Jacobson v. Bryan

12 N.W.2d 789, 244 Wis. 359
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 789 (Jacobson v. Bryan) 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
Jacobson v. Bryan, 12 N.W.2d 789, 244 Wis. 359 (Wis. 1943).

Opinions

Fowler, J.

The plaintiff sustained injuries in a collision on the highway between an empty milk truck he was driving and a truck driven by Winthrop Bryan loaded with crushed limestone, which he claims were proximately caused by the negligent driving of Bryan and sues Bryan and his insurer to recover damages therefor. There was a jury trial. The jury by special verdict found Bryan causally negligent in respect of lookout, speed, and position on the highway and management and control, and acquitted the plaintiff of contributory negligence. Judgment was entered for the damages as assessed by the jury. The defendants appeal.

The defendants claim that none of the findings of the jury is supported by the evidence. We consider that all are so supported. When the only question involved is whether the evidence supports findings and we consider that it does, we do not ordinarily file an opinion. -Were this the only question involved we would not file one in this case.

The defendants also claim that the court erred in receiving in evidence over objection of defendants the report of a traffic officer who came to the place of collision a short time after the collision occurred. The report was a printed form on a large card which the officer filled in by making check marks in squares after the items on the card. One item on the card covered “Manner of collision.” Under this heading were items numbered 1 to 5. The fifth item was “Sideswipe” and the square after this item bore the officer’s check mark. The other items were “1. Angle collision. 2. Head-on. 3. Rear end. 4. Backed into other vehicle.” The only thing on the *362 card which the defendants claim was prejudicial was the item “Sideswipe.”

The trial court held that it was the officer’s duty to make and file the report; that his experience in viewing situations after collisions made him an expert; and that because of these matters the card was admissible in evidence. The officer was no better qualified to draw conclusions from what he saw after the collision than any person of ordinary intelligence and therefore was not an expert. And if he were an expert and qualified to give an opinion as to whether the collision was a “sideswipe” or an “angle collision” his report would not be admissible in evidence, but to make his opinion admissible he would have to give it on the witness stand under oath. But assuming that the card was not receivable in evidence, the admission of it does not require reversal of the judgment unless it appears to us from the record that the admission of it was prejudicial.

Sec. 274.37, Stats., admonishes and directs us as to our duty under the instant situation. So far as here material it reads as follows:

“No judgment shall be reversed ... or new trial granted in any action ... on the ground of . . . the improper admission of evidence, . . . unless in the opinion of the court to which the application is made, after an examination of the entire action,' ... it shall appear that the error complained of has affected the substantial rights of the party seeking to reverse ... the judgment, or to secure the new trial.”

We cannot say that it appears from the record before us that the admission of the report affected the defendants’ “substantial rights.” If we assume, as defendants’ counsel contends, that the evidence shows or warrants the inference that the collision was an “angle collision” rather than a “sideswipe,” this would not necessarily or presumptively show that the admission of the card affected any “substantial

*364 rights” of the defendants. That it did affect his substantial rights must affirmatively appear from all the evidence bearing upon the point, and we are constrained to hold that this does not so appear. It rather appears to us that if the jury accepted the card as proof that the collision was a “sideswipe” this inference may have been to the advantage of the defendants rather than to the plaintiff. For if the collision was a “sideswipe” it was not an “angle collision;” and if it was not an “angle collision” this would tend to defeat plaintiff’s claim that the collision was caused by the defendant’s turning left to pass ahead of the truck instead of keeping right or turning further right to avoid a collision. True, it may have been to the plaintiff’s advantage as tending to show that the plaintiff had entirely crossed the near half and was wholly on the far half of the state road as the plaintiff claimed. But whether it operated to the advantage of the one party or the other is wholly speculative and we cannot say it was prejudicial to the defendant.

The accompanying plat drawn an inch to twenty feet scale makes the entire situation clearer than we can make it by a mere statement. It is undisputed that the plaintiff was driving south on the county road which was graveled to a width of eighteen feet. The defendant Bryan was driving westerly on the state road which was surfaced with black-top- to a width of thirty-two feet. The plaintiff turned left at the intersection. The collision occurred on the state road. It was broad daylight, the weather was clear, and the roads dry. The angle of the intersection toward the northeast is seventy degrees. From the evidence the jury might properly infer facts as stated following: The point of impact was indicated by a gouge mark sixteen feet long made by the frame of defendants’ truck, which collapsed at the junction of the cab with the gravel box, the front end of the box falling to- the ground and the rear supported by the standing rear wheels. The easterly end of the gouge was sixteen feet six inches from *365 the extended line of the east right-of-way line of the county road, and sixty-five feet easterly from the extended line of the graveled part of that road. The trucks came to rest at the extreme south side of the black-top with their front ends together at some mailboxes outside the black-top, the defendants’ truck facing south and the plaintiff’s tipped on its side beside the defendants.’ The gouge was south of the center of the state road. The plaintiff’s counsel claimed that the plaintiff’s truck was wholly south of the center of the state road when the collision occurred. Defendants’ counsel claimed that his truck was north of the center of the state road as he approached the point of collision and the plaintiff’s truck was across his path. The defendant driver was then going thirty-five miles per hour, perhaps much faster as the crushed stone was thrown over the cab and the plaintiff’s truck and scattered along the black-top for sixty-three feet. The plaintiff was shifting into second gear going ten miles per hour. The plaintiff had stopped at the intersection before turning and looked to his left for traffic. There were shrubs at the northeast corner of the intersection that obstructed the view. From where he stopped he saw to his left one hundred fifty to two hundred feet up the state road and the defendants’ truck was not visible. The defendant driver had an unobstructed view of the state road from a hilltop three hundred feet easterly from the intersection. He did not see plaintiff’s truck until twenty-five or thirty feet from it.

We are of the opinion that the facts being as above stated, as the jury might properly find them, the facts sustain our conclusions that the findings of the jury are supported by the evidence and that the admission of the officer’s report was not prejudicial.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 789, 244 Wis. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-bryan-wis-1943.