Cawley v. La Crosse City Railway Co.

77 N.W. 179, 101 Wis. 145, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 315
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 179 (Cawley v. La Crosse City Railway Co.) 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
Cawley v. La Crosse City Railway Co., 77 N.W. 179, 101 Wis. 145, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 315 (Wis. 1898).

Opinion

MaRshall, J.

The sole question involved on the various assignments of error which we deem necessary to consider is, Was there evidence, under the most favorable view that can be reasonably taken of it, to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff ? If there was not, and that situation was apparent at the close of plaintiff’s case, the court erred in denying the motion for a nonsuit. If such was the situation at the close of the evidence on both sides, the motion for the direction of a verdict should have been granted, and the errors in denying the two previous motions of course were repeated in failing to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial.

The circumstances of the accident, as shown conclusively by the evidence, are substantially as follows: It occurred in the early par£ af the evening, a little after dark, on a railway track laid on a broad, level, raised street, not crossed [148]*148by any other street for a distance of about 2,400 feet. On the -west side of the street were two electric railway tracks, occupying some twelve feet in width. .At a safe distance east of the tracks there was a macadamized roadway about twenty feet wide, specially fitted for public travel by vehicles, and east of that for a distance of some fifty feet the street was reasonably level and smooth so there was ample opportunity for teams to pass each other by night or day without driving onto the railway tracks. Plaintiff, while proceeding north, riding in a phaeton drawn by one horse, traveling on the macadamized roadway behind a heavy wood wagon, turned to the left and drove onto the railway track for the purpose of passing such wagon. The reason given for driving to the left instead of to the right was that plaintiff deemed the latter a little rough so that, had she turned that way, the parcels she had in the phaeton were liable to fall out. She drove at quite a brisk trot as she turned to the left and drove onto the railway track. She had proceeded, in endeavoring to pass the wood wagon, but a short distance when she was run into by a car going in the same direction. That caused the injury. She said she looked and listened for a car before driving onto the track, but did not see or hear any. The car was in perfect condition, being supplied with all the customary appliances, such as a brake, a suitable headlight, and a signal bell. It was running at a lawful rate of speed and the motorman was at his post, keeping a sharp lookout ahead. As he approached the teams driving along at the right of the track, and before plaintiff turned toward the track, he sounded his signal bell. As soon as he observed the movement of the horse toward the track he sounded the bell, and immediately turned off the current and did all that was in his power by applying the brake to stop the car. It nevertheless ran into the plaintiff’s phaeton, throwing it off the track to the right, plaintiff at the same time falling out of the phaeton to the [149]*149left. After the collision the car went about two or three car lengths and stopped. The wrecked phaeton was then found in the roadway behind the wood wagon. /

We search in vain in the foregoing to find any support whatever for the charge of negligence contained in the complaint. In view of that, upon what theory the learned trial judgé submitted the case to the jury we are unable readily to perceive. Without any evidence whatever to sustain the charge of negligence made in the complaint, but, on the contrary, in the face of evidence showing that everything was done td guard against all dangers reasonably to have been apprehended respecting the personal safety of plaintiff as she was traveling on the road along the street-car track, and to warn her off the track when she turned to the left, and to avoid injuring her after she entered upon the track, it was left to the jury to say whether the defendant was culpably negligent or not, as if negligence under the circumstances were a disjDuted question of fact. The rule seems to have been overlooked that when the evidentiary facts are all undisputed and there is only room for one reasonable inference as to the ultimate fact in issue, it is for the court to draw the proper inference as a matter of law. There does not appear to be a scintilla of evidence tending to show negligence on the part of defendant. The only evidence in that regard, claimed by plaintiff’s counsel, is that the motorman did not use reasonable diligence after he saw, or might have seen, the plaintiff turn toward the track. That is predicated solely on the theory that plaintiff’s testimony shows, or tends to show, that she traveled the distance requisite to pass two or three teams before she was struck by the car. A careful examination of her evidence leads to the conclusion that the jury were not warranted in saying from it that plaintiff passed more than one team before the accident, while the undisputed fact in the case, that the wrecked phaeton was found immediately after the accident behind the wood wagon [150]*150shows that it must have been struck very soon after the horse turned in upon the track and before it had time to pass such wagon far enough to turn to the right ahead of it. It is easy, to see how plaintiff might have been mistaken, in view of the very uncertain nature of her evidence and her interest in the result'of the trial; but the undisputed fact as to the location of the wrecked phaeton with reference to the "wood wagon leaves no room for a reasonable belief other than that plaintiff had not passed fully by that wagon before the car reached her. All the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom are consistent with that theory, and with no other; so if there were anything in plaintiff’s evidence, standing alone, tending to show that she had passed two or three teams before, and we say there is not, the rule of law often announced, that the testimony of an interested party contrary to the facts otherwise conclusively established in the case and all reasonable inferences from the situation disclosed by the evidence, does not raise a conflict requiring a finding by the jury. Flaherty v. Harrison, 98 Wis. 559; Badger v. Janesville Cotton Mills, 95 Wis. 599.

So it follows, as before stated, that on the question of defendant’s fault 'there was not only no evidence tending to establish the allegations of the complaint, but the evidence affirmatively established the contrary. The failure, therefore, to grant the nonsuit and to direct a verdict for defendant, and to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, are errors too plain to require more to make them apparent than a mere statement of the facts-established by the evidence.

But, if it were not for the failure to establish negligence of the defendant, plaintiff could not recover on account of her contributory negligence, which appears as a matter of law from the undisputed facts. The situation was such that it was plaintiff’s duty, in the exercise of ordinary care, to look and listen before going upon the track. ¿That is con•.ceded. The court so instructed the jury in the following [151]*151language:

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 179, 101 Wis. 145, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cawley-v-la-crosse-city-railway-co-wis-1898.