227 Wis. 439 | Wis. | 1938
The defendant appeals from a judgment for the recovery of damages sustained by the plaintiff when she lost control of her automobile and collided with a truck upon skidding on ice, which the jury found had formed on a bridge as the result of the deposit of moisture in water vapor which the defendant negligently caused or permitted to be emitted from exhaust vents at its paper mill. In that connection the jury also found that the defendant’s negligent failure to prevent the emission of the vapor and the formation of the ice on the bridge proximately caused the collision so that plaintiff’s damages resulted naturally therefrom. The only issues on this appeal are whether those findings are supported by credible evidence; and whether, — if the evidence established such formation of ice as the result of negligence in the operation of defendant’s plant, — the possibility of injury therefrom was so remote that it could not be foreseen in the exercise of ordinary care.
The skidding occurred at 7:50 a. m. on November 23, 1936, on a strip of ice about seventy-five feet long and twenty feet wide on the east half of the roadway at the north end of the Washington street bridge in Menasha. Immediately to the north and east of the bridge the defendant operated a paper machine in a building forty-two feet wide along Washington street, three hundred feet deep and forty
The defendant, in contending that there was no credible evidence in support of the jury’s finding that the ice in question was formed as the result of vapor negligently emitted from defendant’s plant, and that the possibility of injury therefrom was so remote that it could not reasonably be foreseen in the exercise of ordinary care, claims (1) that the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses as to vapor blowing
However, in so far as the defendant’s third claim is concerned, there does not appear to be any evidence which directly, or by any inference that could be drawn reasonably therefrom, admits of finding that ice had ever formed theretofore on the bridge or roadway in question, as the result of vapor emitted from the defendant’s vents and blown toward and onto the bridge, or that the defendant ought to have foreseen, in the exercise of ordinary care, that ice would form thereon and cause injury to others, as the result of such vapor. That there was the twenty-feet-wide strip of ice on the east half of the bridge roadway at the time of the accident is well established; and there is also the testimony of a witness that he had seen ice at approximately that point
“a jury cannot properly be allowed to determine disputed questions of fact from mere conjecture. There must be some direct evidence of the fact, or evidence tending to establish circumstances from which a jury would be warranted in saying that the inferences therefrom clearly preponderate in favor of the existence of the fact, else the question should not go to the jury for determination at all. To allow a jury to reach a conclusion in favor of the party on whom the burden of proof rests, by merely theorizing and conjecturing, will not do. There must at least be sufficient evidence to remove the question from the realms of mere conjecture, else the trial court should pronounce the judgment of the law on the situation by taking the case from the jury when requested so to do.”
Stafford v. Chippewa Valley Electric R. Co. 110 Wis. 331, 341, 85 N. W. 1036; Gardner v. Chicago & M. E. R. Co. 164 Wis. 541, 543, 544, 159 N. W. 1066; Creamery Pack
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment dismissing the complaint.