230 Wis. 252 | Wis. | 1939
The following opinion was filed December 6, 1938 :
The defendants, Agnes Cooper and her automobile liability insurance carrier, appeal from a judgment against them for the recovery by the plaintiffs, Zilphia A. Webster, a minor, and her father James C. Webster, of damages sustained by them as the result of injury to Zilphia A. Webster by the negligence of the defendant Agnes Cooper in operating an automobile which collided with a car driven by Gerhardt Krembs, in which Zilphia A. Webster was a guest. The plaintiffs’ complaint against Krembs and his insurer and also a cross complaint filed against them by Cooper and her insurer for contribution were dismissed by the judgment.
Before considering matters involving the merits, we may dispose of a question of practice raised by the appellants’ contention that because the motions after verdict were not decided within sixty days after the verdict was rendered, and that period was not duly extended by an order, the court was without jurisdiction after the expiration of that period, in view of sec. 270.49 (1), Stats., to substitute its finding for
The collision in question occurred at or near the west line of the right-angle intersection of Highway No. 10, running east and west, and a graveled town road running north and south. The latter was about twenty feet wide. Highway No. 10 had a twenty-feet-wide concrete roadway, with four-feet-wide level shoulders on each side extending to guardrails paralleling the roadway. The defendant Cooper approached and entered the intersection from the south and turned westward on Highway No. 10. Krembs approached from the cast and continued westward beyond the intersection.
The jury found (1) that Cooper was not negligent by failure to stop before entering Highway No. 10; (2) but that there was causal negligence on her part by (a) not keeping a proper lookout, (b) not yielding the right of way, and (c) not making a turn as near as practicable to the left of the center of the intersection; and (3) that Krembs (a) was not
The latter contend that the court erred in substituting its finding that Krembs was not negligent for the jury’s finding that he was negligent in not keeping his car under proper control. In passing upon that contention, it must be noted that the fact that the court considered the jury’s finding against the preponderance of the evidence would not warrant discarding that finding. If there was any credible evidence which reasonably admitted of inferences sufficient to sustain the jury’s finding then what were the proper inferences to be drawn was for the jury, and its findings could not be discarded by the court, although a new trial could have been granted on that ground in the exercise of the court’s discretion in the interests of justice. Trautmann v. Charles Schefft & Sons Co. 201 Wis. 113, 228 N. W. 741.
It is undisputed that Krembs in coming toward the intersection from the east drove at a speed of forty-five to' fifty miles per hour, and that while he was approaching the place of the collision and until after it happened, there was no other traffic on the highway in that vicinity which prevented the use of all parts thereof by either of the cars. There was testimony that the Cooper car had stopped before entering Highway No. 10, and that when it entered upon the concrete Krembs was more than two' hundred feet east of the intersection; and he admitted that when that car started onto the concrete he was about two hundred feet east of the intersection and that he was about at the east line of the intersection when he first applied his brakes. There was also testimony to the following effect: That the Cooper car had completed
The defendant Cooper contends that there was no such assumption of risk, and that the evidence necessitates holding so, as a matter of law. That contention must be sustained. Krembs’ acts and omissions, which constituted the negligence in question, were committed within but three or four seconds immediately preceding the impact. They were not a continuance or repetition of similar negligence on his part, because of which there was occasion or opportunity for Zilphia A. Webster to protest or leave the car to avoid injury; and the acts or omissions were of such nature that there was an actionable increase in the risk of injury to her. Consequently, there is applicable the statement that,—
"the plaintiff cannot be held to have assumed, as a matter of law, the danger or risk of injury by the defendant’s negli*259 gent acts. They were committed suddenly upon his approaching and passing the other automobile, and they followed in such rapid succession that there was no- time or opportunity for her to protest or leave the car fi> avoid injury.” Forbes v. Forbes, 226 Wis. 477, 480, 277 N. W. 112; Lang v. Baumann, 213 Wis. 258, 251 N. W. 461; Groh v. W. O. Krahn, Inc., 223 Wis. 662, 271 N. W. 374.
The defendants Cooper and her insurer also contend that the court erred in assessing and awarding $405 as the damages sustained by Zilphia A. Webster by reason of her loss of earnings and impaired earning capacity after reaching her majority; and also erred in assessing and awarding $286 as the damages sustained by her father James C. Webster by reason of his loss of her services daring her minority. It is contended (1) that those awards are erroneous because there was a lack of proof of any loss by the father of such services, and the evidence as to the daughter’s loss of earnings is too remote and conjectural to warrant finding that she had suffered any such damages; and (2) that because of a stipulation submitting the question of plaintiffs’ loss of earnings to the court, the compensation was to be assessed at $75 per month. The daughter was injured on September 24, 1936, and she will be twenty-one years of age in August, 1939. At the time of her injury she was a sophomore at the Stevens Point Teachers College. With proper scholastic credits she could have graduated in June, 1939, but by reason of her absence from college, due to her injury, her graduation will be delayed at least until February, 1940; i. e., four and one-half months. In assessing damages as to her loss of earnings and impaired earning capacity, the court stated in its opinion that the June, 1939, graduates from her course would probably find employment commencing with the fall term that year, but that the delay in her graduation, because of her four and one-half months’ absence, until February, 1940, would probably also delay her obtaining employment and
There is no explanation in the court’s decision in respect to the award of $286 to James C. Webster as damages by reason of the loss of his daughter’s services. There is no evidence that she could have graduated before June, 1939, even if she had not been injured, or that if she had graduated then she could have secured a position to teach prior to becoming of age in August, 1939. Consequently, her father cannot be deemed to have sustained any loss of earnings by
It follows that the judgment must be modified, in so far as the damages recovered by James C. Webster include the award of $286, by reducing the amount of his recovery accordingly; and as modified that judgment must be affirmed, excepting that it must be reversed in so far as it adjudges the dismissal of the cross complaint for contribution filed by Agnes Cooper and the Connecticut Indemnity Company of New Haven against Gerhardt Krembs and the Travelers Indemnity Company; and that in lieu of that adjudication the judgment shall provide for the recovery of contribution by Agnes Cooper and the Connecticut Indemnity Company of New Haven from Gerhardt Krembs and the Travelers Indemnity Company, the amount whereof shall be one half of such amount as Agnes Cooper and the Connecticut Indemnity Company of New Haven, or either of them, pay to the plaintiffs in discharge of the judgment herein.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed in part, and modified and amended in part, and affirmed as modified and amended, as stated in the opinion; and cause remanded with directions
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs/ on February 7, 1939.