132 Minn. 205 | Minn. | 1916
Action by the plaintiff to recover damages for the death of his intestate alleged to have been caused by the negligence o£ the defendant. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals from the order denying its alternative motion for judgment or for a new trial.
“You are instructed that wanton negligence, whereby liability is incurred irrespective of plaintiff’s negligence, is a failure after discovering his peril to exercise ordinary care to prevent the impending injury. In order for the jury to find wanton negligence in this case, it need not find intentional or malicious injury, or the reckless or wanton disregard of John Madden while in a position of peril.”
It is conceded that the language of this instruction is a correct statement of the law of Minnesota. Anderson v. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. Ste. M. Ry. Co. 103 Minn. 224, 114 N. W. 1123, and cases cited; Gill v. Minneapolis, St. P. R. & D. Ele. T. Co. 129 Minn. 142, 151 N. W. 896. It is substantially that of Chief Justice Start in the Anderson case. The other instruction was as follows:
“Wanton negligence is something more than mere inadvertence. It is an absence of any care on the part of a person having a duty to perform to avoid inflicting injury to the personal rights of another, by recklessly or wantonly acting or failing to act to avoid doing such injury,*207 evincing such an utter disregard of consequences as to suggest some degree of intention to cause such injury. It evinces such disrespect of consequences as to show little short of actual intent.”
This is a correct statement of the Wisconsin law. It is substantially the language of Justice Marshall in Astin v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co. 143 Wis. 477, 128 N. W. 265, 31 L.R.A.(N.S.) 158. This case, with others, was in evidence in proof of the Wisconsin law.
An examination of the Wisconsin cases in evidence, including the one just cited, and a comparison of them with the Minnesota cases, indicate to us a radical difference in the legal conception in the two states of the degree of negligence, whether termed wanton or wilful or gross, which permits a recovery though the plaintiff is negligent. Expressions vary from case to case in Minnesota as they do in Wisconsin; but the two typical instructions quoted do not define the same legal conception. The term wanton or wilful negligence, such as permits a recovery by a plaintiff, himself negligent, imports in Wisconsin a higher degree of delinquency than In Minnesota. In Minnesota it is sufficient to charge a defendant with liability, if it be found from the evidence that, after seeing the plaintiff in a place of danger and peril, and having ability to avoid injuring him, he failed to exercise ordinary care to avoid doing so. This is not a true statement of the Wisconsin law. The second instruction would be erroneous if applied to a case in which the Minnesota law was the governing law; and it seems clear that the giving of the first one was erroneous in a case where the Wisconsin law was the governing law.
The important facts are few. The defendant had two parallel tracks between Duluth and Superior. The plaintiff’s intestate was walking on the westerly of the two tracks in Superior going northerly towards Duluth and towards his place of work for the Great Northern. An engine with its caboose was approaching on the same track from Duluth. An engine with its caboose was coming from the south on the easterly track. The Duluth train gave a warning signal and the plaintiff’s intestate turned to the right between the two tracks which' were about eight feet apart. The trainmen on both trains saw him. He was struck and killed by the engine
There was some confusion at the trial owing to the joinder of the Great Northern and the claim of its liability under the Federal Employer’s Liability Act — a claim clearly unfounded and properly disposed of by the trial court’s direction of a verdict. On a new trial, with similar
Order reversed.