Fugina v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

125 N.W. 981, 142 Wis. 144, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 228
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 125 N.W. 981 (Fugina v. Chicago & Northwestern 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
Fugina v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 125 N.W. 981, 142 Wis. 144, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 228 (Wis. 1910).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed March 15, 1910:

KeuwiN, J.

The errors assigned may be classified under three heads: (1) in directing a verdict for defendant; (2) in excluding evidence offered by appellants; and (3) in refusing a new trial.

The evidence tends to prove that on September 8, 1908, the appellants’ steamboat E. Rutledge, under the command of Wm. H. Wier, a duly licensed master and pilot on the Mississippi river, reached Winona at 2 p. m. and landed at [146]*146the public levee on the south bank of the river. The river at this point runs east and is spanned west of the levee by two bridges, one a high wagon bridge, the other the respondent’s railway bridge, which is a drawbridge, the draw being located on the south, or Minnesota side of the river. There are two channels through the di’aw, one on either side of the pivot pier on which the draw span revolves. On the north side of the south channel there is a pier 360 feet long which is built of piling driven into the river, forming a long box filled with stone and extending longitudinally up and down the river, in the center of which is the pivot pier upon which the draw span swings. The channel on each side of the pier is about 150 feet wide. .When the Rutledge landed at the levee a steamboat called the La Crosse was lying about 300 feet below. The Rutledge started up river to Fountain City, but shortly before leaving the levee the La Crosse blew her whistle as a signal to open the draw, which was then closed, but which immediately opened to its full width, and was so open when the Rutledge and La Crosse proceeded up stream. The La Crosse pulled out first and was immediately followed by the Rutledge, the two boats being about 200 feet apart as they went into the draw with the La Crosse in the lead, both boats taking the south channel through the draw. Before the La Crosse had cleared the draw the master of the Rutledge observed the draw span swinging off the pier toward his boat. At this time his boat was about seventy-five feet below the pier and running at about nine miles an hour. Immediately upon observing the movement of the draw span signals were given to stop the boat and reverse the motion of her wheel, thereby reducing the speed to about three miles an hour; but before she could be stopped the bridge struck her on the right-hand side, knocking down the smokestacks and pilot house and causing, other injury. When the draw first began to swing the stem of the La Crosse was about opposite the pivot pier, the La Crosse then being about half way [147]*147through the draw. No warning signal was given by blowing the whistle on the engine house on the draw. About thirty feet in length of the Rutledge had passed the bridge before the collision. The collision occurred about 3 p. m. of a perfectly clear, bright day. From the time the Rutledge left the levee until the collision the engine house on the draw span was in plain sight. No signal was given by the engineer on the draw when the draw span began to swing.

The defendant put in evidence see. 5 of the River and Harbor Act of August 18, 1894 (ch. 299, 28 U. S. Stats, at Large, 362, U. S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 3538), which provides for the opening of drawbridges across navigable rivers of the United States and authorizes the secretary of war to make such rules as in his opinion public interests require, and further provides that when such rules and regulations are made and published they shall have the force of law. Also regulations 1 and 2, passed in pursuance thereof, as follows, were offered:

“1. Whenever a steamboat is to be passed through the channel at any drawbridge, the officer or person in charge thereof shall cause to be sounded, when said boat shall be at a distance not less than one half mile, but within signaling distance from said bridge, one long blast of a steam whistle.
“2. When a steamboat is to leave a landing one half mile or less from a drawbridge, with the intention to pass through the bridge draw, the officer or person in charge of said steamboat shall cause to be sounded the required signal, a sufficient time before leaving the landing to allow the bridge to be opened in time.”

These rules were made by the secretary of war May 31, 1901. No proof was made of the publication of these rules or regulations except that some twenty copies were sent to the United States engineer in charge of improvements on the Mississippi river from Winona to the mouth of the Wisconsin river with instructions to give them to the commanding officers of every vessel that touched at La Crosse, and that [148]*148be distributed these copies to different boats, but tbat be bad no recollection of delivering a copy to Capt. Wier of the-Rutledge or posting a copy on tbe Rutledge, and tbat the-Rutledge entered tbe upper waters of tbe Mississippi before-1901. Captains De Mars, Wier, Cassidy, and Fugina, all running boats on tbe upper Mississippi since 1901, testified tbat they never saw nor received tbe rules or regulations referred to. It also appears from tbe .evidence tbat tbe following pilot rules governing pilots on tbe Mississippi river were in force at tbe time of tbe accident, viz.:

“Rule 12. In obeying and construing these rules due regard shall be bad to all dangers of navigation and collision,, and to any special circumstances- which may render a departure from tbe above rules necessary in order to avoid immediate danger.”

Also the amended pilot rule, adopted January, 1907: “Unnecessary sounding of tbe steam whistle is prohibited within any harbor limits of tbe United States.” Tbe foregoing rules were offered in evidence by appellants and excluded. Tbe appellants also offered to prove tbat no copy of tbe rules- or regulations was posted on tbe Rutledge or on any other steamboat upon which tbe witness bad been since May 31, 1901, which evidence was excluded. Tbe court below seems to have rested its opinion in direction of a verdict upon tbe idea that the respondent bad tbe right to rely upon tbe regulations respecting the opening of drawbridges, hence in the-absence o-f a signal by the Rutledge was under no duty of observation as to whether the Rutledge was approaching, and that tbe appellants bad no right to run their boat up river assuming that the draw would be left open. This proposition, of course, is based upon tbe assumption that the rules were regularly published, because, until they were, they had no force under the act of Congress heretofore referred to, which provides that “such rules and regulations, when so made and published, shall have the force of law.” So we at. [149]*149•once approach the question of whether the evidence was sufficient to establish as a matter of law the publication of the rules and regulations upon which the respondent relies. The act clearly contemplates a publication, and no attempt to prove publication was made, except as before stated, and there is evidence that neither the appellants nor the captain in charge ever received a copy or had any notice of the rules. There is also evidence that other captains on the river never saw or received the rules.

Counsel for appellants calls our attention to sec. 4405, R. S. of U. S. (U. S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 3017) and the following rule made in pursuance thereof:

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 981, 142 Wis. 144, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fugina-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-wis-1910.