Griffin v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.

201 N.W. 254, 185 Wis. 251, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 92
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 N.W. 254 (Griffin v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light 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
Griffin v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co., 201 N.W. 254, 185 Wis. 251, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 92 (Wis. 1924).

Opinion

Doerfler, J.

Prior to the action commenced in the civil court the plaintiff had prosecuted an action against the defendant in the circuit court for Racine county to recover damages for injuries to a truck and for personal injuries. In such action the court directed a nonsuit and judgment was thereupon entered accordingly, and the plaintiff then appealed to this court, where such judgment was affirmed by a divided court. Griffin v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 176 Wis. 179, 185 N. W. 639.

It is first argued by the defendant that the decision of this court on the former appeal establishes the law of the case, and that the testimony in the civil court was substantially the same as that which appeared in the action prosecuted in -the circuit court for Racine county, and that therefore the circuit court for Milwaukee county properly reversed the judgment of the civil court and ordered judgment for the defendant.

Fourteenth street runs east and west in the city of Racine, and in the block bounded on the east by Grand avenue and on the west by Center street has located thereon north of its center line a single street-car; track, the north rail whereof is thirteen feet distant from the north curb of the street, and said track at the time of the collision herein referred to was, with the knowledge of the plaintiff, used by the defendant in the operation of its passenger cars both towards the east and the west.

On August 13, 1920, plaintiff was the owner of one three-and-one-half ton Packard truck, which truck was laden with .iron castings so that the entire weight of both truck and castings amounted to about ten tons. The day in [253]*253question was clear and bright, and while plaintiff was proceeding west at the rate of speed of about six miles per hour upon Fourteenth street between Grand avenue and Center street the north wheels of his truck were about two feet from the north curb, while the south wheels were a distance of about three feet from the north rail of the track, and, the truck having a right-hand drive, plaintiff was seated about six feet from such north rail. A Ford runabout with its top up, driven by one Osborne, had passed plaintiff’s truck on the south and was first observed by the plaintiff after it had driven about twelve feet ahead of him, and at that time. the Ford proceeded west at a rate of speed of about twelve miles per hour, with its front wheels straddling the north rail of the defendant’s track. When the Ford had thus proceeded and by its superior speed had gained about eight feet on the speed of the truck, and was about twenty feet west of it, the driver of the Ford suddenly diminished his speed, turned his car toward the northwest and proceeded to the north curb of Fourteenth street, stopping along such curb just east of the east intersection of Center street. When it became evident to the 'plaintiff that Osborne was about to leave the street-car track with his Ford and take the course above indicated, the plaintiff looked towards the east to ascertain whether a car was approaching from that direction, and, seeing none, looked towards the west to determine whether a car was coming from that direction, and his view down the track being obstructed by the presence and position of the Ford, and hearing no signal or noise of an approaching car, he immediately turned his truck to the south and onto the north rail of the track, and then, for the first time having a clear view towards the west, observed defendant’s car approaching him at a distance of about eighty-five feet, at a rate of speed estimated by him at about .thirty miles per hour. The front south wheel of the truck had proceeded over the north rail a distance of about two feet when he immediately swerved his truck abruptly [254]*254towards the north to avoid a collision, but before the entire truck could clear the path of the oncoming car a collision resulted which practically demolished the truck.

The case was tried in the civil court before a jury, and a special verdict was returned in which all of the questions submitted were answered favorably to the plaintiff, the jury acquitting the plaintiff of contributory negligence. The negligence of the defendant was amply supported by the evidence, the principal basis for such negligence being the excessive speed of defendant’s car, the rate of speed of street cars on the streets in the city of Racine having been limited by ordinance to fifteen miles per hour. Judgment being ordered and entered-in plaintiff’s favor in the civil court, the defendant appealed from the judgment to the circuit court, which reviewed the evidence certified up from the civil court, and upon such review reversed the judgment of the civil court upon the ground that the evidence adduced in the civil court was substantially the same as that which appeared in the action prosecuted in the circuit court for Racine county, where a judgment of nonsuit had been ordered and entered, and which judgment had, as above stated, been affirmed by this court on appeal.

We will first consider the issue involved upon which the circuit court for Milwaukee county reversed the judgment of the civil court. We have examined carefully the record of the evidence in the two courts in which the action had been tried, and we find that there is a striking similarity upon all material and substantial points between these two records. Plaintiff points out in his brief that the only difference between the evidence in the latter trial and the former one consists of the fact that in the latter it was made clear from actual measurements that at the, time he started to turn his truck towards the track he was unable to obtain a view down the track, owing to the obstruction created by the Ford, and that from such measurements it appeared that he was unable to look over the Ford. On the [255]*255trial in the Racine circuit court, actual measurements were testified to of the distance between the seat and the pave-metit, but there was no actual measurement of the distance from the seat to plaintiffs line of vision. In other words, this latter distance was left as a matter of inference and estimate. However, on the first trial plaintiff took the unequivocal position that the Ford completely obstructed his view, and that this was the reason he could not look down the track. In the trial in the civil court the obstruction was testified to, but was fortified by actual measurements. It thus becomes clear that at each trial the same claim was made, which involved the question of whether or not there was a complete obstruction of the view. Such being shown by plaintiff’s own evidence, we are forced to the conclusion that the evidence on both trials was substantially the same, and that being the case the circuit court for Milwaukee county properly reversed the judgment of the civil court.

The question is not now before us whether the action of the circuit court for Racine county in ordering a nonsuit was right or wrong. The judgment of such court having been affirmed by this court, such judgment becomes the law in the case. Strehlau v. John Schroeder L. Co. 152 Wis. 589, 142 N. W. 120; Thomas v. Lockwood Oil Co. 178 Wis. 599, 190 N. W. 559.

A motion for a nonsuit is equivalent to a demurrer to the evidence. When a general demurrer is sustained to a pleading, the court assumes that all of the allegations contained in the pleading to which the demurrer is interposed are true, but that such allegations in law are insufficient.

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235 N.W. 406 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
201 N.W. 254, 185 Wis. 251, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-milwaukee-electric-railway-light-co-wis-1924.