123 Wis. 479 | Wis. | 1905
Tbe verdict seems to b,e supported by evidence. Tbe question for consideration is whether there was any reversible error upon tbe trial.
“A traveler upon a street crossing, desiring to cross the street car track there situated, has not the same right to require the speed of a car to be slackened, to enable him to pass over the track, as the person in charge of the car has to require him to give way to allow the car to pass.”
And then, after stating that it was the duty of a traveler about to cross a street car track “to look and listen for a coming car, and to perform that duty when and where he will have reasonable opportunity to render his efforts in that regard effective,” the court further charged the jury:
“It is as much his duty, as a matter of law, to see an approaching car which is in plain sight and in dangerous proximity to the crossing, and not to negligently place himself in the way of it, as it is to look for the car. Testimony of a person or any number of persons that he or they, when approaching a street car track with a view of crossing it, looked along the track for a coming car, and did not see one, although a car was in plain sight, and so near the point of observation as to render an attempt to cross the track in front of it dangerous, is inconsistent with all reasonable probabilities.”
The manifest purpose of such instructions was to inform the jury that the defendant was only responsible for the misconduct of its motorman, and not for the misconduct of others over whom it had no control.
Other exceptions are without sufficient merit to call for consideration. We find no reversible error in tbe record.
By the Court. — Tbe judgment of tbe circuit court is affirmed.