101 Wis. 352 | Wis. | 1898
This action is to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant as rear brakeman on a freight train. It appears from the record and is undisputed that the defendant’s line of railway coming into the station of Gordon from the north crosses a trestle spanning the St. Croix river; that the top of the trestle consists of square ties laid five inches apart, upon which the rails of the track, including guard rails, are laid, the ties being twelve feet in length, and the width of a box car nine feet seven and one-half inches; that south of this trestle is the station of Gordon, with a passing track to the west of the main track, extending from the 900-foot mark south along the track beyond the station; that January 11, 1895, about 8:35 a. m., a freight train of thirty loaded.cars, running south, was about to pass upon the-side track at the switch south of the south end of the trestle for the purpose of passing the passenger train running north to Duluth; that the freight, in attempting to head in upon the side track, broke into two sections upon the trestle; that the forward section consisted of the engine and about twenty-one cars, and the rear section consisted of the caboose and about eight cars.
The complaint, which is in the usual form in such cases,
The answer consists of admissions of certain facts not so specifically alleged, and then denies each and every allegation of the complaint not so specifically admitted.
At the close of the testimony the counsel for the defendant requested the court to submit the case to the jury on a special verdict, and at the close of the trial the jury returned a special verdict to the effect: (1) That the defendant’s servants in charge of the front section of the train were guilty of a want of ordinary care in backing the same up at the time of the plaintiff’s injury; (2) that such want of ordinary care wTas the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury; (3) that the plaintiff was not guilty of any want of ordinary care on
From tbe judgment entered thereon in favor of the plaintiff for tbe amount named, with costs, tbe defendant appeals.
Upon the first of these questions, the testimony of the plaintiff corresponds substantially with his complaint, but it
The plaintiff gives different versions of the transaction Avhich differ widely from each other. One is to the effect that after the two sections had separated and stopped he Avent back to the caboose, in the rear section, and got a link and pin, and then walked along south to the forward end of the rear section, and then pulled out the broken link and put in a good one, and then stepped out to the side of the bridge and'gave the conductor, Avho was Avell ahead on the
July 27, 1895, one C. R. Hill, employed in the claim department of the defendant, had an interview with the plaint
August 28,1895, the plaintiff made his verified petition for the appointment of a guardian ad litem by a Minnesota cour^ and in that he predicates his right of action wholly upon the failure of the defendant to afford him a reasonably safe place in which to perform his duties as such brakeman, and the negligence of the engineer in not backing and moving the train in and at a reasonably safe and careful rate of speed. In this action no such claim is made.
If the plaintiff’s testimony stood alone, it -would still be very difficult to reach any satisfactory conclusion as to just how the plaintiff received his injuries, in view of his different and inconsistent versions of the transaction. With all such conflicting testimony of the plaintiff as to the circumstances under which he was injured, and with so many statements made by him out of court, totally at variance or inconsistent with his testimony in court, sworn to by so many different witnesses, and, in part, evidenced by the plaintiff’s own signáture to a written statement, we are constrained to hold that it was an abuse of discretion not to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant a new trial. McCoy v. Milwaukee St. R. Co. 82 Wis. 215; Hardy v. Milwaukee St. R. Co. 89 Wis. 185; Adams v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 89 Wis. 647. The only portion of the plaintiff’s testi
By the Oowrt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.