115 Wis. 155 | Wis. | 1902
The following opinion was filed May 13, 1902:
The.defendants’ counsel assigns 110 errors, and argues most of them under separate heads and subheads in a brief of an almost equal number of pages. In a case tried by the court, and in which the principal questions were supposed to have been discussed and decided by this court upon a former appeal, this showing certainly establishes his industry and zeal beyond a reasonable doubt. It is true that he notices, in passing, the fact that some questions relevant to the case were incidentally mentioned in the opinion upon the former appeal, but he easily disposes of that opinion upon the ground that, because that appeal resulted in a reversal, noth
, However, the insistence and apparent sincerity of counsel in his position have induced us to examine the question anew, and the investigation so made has simply served to confirm our previous views. Thus> in Parker v. Pomeroy, 2 Wis. 112, it was held that the decision of a legal question in the cause made by the supreme court upon a former writ of error in the same cause (Pomeroy v. Crocker, 3 Pin. 318) must be considered res adjudícala upon a subsequent trial of the case upon the same facts. In Ranney v. Higby, 6 Wis. 28, it was held that upon retrial of a jury case after reversal by this court upon a former appeal, instructions in accordance with the views of the court as expressed in the previous opinion' should have been given, no new facts having been elicited at the last trial. In Cole v. Clarke, 3 Wis. 323, it was held that, when questions had been once decided by this court in a case, whether rightly or wrongly, that decision becomes the law of the case, by which the parties are bound upon a new trial. This principle thus early laid down has never been overruled or departed from by this court. It is acted upon frequently— almost daily in fact — by the trial courts. It is logical; in fact without it this court would frequently be in the ridiculous position of an officious intermeddler, and suits might have no end. In 2 Van Fleet, Former Adj. § 664, the principle is thus stated: “If a cause is reversed in a higher court, the lower one is bound to proceed in accordance with the
With this principle in mind, we have simply to inquire what questions were properly raised and decided upon the first appeal, and whether any of them arose again upon the retrial. The judgment first appealed from was based upon the pleadings, and the question was whether every fact essential to plaintiff’s right to recover appeared either admitted or undisputed upon the complaint and answers. The pleadings were reviewed, and it was held, in effect, that, if the door •from the hotel was open when the lease was renewed in July, 1898, the plaintiff was entitled, under his lease, to have it remain open, or, in other words, entitled to judgment for the relief prayed; but that, as it was not definitely stated in the pleadings whether the door was open July 1st, and no evidence had been taken to show that it was then open, judgment was wrongly ordered. The opinion says:
“To entitle the plaintiff to a judgment requiring the removal of the barricade to the door, the complaint should have ..alleged with definiteness the precise condition of things at the time of the renewal, or proof should have been taken so that the court could have been- advised of the facts as a basis 'for judgment.” Shaft v. Carey, 101 Wis. 278, 83 N. W. 290.
It was vigorously contended, however, that there was one new question in the case, at least, upon which the defendants were not foreclosed. The lease contains a provision that the plaintiff’s saloon should be conducted in accordance with law and the ordinances of the city, and that a failure to keep this .condition should terminate the lease at once. The defendants’ answers contain general denials of all allegations of the complaint not admitted or otherwise answered, and the defendants offered upon the trial to prove that the plaintiff had conducted gambling in his saloon, and otherwise disobeyed the laws and ordinances applicable to saloons, which evidence was raled out by the court. The argument of defendants is that under the pleadings they were entitled to show that the-plaintiff .was running a saloon in violation of law, and that, if such was the case, it formed a complete defense on the-ground that a court of equity will not lend its aid to help out an unlawful business which is injurious to the public welfare-
Complaint is made as to rulings upon evidence on the' question of damages. The plaintiff recovered of Oarey, his landlord, a judgment for $50 a month as damages for the closing of the door from the time the same was closed. This judgment was based on evidence of expert witnesses showing that the rental value of the saloon with the door closed up was $50 or more less per month than it would have been had the door been open. The decrease in the rental value of the premises by reason of the unlawful closing of the door was doubtless the true measure of damages. Hunter v. Hathaway, 108 Wis. 620, 84 N. W. 996. There was ample competent evidence to sustain the court’s finding. Eone of the rulings complained of could have affected the conclusion reached, and, the trial having been by the court, they do not constitute ground for reversal, even if erroneous.
By the Oowrt. — Judgment affirmed.
Upon a motion for a rehearing there was a brief for the appellants by H. H. Hayden, attorney, and H. B. Walmsley, of .counsel, and a brief for the respondent by Edward 8. Bragg, attorney, and John I. Thompson, of counsel.
The motion was denied September 23, 1902.