Reed v. City of Madison

85 Wis. 667 | Wis. | 1893

Eton, C. J.

The record and arguments in this action forcibly impress upon our minds the fact that the average action to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence is, so to speak, a mine, in which the inducements to dig and search for error are exceptionally enticing and often prove irresistible to ingenious and acute counsel. Hence it is that while the general principles of the law of negligence are well settled and easily understood, and while the proper application of those principles is not often very difficult, appeals in. actions for negligence are usually more prolific in allegations of error than in any *672other class of actions. The present case is no exception to the nsual rule. Every error or suspicion of error disclosed in the record which the industry and acumen of the able counsel could possibly discover has been brought to view and skilfully marshaled in their arguments for attack on the judgment of the circuit court. If we may be permitted to continue the metaphor in connection with a somewhat homely expression, we should say that this particular mine has been worked by counsel for the city for all it is worth. This court is now required to determine the quality of the product. With these preliminary observations (which, perhaps, might as well have been omitted) we proceed to the consideration of the errors alleged for a reversal of the judgment.

I. At the close of the testimony, counsel for the city moved the court to direct the jury to return a verdict for the city, for the alleged reason that there is not sufficient testimony to support a verdict for plaintiff. The court refused to give such direction. We think the testimony is sufficient to uphold a finding that all the material allegations of the complaint are true. It having been held on the former appeal that the complaint states a cause of action against the city, such testimony necessarily supports a verdict for plaintiff; hence the court properly refused to direct a verdict against her.

But were the proofs insufficient to support a verdict for plaintiff, still the refusal by the court to direct a verdict for the city would not be sufficient ground for a reversal of the judgment. The reasons are, no motion for a new trial was interposed before the judgment was entered, and no appeal has been taken from the order denying the motion for a new trial made after judgment. The law is that this court cannot properly review the evidence to determine whether it does or does not support the verdict and judgment, unless a motion for a new trial was submitted *673to the trial court. In the absence of such motion, this court has said: “The verdict must be taken as sustained by the evidence, and the only questions to be inquired into upon an appeal from the judgment are the errors, if an}r, arising upon the trial in the admission or rejection of evidence, in the instructions of the court to the jury, or otherwise in the conduct of the trial.” Anstedt v. Bentley, 61 Wis. 629. See, also, the cases cited in the opinion by Mr. Justice Tayloe. The fact that a motion for a new trial was made at the trial term, but after judgment, and denied, is of no importance on this appeal from the judgment alone, for the reason that such an appeal does not bring up for review proceedings after judgment. Weis v. Schoerner, 53 Wis. 72; Morris v. Niles, 67 Wis. 341. Because it does not, we cannot consider the motion for a new trial and are powerless to review the evidence. The verdict is conclusive of the facts found therein.

II. It is maintained that the court admitted improper testimony against objections on behalf of the city. On the trial it became material to plaintiff’s case to show that she tripped and fell at the upper line of Gen. Hamden’s lot. Dr. Shipman, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, testified that • he was near plaintiff when she was ■ hurt; that she passed, him on the sidewalk, going in the same direction but faster than he was walking, rolling a hoop: that he saw her fall upon the sidewalk about twenty-five feet ahead of him; and. that he picked her up and took her to the house of her ■ parents,, which, it appears, was quite near the place where' she was injured,— only three or four houses therefrom’. The witness also testified, without objection, that his;recollection was that plaintiff fell near the northeast or upper • line of Gen. Harnden’s lot, and that a few minutes after the accident, after he had taken plaintiff home, be went to the spot with one Dora Stewart, now Mrs. Sawyer, and' pointed out to her the place where plaintiff fell. Mrs, *674Sawyer was also called by plaintiff as a witness, and testi-. fied that she lived across the street from plaintiff’s home, and was sent for and went there when plaintiff was injured, and that she met Dr. Shipman there. Mrs. Sawyer was permitted to testify, against objection, that after some conversation with Dr. Shipman they went down the walk and he pointed out to her the upper line of Gen. Harnden’s lot as the place where plaintiff fell. It is claimed on behalf of the city that the testimony of Mrs. Sawyer, thus objected to, was improperly received, and that the error is fatal to the judgment.

The action was tried more than fourteen years after plaintiff was injured. Owing to the great lapse of time between the injury and trial, there was an element of doubt running through the testimony of Dr. Shipman, and he could only locate the place of injury according to his best recollection. But he gave data by reference to which it was possible to remove that doubt in a great measure. He knew he had pointed out the place to Mrs. Sawyer a few minutes after the accident. What reasonable objection can be made to allowing Mrs. Sawyer, who remembers the place thus pointed out, to testify to its location? Suppose in some action the date of a certain circumstance which transpired years before is material, and a witness who was present when it transpired testifies to his recollection of such date, and that it certainly occurred on the day a certain written instrument bears date; is there a reasonable doubt of the right of either party to introduce the instrument to show the true date of the event? We cannot sanction any rule of evidence which excludes such proof in a case like that supposed. In principle this is just such a case.

We do not care to pursue this discussion further, for the reason that we think the act of Dr. Shipman in pointing out to Mrs, Sawyer the place of injury pertains to the res *675gestae, and hence that the testimony of Mrs. Sawyer locating the place thus pointed out to her was admissible, within the rule of Hermes v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 80 Wis. 590, and the cases cited by Cole, C. J., in the opinion, particularly that of Hooker v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 76 Wis. 547.

Moreover, the proof is overwhelming that plaintiff was injured at the upper line of Gen. Hamden’s lot, and it is highly probable that a finding that it was received elsewhere would have to be set aside as against evidence. In such case no harm was done the city by the admission of the. testimonj'-, even were it improperly admitted.

2. Dr. E. W. Bartlett, of Milwaukee, a well-known expert in the treatment of diseases of and injuries to the eye, was a witness for plaintiff. He testified that he treated plaintiff in 1886 and removed the injured eye,(which was totally sightless, to save the sight of her other eye, which was being impaired, and that he had her under his charge for several weeks, and had a distinct recollection of her case. He was allowed to testify, against objection on behalf of the city, to many circumstances connected with the injury of plaintiff and her condition and treatment after she was injured, which were related to him by the plaintiff and others, but of which he had no personal knowledge. It is claimed that this is mere hearsay evidence and therefore inadmissible. Concede that it is.hearsay evidence; there is not a material fact stated by Dr. Bartlett to have been told him by others which is not abundantly proved by other and competent evidence which is entirely uncon-tradicted. Hence, if any of such alleged hearsay evidence should have been excluded, its admission could not possibly have worked any harm to the city, and the error, if error was committed, will not work a reversal of the judgment.

3. Dr. Eox testified for plaintiff, as an expert, under objection on behalf of the city, that in his opinion it was neo-*676essary to remove plaintiff’s injured eye to save the sight of her other eye, which was endangered by sympathetic inflammation. We are unable to conceive of any possible valid objection to this testimony. Plaintiff had the right to inform the jury of the nature and actual and probable results of the injury complained of. The testimony of Dr. ’Eos was in that direction, although perhaps cumulative to the testimony of Dr. Bartlett. Here, again, the fact that it was necessary to remove the injured eye to save the sight of the other was conclusively established by competent and uncontradicted testimony.

We conclude that no reversible error was committed in the rulings of the court admitting testimony against objections thereto in behalf of the city.

III. It is further claimed that counsel for plaintiff was allowed to prejudice the jury against the city by improper argument. Commenting upon the testimony of Gen. Harn-den, a witness for the city, Mr. Sanborn said: “A witness always gets into trouble when he volunteers testimony. Gen. Harnden volunteered two statements — first, that the ends of the boards ran over his line (in order to remove moral responsibility for the accident); and the second was that he fixed the walk after the accident.” Counsel for the city said: “ I except to any argument on that testimony. It is improper, and it was not in response to any question.” There was d colloquy between court and counsel in which it was not denied that Gen. Harnden testified as stated, but it was suggested that his testimony had been stricken out. So far as the repair of the walk was concerned it had been stricken out, but the court seemed to think otherwise. However, no argument was made on such testimony and the whole subject was there dropped. We find in all this no material error.

IV. Under this head will be considered errors assigned upon the form of the special verdict, and the refusal of the *677court to submit to the jury certain questions proposed on behalf of the city. The questions submitted are, in brief: (1) Was the sidewalk in question in proper repair for the use of travelers thereon? (2) If not, was the insufficiency thereof the cause of the injury complained of? (3) If insufficient, had it been so prior to the accident so long that . the proper city officers, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, ought to have discovered and repaired the defect before the accident? (4) Was the plaintiff, when injured, using the sidewalk merely for the purpose of play, or was she traveling thereon to meet her playmates? (5) Was the plaintiff guilty of any want of such ordinary care as the great mass of ordinarily prudent children of her age and capacity exercise under like circumstances, which directly contributed to cause the accident in question? And (6) what damages has the plaintiff suffered bjr reason of her injuries?

In the arguments in behalf of the city, there is considerable criticism upon the form of the questions thus submitted to the jury, and it is claimed that the jury may have misunderstood them. We think, however, that the substance of them is fairly stated in the above summary, and that there- is no room for an intelligent juror to misapprehend their meaning.

On behalf of the city, the court was asked to submit several other questions to the jury, but refused to do so, except as they are included in the questions submitted. Some of them are specifically included in those submitted. These are: “Was the walk, at the place complained of, reasonably safe for the use of travelers on the street? Do you find that the condition of the walk was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff’s eye? Do you find that the plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was using the sidewalk merely for the purpose of playing?”

The following proposed questions are also substantially *678included in those submitted: Do you find that the plaintiff fell by reason of catching her foot against the end of a plank? If you so find, was such end of the plank opposite the north end of the lot named in the complaint? About how many feet from the northeasterly corner of the lot was the plaintiff found after the accident? Do you find that at the time of the accident the plaintiff was rolling her hoop in the manner usual to children of her age? Do you find that the rolling of the hoop in any way prevented the plaintiff from using ordinary care? Do you find that at the time of the accident the plaintiff was playing upon-the street?” Assuming their materiality, we think it was within the sound discretion of the trial court to refuse to submit the above questions in the specific form proposed, inasmuch as they were substantially and intelligibly submitted in other forms.

The remaining questions which the court refused to submit to the jury are: Do you find that the city officers had any actual notice of the condition of the walk before the accident? Do you find that the negligence of the parents of the plaintiff contributed to the injury?” There is no testimony which calls for the submission of either of these questions to the jury. The question of constructive notice to the city was submitted, and did the testimony warrant the submission of the question of actual notice the refusal to submit it was favorable to the city. There is no testimony to warrant a finding of the contributory negligence of plaintiff’s parents.

We conclude that proper questions as the basis of a special .verdict were submitted to the jury.

Y. Numerous errors were assigned for the city upon the instructions given by the court to the jury, and the refusal of the court to give certain other instructions proposed in its behalf. These will now be considered, but in doing so we must be excused from stating or discussing at length *679the charge and proposed instructions. They have been carefully examined, and we are prepared to express the opinion that the charge contains a correct statement of the law of thé case, and that everything material and correct in the proposed instructions is sufficiently given in the charge. Indeed, as already indicated, the law of negligence is so well settled that in an ordinary case it would be somewhat surprising if a trial court should go far wrong in stating it to a jury.

There is, however, one feature of the charge which seems to require more particular notice. No general verdict was returned, and the case went to the jury for a special verdict alone; yet the court charged the jury on the law of the case as though they were to return a general verdict. That is to say, the jury were told that in order to entitle the plaintiff to judgment they must find that she was injured by reason of the insufficiency of the sidewalk; that she was a traveler thereon; that the city officers had constructive notice of the defect in the sidewalk and should have repaired it before the accident; and that the plaintiff was not guilty of any want of ordinary care (regard being had to her age and capacity) which contributed directly to the injury. It is urged with much apparent force that this was informing the jury how they must shape their verdict to entitle one party or the other to judgment upon it, and brings the case within the rule of Ryan v. Rockford Ins. Co. 77 Wis. 611. Eut a little examination will show that the Ryrni Case differs materially from the present case. In the Ryan Case it was held that the effect of the instructions there in question was very much the same as it would have been had the jury been told that, after they had determined their genera! verdict, they should answer the special questions submitted to them in the way the court* indicated would be consistent with such general verdict. Of course, the tendency of such instructions would necessarily be to *680confuse the jury and divert their minds from that close and independent consideration of each question of fact submitted which the law demands, and to secure which is the main purpose of a special verdict. In the present case, however, the instructions do not, as in that case, indicate how the jury should find upon any given question of fact, or interfere with the proper consideration and determination of each qúestion submitted, independently of all others.

While a general statement of the law of a given case to the jury where only a special verdict is called for seems out of place, and is not to be commended, and, if given, might in some cases be error, we are not prepared to hold that the practice is erroneous in all cases or in the present case.

The questions here submitted to the jury are in logical and legal sequence. It would have been entirely competent and proper had the court instructed the jury that, ifithey found the sidewalk in a reasonably safe condition, the answer would be fatal to the action and they need not answer any other question submitted for a special verdict; or that, finding such' insufficiency but failing to find it caused the accident, they need go no further, because it is essential to the plaintiff’s right to recover that the injury be caused by the defect; or that, finding the insufficiency and that the accident was caused by it, should they fail'to find timely notice to the city of the defect they might stop there, because such notice is essential to the plaintiff’s right of action. . And so the jury might properly have been told that if plaintiff was on the sidewalk merely for the purpose of play, or if she was guilty of contributory negligence,she could not recover and no assessment of damages would in such case be required.

Had the court omitted the general statement of the law of the case, and charged the jury as above indicated, specifically upon each question submitted, we think no one would claim that it was error. Yet such instructions would' *681give the jury the general law of the case, and inform them how to shape their answers to secure a judgment for one party or the other, just as effectually as such information was imparted in the charge of the court actually given. So in this particular case, for the reasons suggested, we are impelled to hold that it was not error to charge the jurjr generally on the law of the case. Chopin v. Badger Paper Co. 83 Wis. 192.

It is believed that the foregoing observations dispose of all the alleged errors which are material to a. correct determination of the case. We fail to find in the record any reversible error.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

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