191 Wis. 618 | Wis. | 1927
Three grounds of negligence were alleged in the complaint: (1) excessive speed; (2) lack of proper control; and (3) failure to maintain a proper lookout. Under the evidence a proper jury issue was raised upon each of these grounds. This being so, under the repeated decisions
The questions requested by defendant’s counsel and refused by the court are the following:
“(1) Just prior .to the accident in question did defendant, A. C. Dorau, fail to exercise ordinary care in respect to the speed at which he was driving his car ?
“(2) Just prior to the accident in question did defendant, A. C. Dorau, fail to exercise ordinary care in respect to keeping a reasonable lookout for plaintiff’s car?
“(3) Just prior to the accident in question did the defendant, A. C. Dorau, fail to exercise ordinary care in respect to keeping his car under proper control ?”
In the Rowley Case, supra, this court said:
“This court has several times held that where specific acts of negligence are charged by the complaint, denied by .the answer, and litigated on the trial, a special verdict should contain specific questions covering' these alleged acts, and that the submission of a general question simply asking whether the defendant was guilty of want of ordinary care which proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury is not a compliance with the special-verdict statute and will be error, at least where the proper specific questions are requested.” (Citing a number of Wisconsin cases.) The other cases above referred to hold likewise. ■
In Brickell v. Trecker, supra, where a similar situation was presented, the court said:
“It is not discoverable from the verdict in which one of the respects alleged the jury found the defendant negligent, or whether some thought she was negligent in one respect and some in another. This is a form of verdict that was condemned in Matuschka v. Murphy, 173 Wis. 484. 180 N. W. 821.”
“No person shall operate a motor vehicle recklessly or at a rate of speed greater than is reasonable and proper with regard to the width, traffic and use of the highways and the rules of the road, or so as to endanger the property, life or limb of any person. ...”
Under the undisputed evidence, the defendant’s car for a number of blocks prior to the accident maintained a distance of between twenty-five and thirty-five feet in the rear of plaintiff’s car. Traveling at the rate of fifteen miles per-hour, it was for the jury to determine whether the defendant maintained a proper lookout. This issue, like that of excessive speed, was peculiarly for the jury.
What has been said on the subject of proper lookout is equally applicable to the issue as to whether the defendant maintained a reasonable control of his car immediately prior to the collision.
No useful purpose will be served in further commenting upon the error of the court in failing to submit defendant’s requested questions in the special verdict, the grounds for holding such refusal as error fully appearing in the cases above referred to and in numerous other Wisconsin cases not cited. Regardless of the various grounds of negligence alleged in the complaint and denied by the answer, if the evidence established but one ground of negligence no error would have been committed in submitting the special verdict in the form prepared by the court; but the evidence did not disclose such a situation, but, on the contrary, raised three distinct and separate issues.
Under the circumstances the testimony based on merely subjective symptoms has but little probative force. At any rate we are convinced that the damages awarded under this state of the evidence are out of all proportion to what can be considered a natural and logical'- consequence of the injury sustained. It may well be that upon a retrial of the
By the Court. — rThe judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial..