Riger v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

156 Wis. 86 | Wis. | 1914

Tbe following opinion was filed December 9, 1913:

TimliN, J.

Tbe plaintiff was run down and injured by a car-of tbe defendant railway company on or about November '3, 1910, at a street crossing. Tbe jury returned a verdict fixing bis damages at $5,000 and finding that tbe train in wbicb tbe car was approached tbe crossing at a speed greater than tbe lawful speed of twelve miles per bour, wbicb excessive speed was tbe proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. Plaintiff was not' guilty of more tban a slight want of ordinary care wbicb proximately contributed to bis injury in failing to look and listen for an approaching train before stepping on the track.

Tbe court changed tbe answer relative to tbe speed of tbe train so as to find that tbe speed did not exceed twelve miles per bour. It was conceded that the engine bell was properly rung. Tbe court ordered judgment on the verdict so altered in favor of tbe defendant. . No claim is made by tbe appellant that be was entitled to judgment on tbe verdict after tbe answer relative to speed was changed, if tbe change was properly made. The plaintiff produced one witness (Swedlow), not specially qualified but competent, who estimated tbe speed of tbe train at “about sixteen to seventeen miles an bour.” Tbe defendant produced two brakemen, tbe conductor, fireman, and engineer, five witnesses competent and better qualified to judge, who testified that tbe rate of speed was from four to seven miles an bour. One of these witnesses compared tbe speed to that of a man walking at a fair gait. And he also added that tbe train stopped within thirty feet after signal. These five witnesses were, it is true, interested as employees of tbe defendant in absolving themselves from blame for tbe accident.

Tbe question is, Had tbe circuit court authority to change *88tbe answer of the jury in the respect stated and substitute the contrary answer? The opportunity of Swedlow to observe the rate of speed was only momentary. He testifies:

“I saw the train just a second before it hit him.” “I thought he was hurt' and I was scared.” “When I saw him get hit I was thinking about him and I helped take care of him and take him away.” “That train passed right in front of me very quick, that is all I saw of it.” “The train was going about sixteen or seventeen miles an hour.” “It did not take that train more than one minute (second ?) to cross that street there, may be two, I don’t know exactly.” “All that went by was an engine and two cars.”.

Testimony relative to rate of speed is an estimate except in rare instances in which some measuring appliance is used. Such testimony may be to a fact or it may shade off into a mere opinion. For illustration: Where one testifies to a rate of speed which he estimates at twenty or forty miles per hour, that presents a question of fact as against a claim that the rate of speed was ten or twenty miles per hour. The former includes predication that the speed was more than ten or twenty miles per hour and of course goes beyond such predication. But where one witness testifies that a rate of speed was twenty miles per hour and the only countervailing evidence is that of another equally credible witness to the effect that the rate of speed was twenty-two miles per hour, both are testifying to estimates, and such small difference becomes mere matter of opinion. The high minimum rate is fixed, and the smaller the difference between such high minimum and the maximum the more clearly the opinion character of the evidence appears and the more meager the data upon which to rest the opinion. Every estimate is in one sense opinion, but not opinion evidence within the legal conception of the latter'term. So in the case at bar the lawful maximum being twelve miles per hour, and the witness, from a momentary view while in a state of excitement and otherwise engrossed, fixing it at “about sixteen or seventeen miles per *89hour,” is manifestly giving opinion evidence. Indeed, t'o many persons twelve miles an hour is “about” sixteen miles ppr hour. The learned circuit judge said:

“The testimony as to this claimed excess of three to four miles per hour is so slight, vague, and unsatisfactory as against the positive testimony of the five trainmen, that the finding of the jury in the second question, that the speed was greater than twelve miles per hour, must he set aside.”

The opinion of Swedlow, formed from very imperfect observation and loosely expressed, was, as stated, met by the uncontroverted fact relative to the distance within which the train was stopped and by the positive evidence of the comparatively large number of witnesses whose testimony differed so widely from a rate of twelve miles per hour and who compared the actual speed with that of familiar moving objects. It must have been perjured testimony' on their part if the opinion of Swedlow was correct. Eor no experienced man with full opportunity for observation could be honestly mistaken with reference to whether the speed was four to seven or sixteen to seventeen miles an hour.

The decision of the circuit judge is entitled to weight. The testimony which he considered completely overborne does not rise above the grade of opinion evidence, and under such circumstances his ruling changing the answer to conform to the evidence must he upheld.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.

A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on February 24, 1914.