113 Wis. 322 | Wis. | 1902
Many questions, by proper exceptions to rulings of the court, were preserved for consideration, and were brought to our attention by proper assignments of error and fully discussed by counsel both in the oral and the printed arguments, which in our view of the case are immaterial; therefore, in the statement which we have compiled from the record we have omitted all parts of the history of the litigation not essential to an understanding of the single question upon which the appeal turns. ■ We shall not discuss the subject of whether the verdict is sustained by the evidence as to the highway being insufficient. It may be assumed, for the purposes of the. appeal, that the verdict in that respect is amply justified. Neither shall we discuss any of the numerous assignments of error as to rul
After giving the verdict of the jury and the decision of the court due consideration, it seems that the vital question above suggested must be decided in favor of appellant. It is conceded that all the conditiitos which made the highway unsafe were open to the most casual observation and were fully known to respondent. The evidence shows such to have been the fact beyond reasonable controversy. The nature of respondent’s load was such that he must have known that he could not draw it out of the cut and up the slope, which rose some thirteen inches in a distance about the width of his sled, to the plain above, without great danger of the load being overturned. He must have known that if he met a team in the cut he might have to attempt that feat, or the person coming from the south would have to encounter a like danger, in order that the two might pass each other. He was traveling on one of the main highways of the town, one.upon which there was considerable travel to his knowledge, by teams with loaded sleds or wagons, and must have
It is not often that a case is presented which so perfectly illustrates the doctrine of proximate cause in the law of negligence, the importance of it and its applicability to an action to recover compensation for an injury alleged to have been caused by the insufficiency of a highway, the same as to every action grounded on negligence of the defendant. The immediate cause of plaintiff’s injury was the condition of the highway in that it was in a narrow cut at the place where-the injury occurred, but the proximate cause thereof was the negligence of respondent in going into the cut as he did and paying no attention to whether a team was already in there, approaching from the south, till he had passed by the last place where he could have safely turned out. That first act of negligence set all the other events in motion, each being started by the one which preceded it,, down to the instant of the injury. They were all linked together in close causal connection, and with all the essentials of legal responsibility, so that, conceding that the highway was insufficient, as found, the negligence of respondent intervened and gave the impulse which did not spend itself till his injury occurred, and which, in a legal sense, at least, was the responsible cause thereof, or, in any view that can be taken of the matter, contributed to cause it.
It does not seem that anything need be or can be profitably added by further discussing this case. The principles of law involved are all so firmly settled as not to be open to ques
This case is of a character where there is great danger of a jury not understanding and properly applying the law unless it is explained to them with considerable care. It seems that the mere use of legal terms, which are plain to one trained in the law, does not always convey the correct idea to a jury of the essentials of proximate cause. Nevertheless, of course, if a trial judge contents himself with a mere statement of the principles of the subject in the language of the law, his duty is so far performed that no prejudicial error can be assigned for want of a more definite explanation thereof. Had the jury understood that it was necessary for them, in determining what was the efficient or real producing cause of the accident and whether respondent was guilty of contributory negligence, to go back from the instant of the injury, step by step, in the chain of causal connection, to the first act which was at the foundation of the mischief, the one which started the chain of events in motion, and name it the proximate cause thereof, understanding that it was essential to rich first act being so named for each event in the chain in regular succession to be a natural and probable result of the one that prei-ceded it, and one which a person of ordinary care might reasonably have expected, resulting in an injury to person or property, they would in all reasonable probability have reached the conduct of respondent in negligently going into the place of danger before stopping in their search, and would not have retraced, their steps. As it was, they either stopped at or started with the immediate cause of respond
We will illustrate what was last said. A person was injured by his horse or carriage coming in contact with an insufficient condition of a highway while the horse was in a condition of fright and was uncontrollable by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the driver. The immediate cause of the accident was the insufficiency of the highway, but that, we can readily see at once, was not the proximate cause thereof because of the fright of the horse. That, though not, perhaps, the nearest cause, was a near cause. But we must discover what started the horse to run away, since we cannot see that any failure of the driver to regain control of it intervened to break the causal connection between the cause of the fright and the final result. Proceeding backward on our course we find an object in the highway, liable to frighten a horse of ordinary gentleness so that its driver would lose control of it, without negligence on his part, and that such object caused the condition of fright and uncontrollability in the case in question. We cannot stop yet, however, and call the insufficiency of the highway caused by such object the proximate cause of the accident. Looking further, we find that the object which caused the fright was placed in the highway by the action of the elements. So if we were to stop with the mere defective condition of the highway we would be at a mere link in our chain, and if we were to stop at the cause which made the highway defective by placing the object therein we would not reach any responsible cause, especially since the fright
By the Court. — Tbe judgment is reversed and tbe cause remanded with directions to change tbe answer to question-12 of tbe special verdict from yes to no, and tbe answer to question 14 from no to yes, and to render judgment upon tbe verdict as so corrected in favor of tbe defendant, dismissing tbe case with costs.