109 Wis. 299 | Wis. | 1901
The main question litigated in the trial court, and the one urged with greatest vigor on this appeal, is that the highway was not shown to be in such a state of insufficiency or want of repair as to render defendant liable for plaintiff’s accident. The facts regarding the exact condition of the highway were in sharp dispute. The accident occurred at a culvert in a narrow turnpike, in a depression between two hills. The testimony regarding the width of the culvert and the height of the turnpike was conflicting. The jury found the culvert was eleven feet wide, and the turnpike was eighteen inches high, and with abrupt banks. There is evidence to support these conclusions, and they must stand as verities in the case. The plaintiff was traveling west. Just before reaching the culvert the horse shied at some drain pipes left in the highway by the town authorities on the north side of the turnpike,' and the buggy ran off the south end of the culvert, and plaintiff was
The defendant sought to introduce testimony of measurements made by a witness a year or more after the accident. The evidence is undisputed that changes in the turnpike
By the Gourt.— The judgment is affirmed.