120 Wis. 380 | Wis. | 1904
Appellant claims that the notice given the •city of the place where the injury occurred, and describing the insufficiency complained of, with a demand for damages, did not comply with the requirements of sec. 1339, Stats. 1898. The notice stated that respondent sustained damages from a personal injury caused by reason of the insufficiency and want of repair of the sidewalk “extending upon and along the east side of Willard street and on the north side of the Wisconsin Central (Line) Railroad track, at a point ■south from the crossing of Willard and Bartlett streets about one third the distance between said crossing and the said railroad track, . . . and that the insufficiency and want of .repair of said sidewalk consisted of a loose, rotten plank and rotten stringers.” There was evidence showing that respondent, in company with the witness Boardman, was walking on this sidewalk toward Bartlett street; that it was at about • eight o’clock in the evening, and dark; that respondent walked -on the side nearest the traveled portion of the street, carrying -a lantern in his right hand; that Boardman stepped on a plank of the sidewalk, which flew up, and caused respondent to fall and sustain injuries. The sidewalk from the railway track to Bartlett street was a uniform and continuous walk, consisting of plank boards, laid crosswise, fastened to • stringers. At the place of the alleged insufficiency the walk was raised about two feet above the surface of the ground. The notice is attacked for indefiniteness in describing the ;plaee and the insufficiency complained of. • It does not at
It is urged that appellant’s officers were in fact misled by the notice, and therefore had no opportunity to make careful inspection of the place of accident immediately after it happened, and were unable to ascertain the facts and circumstances concerning the alleged insufficiency. The evidence shows that some of the city officers made a minute inspection of this sidewalk on the day succeeding the accident, to ascertain whether planks were loose, or otherwise out of repair; that they examined every plank, and found none loose, nor discovered any other defects. It also appears that
Error is assigned upon rulings in the admission and exclusion of evidence. The witness Blaisdell testified he saw loose planks in the walk at the place where respondent fell, in the month of November, and that respondent showed him the place of accident. Respondent testified that he pointed out the same place to this witness, described in his testimony, as the place of defect and accident. This testimony was competent and material as tending to show the nature of the insufficiency at the place of accident. .
Several hypothetical questions were propounded by appellant’s counsel to Dr. Lyman.as an expert. The first question pertains to loss of motion in respondent’s limbs, and was predicated upon the fact that he had suffered a former injury. This inquiry was properly excluded upon the ground that there was no evidence of such former injury. The two' succeeding inquiries were directed to elicit the doctor’s opinion whether a spinal injury could result from falling for- ■ ward upon the anterior portion of the body while walking on a sidewalk. The court sustained an objection to the first question because the hypothesis failed to include necessary facts then in evidence, and to the second for the same reason, and that it was improper in form. An analysis of the
It is contended that the court erred in refusing to submit, as requested by appellant, the question of respondent’s contributory negligence. Is there room for conflicting reasonable inferences upon the question of contributory negligence upon the facts and circumstances surrounding the accident ? From the evidence above alluded to it appears that the accident occurred at about eight o’clock in the evening of December 5th; that there was no light except what came from the lantern carried by respondent; that the loose plank lay in place on the stringers, and flew up before him when Board-man, who walked beside him, stepped on the other end. Nothing appears tending to show respondent had knowledge of the defective condition of the walk. The nature of the defect, its concealment from ordinary observation in daylight, seems quite apparent. That it must have been obscured from view to one passing over it at night, is not a debatable question. Nor is there anything in the manner of its occurrence or the attending circumstances of the accident indicating any want of care by respondent contributory to produce the injury. Upon this state of the record, showing respondent was free from any want of care contributing to produce the accident, supported by the deliberate judgment of the trial court that the evidence did not tend to show contributory negligence, we must hold that appellant has no grounds to complain of the refusal to submit this question to the jury. Nicoud v. Wagner, 106 Wis. 67, 81 N. W. 999; Bohn v. Racine, 119 Wis. 341, 96 N. W. 813.
It is argued the court erred in holding that the street was not a reasonably safe one for public use under the finding of the jury by the special verdict. The first question of the verdict is, Was there a defect in the sidewalk at the time and place in question ? This the jury answered in the affirmative. Counsel assert this is not sufficient to establish liability
“The court had under consideration a finding in a special verdict that a street was ‘defective, or in a dangerous condition, or out of repairand it was said, in effect, that such a finding might he true, and the street yet he in a reasonably safe condition for public travel, not insufficient or wanting in repair, which is the test to be applied in measuring a duty of a municipality in caring for its streets under sec. 1339, Stats. 1898. The vice in this question was in several things being stated in the disjunctive when either, or some one of them at least, might exist, and the street be all that the statute required it to be. The court did not decide expressly or by reasonable inference that it is necessary to allege in terms in an action of this kind that the public way involved was not reasonably safe for public use by persons in the exercise of ordinary care, but decided that it must be alleged, proved, and found, in order to support a recovery by the plaintiff, that the public way was in want of repair or insufficient; and that an allegation or finding in that regard in the language of the statute or in the language embodying the judicial construction of the statute is necessary.”
In the instant case the court gave the following instruction to the jury in connection with this question in the special verdict:
“If you are of opinion that at the time and place in question the sidewalk was in a reasonably safe condition -for travel, your answer to this question will be ‘No,’ otherwise it will be ‘Yes.’ ”
This instruction informed the jury that in answering the question as they did they must find, in effect, that the defect was such an insufficiency and want of repair making it a highway not reasonably safe for public use. The further
“That the question of proximate cause is necessarily present in every case of personal injury where the damages are claimed of another by virtue of common-law principle cannot he doubted. No good reason is perceived why the same principle does not apply to cases of highway injuries like the present, although the liability in such cases is based upon statutory provisions.”
And further:
“Let it he granted that the duty of the town is to make the highway reasonably safe in fact. The question is, what is the standard to be applied by the jury in determining the question of safety in fact ? If the jury be charged that they must determine the question of reasonable safety from all the facts in evidence concerning the condition of the road, must they not necessarily use their own judgment in the matter, and consider in their own minds whether, as reasonable men, they would have anticipated that injury would happen to a traveler ? What other abstract test can there he of the reasonable safety of a highway except the test of reasonable liability to cause accident or injury to the traveler ?”
In answering the first question the jury finds that the sidewalk was defective, and the answer to the third question fiirds that the respondent was injured thereon as a natural and probable result of the defective condition, and that the city officers should have anticipated such an injury might result from the defect. This last finding necessarily implies that the sidewalk was not reasonably safe for public use. The findings of the special verdict should be interpreted to harmonize if it is reasonable to do so under the facts and circumstances of the case. The evidence in this case is abundant to support the finding that the sidewalk was not reasonably safe for public use at the time and place in ^ question, and that such defect had existed for a sufficient length of time her
This leads us to the conclusion that the verdict finds facts which constitute a cause of action, and disposes of most of the exceptions preserved to the charge of the court. It may be well to repeat the suggestion of the court made in the Byington Case that it would simplify the practice upon this subject to submit the inquiry in the special verdict upon this issue in-the form: “Was the sidewalk at the time and place of the injury in a reasonably safe condition for public use?” accompanied by the usual instruction that reasonable safety of a public highway used by persons in the exercise of reasonable care is to be determined under the circumstances of its location, amount of use, and nature of travel thereon, and other circumstances established by the evidence, showing the conditions surrounding the insufficiency complained of. We find no error in the portion of the charge further excepted to by appellant, nor in the refusal to charge as requested by it. ■
The amount awarded by the jury as damages for the injuries sustained is claimed to be excessive. One of the grounds upon which this part of the verdict is assailed is that the testimony of Dr. Selden, respondent’s attending physician, was received and submitted to the jury over objection to his competency. Sufficient facts appear in the record to show that the witness was qualified to testify on the subject to which his evidence was directed, and that it was properly admitted. There is evidence tending to support the contention that respondent sustained quite .a severe shock to his nervous system, attended.by fever; that he endured much pain and suffering, and a general impairment of health, confining him to his house for about a month; that he was disabled from attending to his daily tasks at
By the Oowrt. — The judgment is affirmed.