148 Wis. 295 | Wis. | 1912
The following opinion was filed January 9, 1912:
The witnesses for the defense testified in substance that when the front wheels of the wagon which de
The witness Bork testified for the plaintiff that the wagon wheels dropped into one and probably two holes before the deceased was thrown out; that the left front wheel of the wagon came in contact with the south rail of the north track and the right front wheel in contact with the north rail of the south track, and that the wagon slid to the east until the left wheel dropped into a hole, and the sudden stop threw deceased out. The testimony of this witness as it appears in the record is very confusing. Some of it was given with reference to a plat which the witness had before him, and this evidence is entirely meaningless to us. We think the foregoing statement contains a synopsis of what the witness testified to.
John Schwartz testified that he was an eye-witness to the casualty and that the wagon struck one or two holes before the deceased was thrown off, and that his fall was caused hy one of the wagon wheels dropping into a hole, which seems to have been between the rails of the south track of the street railway company. In any event; the witness testified that he showed the hole to the plaintiff, Wanta> the following morning, and Wanta testified that the hole shown him was between the rails of the south track. The latter also testified that this hole was about one and one-half hy two feet in size and was six inches deep, and that he ascertained the depth hy placing a stick forty inches long over the hole and measuring the distance with a'rule from the bottom of the stick to the bottom of the hole. Witness said the stick was not real straight. Schwartz in testifying at the coroner’s inquest seems to have located the hole between the rails of the north track, and at least to this extent there is some contradiction in his testimony.
This court has often held that the testimony of disinterested and unimpeached witnesses on subjects like measurements and distances, and which is based on memory or casual observation and is at best only an estimate, must yield to that which is based on actual measurement. The estimate in such a case may and generally should be disregarded. Burroughs v. Milwaukee, 110 Wis. 478, 86 N. W. 159; Koepke v. Milwaukee, 112 Wis. 475, 88 N. W. 238; Konkel v. Pella, 122 Wis. 143, 99 N. W. 453; Busse v. State, 129 Wis. 171, 173,
It is urged in the brief of counsel for the city that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, and that the judgment of the circuit court should stand for this reason if for no other. Had there been but a single hole in the asphalt at this street intersection this argument would be quite persuasive, because there was apparently nothing to prevent the driver from seeing and avoiding it. If the holes were as pléntiful at this point as some of the witnesses said they were, it might well be difficult, if not impossible, to dodge all of them, and a jury might acquit the deceased of contributory negligence on this ground, as we do not think it was so obviously dangerous to pass over this street that the deceased should be held negligent in attempting to go over it at all. Lines v. Milwaukee, 141 Wis. 546, 133 N. W. 592.
We see no necessity for passing upon the rights and liabilities of the defendants as between themselves, and we do not do so. We hold that there was evidence from which the jury might have found that the street was not reasonably safe and that the deceased was not guilty of contributory negligence,
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
On February 20, 1912, upon a motion made on behalf of the Milwaukee Electric Railway. <& Light Company, the above mandate was modified, without costs, by adding thereto the following:
“Costs on this appeal to be taxed against the city only, pro- ■ vided that in case of final judgment in this action in plaintiff’s favor against the Milwaukee Electric Railway <& Light Company, said judgment shall also include a provision that the city recover against said last named company the costs taxed on this appeal, with interest.”