Estate of Eannelli

68 N.W.2d 791, 269 Wis. 192, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 492
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 68 N.W.2d 791 (Estate of Eannelli) 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
Estate of Eannelli, 68 N.W.2d 791, 269 Wis. 192, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 492 (Wis. 1955).

Opinion

Steinle, J.

Our first consideration in the matter of these appeals is appellant’s challenge of the trial court’s findings of fact. It is well established in this jurisdiction that findings of a trial court are not to be disturbed on appeal unless they are contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. Swazee v. Lee (1951), 259 Wis. 136, 137, 47 N. W. (2d) 733.

Upon the trial, the respondents (petitioners below) presented evidence to the effect that Anthony Eannelli had survived the others. .The appellant (respondents below) offered evidence that Anna Eannelli was still living after the three other members of the family had died. The trial court determined: (1) That there is no sufficient proof that Anna Eannelli and her husband, Massemino Eannelli, and their son, George Eannelli, died otherwise than simultaneously, and (2) that Anthony Eannelli survived his parents and his brother, and was their only heir at law and nearest of kin. In order to determine whether the trial court’s findings of fact with reference to survivorship are contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence, as contended by appellant, it is necessary to review the evidence presented upon this subject, particularly as to material statements of witnesses who testified in relation thereto.

Merritt Tucker, bus mechanic residing at Benton Harbor, Michigan, called as a witness by petitioners, testified amongst *204 other matters, that while driving a truck behind the Eannelli car which previously had passed him on the road, he observed (from a distance of about 500 to 1,000 feet) the collision between the Eannelli automobile and the train. He stated that the automobile ran directly into the side of the train, spun counterclockwise across the highway, moved into a ditch, but stayed upright. Upon arriving at the site where the automobile had come to a stop, he observed that the motor of the car was torn out, and the right side of the car was torn back. He “looked at the mother first and she was gone.” He stated that “from her condition, from the looks of her, she was dead.” He “could see no sign of life.” She was lying in the back of the car with her head upon the back shelf. The top of the car was crushed onto the top of her head. The witness observed the front of her body as he stood at the side of the car and saw her head when looking through the rear window.

Tucker stated that he next observed a man lying outside the car on the driver’s side. He took hold of the man’s wrist to see if there was any pulse, but couldn’t find any sign of life. He testified as to his training in first aid while in the military service and his ability to “take a pulse.” He next saw the boys lying under the back of the car, one obviously was dead. The other (Anthony) was still alive, gasping, breathing, and moving. This boy was “lying on his stomach, and his head was moving up and down, and he was gasping. He was under the right rear of the car.” That boy (Anthony) was the last one to die.

Lewis J. Kurz of Peru, Indiana, fireman of the train involved in the collision, was called as a witness by respondents. He testified that after the collision he got off the train before it stopped a short distance from the highway and proceeded to the automobile. He observed a woman in the back seat and felt her pulse. There was no pulse beat and she “apparently was dead.” A man (the father) lay underneath the *205 car on the ground. The witness felt his pulse but there was no beat. “He apparently was dead.” The boys were under the car. The witness looked at the older boy (Anthony) who was bleeding from the mouth and ears and took his pulse, but there was no pulse beat. The smaller boy (George) was groaning and he had a faint pulse beat. When this boy was removed from underneath the car the pulse beat stopped within a few seconds.

Respondents at the trial presented as evidence death certificates of each member of the Eannelli family. These certificates are discussed later in this opinion.

Upon the trial the appellant presented three Indiana state police officers as witnesses, Jacob Dwight Nash, Virgil Per-ratta, and James A. McKee, each of whom gave testimony concerning events upon their arrival at the scene of the accident shortly after its occurrence. Nash was the last of the three to reach the scene. He testified that the entire right side of the car was torn away. A woman was in the back seat in a sitting position. He noticed that she was pinned into the car. He was solicitous about keeping her in that position until the ambulance arrived. He assisted in the attempt to get the bodies out from under the car. He saw the body of the man lying on the ground to the left of the rear of the car.

Perratta testified that he and McKee arrived at about the same time. After glancing momentarily at the woman in the back of the car he walked around the car and saw the body of a man on the ground a couple of feet to the rear and slightly to the side of the car. He felt the pulse of the man. There were no signs of life, he believes that McKee checked the pulse of the man briefly. Thereafter he saw the bodies of the boys under the rear part of the car. When the wrecker arrived it lifted the car with chains and a hoist and the witness crawled under the car and pulled out the boys. When he brought the first boy out he felt the pulse, but could find *206 no sign of life. The witness believed that the second boy was dead when he was removed from under the car. There was no sign of life at all.

When cross-examined, Perratta testified that as he looked at the woman “at the time he thought her head was bashed in . . . he glanced at her as he went by ... he saw what appeared to be a mass of blood and perhaps brains on the back of her head. Her head was laying in what he thought was blood. ... I thought her head was badly crushed, but later I found I was wrong.” He also stated “I don’t know if there was any blood on the woman.”

Introduced in evidence was a written statement in form of an affidavit signed August 1, 1951, by the witness, Virgil Perratta. Therein it was stated that Perratta—

“. . . upon looking into the car he found the body of Anna Eannelli, the wife, and that said Anna Eannelli was dead; that the skull and head of said Anna Eannelli was severely crushed and that it was obvious to him that said Anna Eannelli was dead; that affiant saw Massemino Eannelli lying on the ground near the car and feeling that said Mas-semino might still be living, this affiant and a truck driver moved the body of Massemino away from the scene of the wreck; that affiant tried to take the pulse of said Massemino and that affiant had the pulse of said Massemino taken by another person.
“Affiant further states that it could-very well be that Mas-semino was still alive upon the arrival of this affiant at the scene of the accident and affiant states that Anna Eannelli was obviously dead upon his arrival.”

Admitted into evidence was another affidavit of Perratta, this dated October 17, 1952, in which all of the statements of affidavit of August 1, 1951, were affirmed and in which the witness stated:

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.W.2d 791, 269 Wis. 192, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-eannelli-wis-1955.