule announced in the Lauson Case, supra, and upon the statutes involved, we again hold that in a case such as was here presented, where the injured driver of an automobile was so driving that he could not see such a large and substantial object as was the truck stopped on the highway, whether lawfully so or not, he himself has violated the law regulating his own use of the highway, and where such violation is clearly, as here, a matter of law, a proximate cause of the injury, it must defeat his right to recover.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to dismiss the action.