138 Wis. 466 | Wis. | 1909
At the time of the injury and for many years prior thereto the defendant was engaged in furnishing electricity to the city of Oshkosh and its inhabitants, and for
1. The form of the special verdict is vigorously assailed, and particularly upon the authority of Rowley v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 135 Wis. 208, 115 N. W. 865. It is insisted that the issuable facts were not submitted, and that the court erred in refusing to submit to the jury the questions asked by the appellant. We have set out in the statement of facts the special verdict submitted, and think it fairly covered the issuable facts raised by the pleadings, namely, whether de
2. It is also claimed that there was not sufficient evidence to support a verdict for plaintiff. This contention is based mainly upon the idea that it was not shown that the defect had existed a sufficient length of time before the injury to charge defendant with notice. We think this position untenable. That the dangerous current which killed Ryan escaped to the guy wire from the primary wire is without dispute and the negligence established if defendant had notice in time to have remedied the defect before the injury. We' think this question was for the jury. The accident occurred July 29, 1907, about noon. On Friday, July 26, 1907, a tree which stood on the south side of Northwestern avenue near the pole to which the charged wire ran was cut, and in falling a branch struck the wires and broke one and injured others, causing slack in one or two of the wires. On the evening of that day, the 26th, notice was brought to an agent of the defendant, who examined the premises and found the wires
It appears from the evidence that the view from the point where the men worked in taking up the slack to the pole in question was somewhat obstructed by thick foliage upon trees intervening, and that the repairing crew assumed that the taking up of the slack was all that was necessary and did not discover the defect at the pole from which the current escaped to the guy wire. In any event there is ample evidence to support a finding that the defect occurred on Friday and so remained until the injury Monday noon, which was sufficient to support the finding of the jury on this point. The jury found that the defendant negligently permitted the guy wire to be charged with a deadly current of electricity. This finding is supported by the establishment of the fact that the defect existed to the knowledge of the defendant for such length of time before the injury as to charge defendant with negligence in failure to repair. It is at least a serious question whether upon the facts of this case the defendant would not be guilty of negligence as matter of law in failing to
3. Several errors are assigned on the charge and refusal to charge.' We shall not go over them in detail. We are convinced that, where instructions asked and refused cover correct statements of the law as applicable to the facts of the case, they were covered by the charge given. Some of the requests to charge refused were improper and misleading. Eor example, the request to charge as to when the contact took place, and that if it took place as late as Monday, the 29th, they should answer the fourth question “No,” was incorrect
4. Error is assigned in permitting the examination of an employee of the defendant. It is insisted that the examination under sec. 4068, Stats. (1898), as amended by ch. 271, Laws of 1907, was error because this section as amended is void under the decision in Phipps v. Wis. Cent. R. Co. 133 Wis. 153, 113 N. W. 456. We do not find it necessary to consider -the validity of the section referred to as amended. The plaintiff had a right to examine a hostile or adverse witness independent of the statute, and the form of questions in such case is largely within the discretion of the court, and we do not find that such discretion was abused.
5. Perhaps the most serious questions raised are those relating to the amount of the verdict and the evidence respecting damages. The jury awarded $7,000 damages. The plaintiff is the widow of deceased, and at the time of the accident was forty-one years of age and the deceased forty-six. Deceased was thrifty and industrious and provided well for plaintiff. Plaintiff and deceased were married in 1887. Deceased died intestate, leaving no children. ’ At the time of his marriage he had only about $700, and at the time of his death $7,000. lie operated a small farm and did some other business, and was a good business man. Quite broad discretion is allowed juries under the authorities in assessing damages in such cases. The court below refused to disturb
6. Complaint is made respecting the admission of evidence on the question of damages, especially respecting the official position occupied by deceased, that at one time he attended college to better qualify himself for business, and principally in admitting evidence as to the average earning from crops, notably the following question:
“State, if you know, about what would be the average annual earning from an acre of strawberries, fairly cultivated, and .raised in the vicinity and where Mr. Ryan lived.”
This question was answered under objection. It appears from the evidence that deceased was running a truck farm, raising berries and small fruits, and that it was a profitable business, and the purpose of this line of examination was to show these facts as having a bearing upon the deceased’s earnings. Also another question of similar character respect ing what an acre of raspberries, fairly cultivated, would produce, was allowed to be answered under objection. The objec
Others errors assigned which we have not specifically-treated have all received careful consideration, and we find' no prejudicial error in the record.
By the Court. — The judgment of the court below is af-' firmed.