135 Wis. 77 | Wis. | 1908
From the attitude of respondent’s counsel upon this appeal we apprehend the nonsuit was granted for some, or all, of these reasons: (1) There was no credible evidence of the defect in the highway which caused the alleged injury to the horse having existed a sufficient length of time before such injury to enable the town officers by the exercise of ordinary care to discover and remedy it; (2) there was no credible evidence that such officers knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care ought to have known, of the defect; (3) there
No time need be spent in discussing legal principles applicable to the case. If the evidence in any reasonable view thereof, giving plaintiff the benefit of the most favorable inferences that can fairly be attributed thereto, would support a verdict in his favor, then it was the province of the jury to determine the right of the controversy and the nonsuit was improperly granted. Gower v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 45 Wis. 182; Badger v. Janesville C. Mills, 95 Wis. 599, 70 N. W. 687.
Appellant testified to this effect; As he was proceeding south on the highway in question in the early part of tire evening of Monday, March 28, 1904, driving a span of horses hitched to a light spring wagon in which he and his -daughter were riding, just as the horses stepped across a stone culvert the off horse stepped a front foot into a hole near the west wheel trade and some five feet east of the west end of the culvert. The hole was so deep that the whole, length of the horse’s leg entered it and his body struck upon the ground. Plaintiff had to assist the-horse to extricate itself from the hole. After doing so he marked the hole with a stake. The horse immediately showed evidences of having been seriously injured. It was in such a condition that an hour and a half was required for plaintiff to drive the five miles necessary to reach his home. The horse was always well up to the time of the accident and was never well there■after. It would not eat and grew gradually worse till it died ¡about a month after the injury. There was other evidence from experts to the effect that a few days after the accident the horse became affected with pneumonia which progressed steadily till the case was hopeless, and that the occurrence of the horse getting- into the hole and falling as it did, striking its breast upon the ground, would reasonably account for the development of the disease.
Now as we read the evidence, four witnesses testified to the existence of a defect in the highway which the jury might reasonably have found to be the one where the accident occurred and which caused it. One witness testified to discovering a hole corresponding to the one in question three days before the accident, when the road was covered with water. Another witness testified that his horse stepped into a similar hole at the culvert the day before the accident, and that he caused notice of. its existence to be on that day given to the town authorities. Two other witnesses, as before indicated, testified to the existence of such a hole the day before the accident, and one of such witnesses testified to there being other holes in the road near by. This it seems furnished ample room for the jury to> find that the particular defect in the highway existed prior to the accident, and that, notice thereof was given to the town authorities.
There was evidence to the effect that the pathmaster of the district in which the highway was located on the day he received notice of the defect went to the vicinity thereof and-filled up a hole, but the evidence left it somewhat uncertain as to whether he filled up the particular hole, or, if he did, as to whether he used reasonable <?are in that regard to efficiently remedy the defect.
On the whole, as seems dear from the foregoing, there was evidence to go to the jury on all questions respecting, which the learned trial court thought otherwise. We do not see any escape from the conclusion, that the .judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted.
By the Court. — So ordered.