149 Wis. 343 | Wis. | 1912
The first question is this: In case of a person being injured by insufficiency of a public way within the scope of sec. 1339 of the Statutes, and death ensues, the circumstances being such that, had he survived, he would he entitled to maintain an action for compensation in respect to the injury, making a case within sec. 4255 of the Statutes, is an action maintainable for surviving relatives, regardless of the
In case of a death from breach of duty under sec. 1339 tbe reasonable construction of tbe words of sec. 4255, “entitle tbe party injured to maintain an action,” etc., with reference to sec. 1339, is, entitle such person to maintain tbe action and do all tbe things essential to that end, including performance of tbe condition precedent to such maintenance; that is, give the requisite notice of tbe injury. Tbe condition bas no reference to tbe right secured to surviving relatives. If it were otherwise, in any case of death from breach of duty under sec. 1339 without opportunity to satisfy such condition as to tbe deceased, sees. 4255 and 4256 would have no efficiency whatever. No such absurd result could have been contemplated by tbe legislature, as suggested in tbe case cited.
We are not unmindful of tbe fact that, in Carpenter v. Rolling, 107 Wis. 559, 83 N. W. 953, where there was a death, as in this case, a notice was served under sec. 1339 and tbe court passed upon its sufficiency without suggesting that no notice was necessary. That question was not suggested, or, apparently, thought of. Counsel and tbe court treated tbe case as if notice were necessary and dealt only with sufficiency of tbe one given. There, certainly, was no intention to overrule McKeigue v. Janesville, supra. It was rightly decided. We should reach tbe same conclusion now if we were dealing with tbe matter from an original standpoint.
Tbe next question is this: In case of tbe death of a person
Tbe court in Robertson v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 122 Wis. 66, 99 N. W. 433, indicated, quite plainly, a disposition to confine McMillan v. Spider Lake S. M. & L. Co., supra, to tbe facts thereof. It declined to treat residents of a sister state as nonresident aliens within tbe broad language used in tbe former ease, and held that tbe legislative purpose was not to discriminate between residents,and nonresidents to tbe extent of excluding tbe latter from tbe benefit of tbe statute, where they are not residents of a country foreign to tbe United States.
Tbis court held, as tbe law stood before cb. 226, Laws of 1911, tbat, under sec. 12, Stats. (1898), one who has declared bis intention to become a citizen of tbe United States and who has resided in tbis state one year or more, as in tbis case, is not a nonresident alien as regards state policy, but is a citizen of Wisconsin with substantially tbe rights and responsibilities of other citizens. In re Wehlitz, 16 Wis. 443; In re Conway, 17 Wis. 526. Tbat is not in conflict with tbe rule that a state cannot make a person one of its citizens who is not a citizen of tbe United States. Lanz v. Randall, 4 Dill. 425; Minneapolis v. Reum, 12 U. S. App. 446. Tbat has reference to tbe conception of tbe term “alien” as embodied in tbe federal constitution or acts of Congress of tbe United States. Tbe policy in tbis country is to afford tbe wife of a citizen here tbe status of her husband in substantially all eases. Halsey v. Beer, 52 Hun, 366; Kane v. McCarthy, 63 N. C. 299; referring to an act of Congress on tbe subject. All tbis reinforces tbe idea expressed tbat tbe construction of tbe statute in McMillan v. Spider Lake S. M. & L. Co. 115 Wis. 332, 91 N. W. 979, should not be extended to exclude from its benefits a person circumstanced as was tbe widow of tbe intestate in tbis case.
Complaint is made because tbe court permitted a witness to testify to an admission made by tbe mayor of defendant, after tbe accident, tbat be knew tbe sidewalk was dangerous. Tbe evidence was improper; but, tbe court,, appreciating tbat,
There are some other complaints; but none which seems to call for discussion. It is considered that if they involve error at all, it is error without prejudice.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.