Burns v. Weyker

261 N.W. 244, 218 Wis. 363, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 205
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1935
DocketNo. 80; No. 81; No. 82
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 244 (Burns v. Weyker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns v. Weyker, 261 N.W. 244, 218 Wis. 363, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 205 (Wis. 1935).

Opinions

Rosenberry, C. J.

Upon the appeal of Lawrence Wey-ker and Edward Weyker from the several orders granting a new trial, the order of the trial court is affirmed. The order was granted by the trial court upon proper motions and after argument in the interest of justice. This rule has been so frequently announced and so thoroughly and exhaustively discussed that no useful purpose can be served by a rediscus[366]*366sion of it in connection with the evidence in these cases. Sichling v. Nash Motors Co. 207 Wis. 16, 238 N. W. 843; McCoy v. Terhorst, 188 Wis. 512, 205 N. W. 420; Mellor v. Heggaton, 205 Wis. 42, 236 N. W. 558.

After the appeal had been taken, counsel for Beetham Brothers made a motion in this court to review the order of the trial court denying the motion of Beetham Brothers in Nos. 81 and 82 for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the ground that Beetham Brothers were entitled to judgment in their favor in each of the cases upon the evidence as a matter of law. This is in accord with the practice indicated in Julius v. First Nat. Bank of Appleton, 216 Wis. 120, 256 N. W. 792.

The accident occurred on August 28, 1932. Edward Wey-ker was the owner of a 1929 Dodge sedan, which on that day he loaned to his brother, Lawrence Weyker. Lawrence Weyker invited the plaintiff to go out for the evening. They left about 10 o’clock p-. m., and shortly afterward picked up Mr. and Mrs. Hasselkus. The four drove to a roadhouse located about six miles east of Waukesha, where they remained from one to two hours, leaving about 1 o’clock a. m. When they left they drove westerly on Highway No. 59. Lawrence Weyker occupied the driver’s seat on the left, and Miss Burns sat by him on the right side in the front seat. Mr. and Mrs. Hasselkus sat in the rear, Mr. Hasselkus behind the plaintiff and Mrs. Hasselkus behind the driver. Their estimate of the speed at which they were traveling is thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. Other witnesses who saw the car near the scene of the accident testified that it was traveling at a higher speed. Highway No. 59 is surfaced with a concrete pavement, was dry, and the weather was clear. A man by the name of Haberle was driving a truck loaded with livestock, proceeding in an easterly direction from the city of Waukesha. His truck was followed by the Beetham [367]*367Brothers’ Chevrolet one and a half ton truck driven by Glew, the Beetham Brothers’ truck maintaining a distance of fifty to one hundred feet to the rear of the truck driven by Ha-berle. Three disinterested witnesses testified that the Dodge car just shortly before it reached the place of the accident about one-half mile west of the roadhouse was zigzagging from side to side. Ross and Krueger, who met the Weyker car about a thousand feet to the east, stated that as it passed them they had to pull to' the right to avoid it; that in its zigzag course at times the car was over the black line of the highway and so on the wrong side of the road. Lawrence Weyker, the driver, admitted that he stated upon his adverse examination that he turned off from his own side of the road two or three times in the last half mile, but explained that it was done to avoid bumps and cracks. Haberle, the driver of the first truck, testified that the Dodge car approached him at a speed of fifty miles per hour; that its position in the road was such that he had to pull far over to the right so that his right front wheel was off the shoulder, and that the left front wheel was' at least five feet south of the black center line, in order to let the car driven by Weyker pass; and that at the moment it passed him the Weyker car was partly over the black center line of the highway. The trucks were proceeding at a speed of about thirty miles per hour. Just before the trucks reached the place of the accident, they ascended a slight upgrade, and, because of the crest of the hill and the truck ahead, Glew did not see the lights of the Weyker car until shortly before the accident. Glew, however, noticed Haberle pulling to the south or his right side of the road, and supposing he had a puncture or some trouble he pulled over to his right to draw in behind. He then saw the Weyker car coming around the truck, just missing the rear end of the Haberle truck. Glew attempted to turn his truck sharply to the right off,.the concrete in order to avoid the Weyker car. [368]*368It appears without dispute that the front left part of the Wey-ker car struck the truck on its left side at or about the front wheel, breaking the wheel off, bending the frame, smashing the fender, knocking the cab from the chassis, and striking the rack on the Beetham Brothers’ truck. The blow overturned the truck. After the collision the Dodge car was fifteen to twenty feet west of the Beetham Brothers’ truck. It was lying on its side, was at right angles to the highway, the front of the car facing south. The rear half of the car was north of the center line, and the front half of the car was to the south of the center line. Beetham Brothers’ truck after the accident was lying on its right side on the south side of the road, facing diagonally east; the front right wheel and body of the truck being off or nearly off the concrete and on the gravel shoulder, and the rear wheel right at the edge of the concrete. There was no skid marks of the truck or cars seen by anyone. The Beetham Brothers’ truck was loaded with a heavy rack in which were hogs weighing two thousand nine hundred pounds. After the accident there was glass and dirt on the center of the road on both sides of the black line. Lawrence Weyker testified that as he approached the place of the accident he was blinded by the lights of the Plaberle truck; that just prior to the time when the glare struck him he was driving in the customary center of the right-hand (north) lane. Plaintiff testified, though with evident hesitation and doubt, that the Weyker car was on its right side of the concrete just before the collision. Mr. Iiasselkus testified: “As I recall, we were on the right-hand side of the road at that time.” This he admitted was based on an observation made some seconds before the collision took place. There is sufficient evidence in the record which, if believed and uncontradicted, would sustain the finding of the jury that Glew, the driver of the Beetham Brothers’ truck, was negligent in reference to keeping his own right [369]*369side of the road. The jury found that he was not negligent as to lookout or as to speed.

The question presented for decision is whether or not the physical facts which are established beyond reasonable dispute are such as to make the evidence sustaining the verdict incredible. Samulski v. Menasha Paper Co. 147 Wis. 285, 133 N. W. 142; Holborn v. Coombs, 209 Wis. 556, 245 N. W. 673; Musbach v. Wisconsin Chair Co. 108 Wis. 57, 84 N. W. 36.

The testimony of the plaintiff and Lawrence Weyker is to the effect that the lights on the Haberle truck blinded them as they approached the scene of the accident. Hasselkus said that at the time of the collision he did not know definitely where the Weyker car was with reference to the black line. The distance between the Haberle truck and Beetham Brothers’ truck at the time of the collision was approximately fifty feet. The evidence as to the location of the trucks after the accident is undisputed or at least without substantial dispute. Such dispute as there is results from a statement made by Mr. Hasselkus. He said immediately after the accident he got out of the car and by the light of the Weyker car reflected on the night air be observed that the rack was about half on the concrete.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 244, 218 Wis. 363, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-weyker-wis-1935.