26 N.W.2d 162 | Wis. | 1947
Robert O'Brien was found negligent as to speed, management and control, and exonerated as to his position on the highway and as to lookout. Kline was found guilty of negligence as to lookout and position on the highway, but exonerated as to management and control. Plaintiff Hulda Stoll was found guilty of negligent management and control but exonerated as *28 to lookout. The jury assigned forty per cent of the negligence to O'Brien, fifty per cent to Kline, and ten per cent to Hulda Stoll. The damages of Walter Stoll for hospital, medical, nursing, and household services for his wife were assessed at $1,250; the damages of plaintiff, Hulda Stoll, for personal injuries were appraised at $5,000; the damage to her car at $1,100. The court denied defendants' motions after verdict and entered judgments on the verdict in the case of Walter Stoll for $1,245.22 and in the case of Hulda Stoll in the amount of $5,760.38. Judgments were entered on June 29, 1946.
Defendants Adolph Andro, special administrator of the estate of Robert O'Brien, deceased, and the Hardware Mutual Casualty Company appeal. The material facts will be stated in the opinion. The accident happened on September 5, 1943, at about 8:30 in the evening. Plaintiff Hulda Stoll was driving north on Highway 12, just south of the city of Baraboo. Shortly before the collision she was traveling on a double-lane highway, the highway being separated by a grass plot. Traveling north, slightly ahead of the Stoll car, was a truck driven by defendant Kline, and just ahead of him and traveling in the same direction was an automobile driven by Schaefer, not a party to this action. As Schaefer arrived at the place where the divided road ends and is continued by a single twenty-foot highway, O'Brien's car passed him going south, and at that moment the Kline truck swung out to its left to pass Schaefer. O'Brien's car came into collision with the Kline truck. The jury found upon sufficient evidence that *29 at the time of this collision the Kline truck was on the wrong side of the highway. The collision involved a substantial contact between the left front portion of O'Brien's car and the left front portion of the Kline truck which extended beyond the cab. The force of the impact was in the vicinity of the driver's seat of the O'Brien car. Thereafter, the O'Brien car zigzagged in a general southerly direction toward the Stoll car, obviously out of control. Hulda Stoll, under the mistaken impression that there was an embankment to her right, and that she could not turn in that direction, turned to the left and came into collision with the O'Brien car. It did not appear that O'Brien was doing anything to avoid collision with the Stoll car after being struck by the Kline truck. Concerning O'Brien's speed, Hulda Stoll could only say that he seemed to be coming quite fast, and her companion used the term "pretty fast." After the collision between the O'Brien and Stoll cars, O'Brien was lying on the pavement unconscious. He died sometime after the accident from causes unconnected with the accident.
Appellants contend that the findings of negligent speed, management and control on the part of O'Brien are not sustained by the evidence and that, assuming negligent speed on the part of O'Brien, the evidence does not sustain a finding that this was a proximate cause of the accident. In respect of the findings of negligent management and control, it is contended, (1) that any contention of negligent mismanagement must relate to the time between the Kline-O'Brien collision and the O'Brien-Stoll collision; (2) that O'Brien being dead, he is entitled to the presumption that he exercised due care; (3) that there is nothing in the facts to support an inference of negligence that will rebut the presumption of due care above referred to.
The case of Seligman v. Hammond,
Coming to the matter of speed, we are of the view that defendants' contentions must be sustained. Kline testified on adverse examination that O'Brien's speed was sixty-five miles an hour. On the trial he testified on direct examination to fifty-five miles an hour. When examined by the district attorney after the accident he estimated O'Brien's speed at fifty miles an hour. On cross-examination he admitted that he could not estimate the speed of an approaching car without a stop watch. He was found negligent as to lookout, which means that the jury concluded that he had not used due care in appraising the factual situation before he turned to the wrong side of the road. The Schaefer car was ahead of him and blocking his view. There is a very serious doubt in view of what this court said in Bellrichard v. Chicago N.W.R.Co.
In respect of the contentions upon management and control, we are of the view that there is no evidence of negligent management and control and that the jury's answer in this respect is not sustained. O'Brien being dead, there is a presumption that he exercised due care. Seligman v. Hammond, supra, and Smith v. Green Bay,
In view of the fact that the collision between the Kline and O'Brien cars adequately explains the course of the latter car after the collision, and that there is no evidence that O'Brien himself was responsible for events happening after this collision, we consider that the presumption of due care arising from the fact of O'Brien's death is not rebutted. The jury could not reject the explanation and infer negligence on the part of O'Brien by any process other than speculation or guess. In the Seligman Case, supra, defendant was killed in a collision which resulted from a sharp veering of his automobile to the wrong side of the highway. After the accident it appeared that defendant's left front tire had had a blowout, although that wheel did not come into contact with plaintiff's vehicle. The jury found no negligence on the part of defendant. This court held not only that the jury could accept the fact of the blown-out tire as a nonnegligent explanation for defendant's invasion of the highway, but that if the jury had not so concluded the evidence would be "in such a state of conjecture that it cannot be determined whether the car turned to the left by reason of the negligence of Sylvester Orth or by reason of circumstances over which he had no control."
The record in the present case offers considerably more support to defendant's theory than did that in the Seligman Case,supra. In Booth v. Frankenstein,
By the Court. — Judgments reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment dismissing complaint as against Adolph Andro and Hardware Mutual Casualty Company.