Jensen v. Wisconsin Central Railway Co.

128 N.W. 982, 145 Wis. 326, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 50
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 128 N.W. 982 (Jensen v. Wisconsin Central 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
Jensen v. Wisconsin Central Railway Co., 128 N.W. 982, 145 Wis. 326, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 50 (Wis. 1911).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed December 6, 1910:

MaRshall, J.

The conclusion reached in this case renders a general treatment of the form of verdict adopted by the trial court, in respect to which a number of criticisms are made and errors suggested by counsel for appellant, sufficient to dispose of all such matters. Such general treatment is not only appropriate to the case, but may be helpful in administering the law as it exists with the legislative change effected by ch. 254, Laws of 1907. It is quite evident that notwithstanding the exposition of the features thereof in Kiley v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 138 Wis. 215, 119 N. W. 309, 120 N. W. 756; Boucher v. Wis. Cent. R. Co. 141 Wis. 160, 123 N. W. 913; and Zeratsky v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 141 Wis. 423, 123 N. W. 904, there is yet, and perhaps not without warrant because of the crudities of the legislation, considerable uncertainty in the minds of bench and bar as to correct practice in submitting a case of this sort to a jury. That is manifest here from the fact that the trial court submitted three questions covering such features, nearly in the words of the statute, explaining some of such words so as to convey an understandable meaning thereof, in harmony with settled legal principles, and in addition added other questions so as to make the verdict also respond to the general special verdict law, in harmony with the settled practice in respect thereto.

[332]*332Eirst there was submitted a question in substantial lit■eral compliance with the supposed requirement that the jury in such a case shall be asked whether “the company, or any ■officer, agent, servant or employee, other than the person injured,' was guilty of negligence directly contributing to the injury ?” That was followed by questions covering the specific acts of negligence alleged, which were, in turn, followed by a question, substantially in literal compliance with the statute, as to “whether the person injured was guilty of any .negligence which directly contributed to the injury,” and again by a question, in like literal compliance, as to “whether ■the negligence of- the company or any of its officers, agents, servants or employees, other than the plaintiff, was slighter -or greater as a contributing cause of the injury than negligence of the plaintiff;” then, upon the theory that, possibly, the supposed legislative questions would not, though answered in plaintiff’s favor, find actionable negligence, for want of a finding on the subject of proximate cause, — a question, substantially in the usual form, was added on such subject.

Thus a double verdict was obtained. In one respect it is substantially in literal compliance with the statute of .1907, .and in another in compliance with the general special verdict ■law. The learned trial court used that extreme care, and in .addition explained the word “negligence” as used in the questions to mean want of ordinary care, and the words “directly •contribute” to mean proximately contribute. On the whole, the questions covered the case, though no such double presentation is necessary and might be confusing. Moreover, with■out adequate explanation of the questions, it might lead to harmful error.

It is quite plain that an inquiry in literal compliance with the first feature of the law of 1907 referred to, could not be answered by yes or no and inform the court with reasonable «certainty of a unanimous agreement upon either of the sev[333]*333eral ideas disjunctively joined contrary to the settled practice on tbe subject wbicb hardly admits of legislative interference. We must assume that such feature only requires the subject to which it refers to be covered by one or more appropriate questions, each involving a single issuable idea, according to circumstances, in accordance with the practice under the general special verdict law.

The term “negligence,” instead of “want of ordinary care,” is used uniformly in the new statute. The learned trial court repeated it some nine times in the verdict. This court, in the cases cited, construed such term to mean “want of ordinary care.” That being the case, it were better to use the latter term in such a verdict and not depend upon using a supposed equivalent which is not such in fact without the aid of judicial construction.

The learned trial court, in supposed necessary compliance with the new law, used the term “directly contribute” six times in the verdict, giving the same, by instructions and appropriate supplementary questions, as before indicated, the effect of “proximately contributing.” Here again it were better to have used, in the question, the term “proximately contributing,” in harmony with this court’s construction of the statute, instead of a supposed equivalent which is not without the aid of judicial construction.

Without further discussing the subject, covered by the several criticisms of the verdict here, it is considered that the law of 1907 simply requires the alleged actionable want of ordinary care of the defendant, the alleged or claimed want of ordinary care, if any, of the plaintiff, the proximate relation to-the injury of such want of ordinary care, and in case of there being such want of care on both sides, whether that of the defendant was the greater, to be specially submitted to the jury. It does not, in effect, change the form of submission required under the general special verdict statute and the settled practice in relation thereto, except as to adding the new element. [334]*334Tbe issues should be submitted accordingly, so far as they are involved on tbe evidence, legal terms being used in tbe ■questions in connection with appropriate explanations in tbe charge, so that a finding will result, specially, on each of tbe detail facts in issue on tbe pleadings and in controversy on the evidence. Neither tbe subject of want of ordinary care of tbe defendant or of tbe plaintiff need be submitted, unless, on tbe whole evidence, there is room for reasonable differences of opinion in respect thereto. In case of want of ordinary care of both parties being in controversy, so findings may result, convicting both of such fault and that tbe fault of each was in proximate relation to tbe injury, a question should be submitted as to which was tbe greater, but it need not be, and better not be, submitted in tbe set phrase of whether tbe fault of tbe injured party “was greater or slighter as a contributing cause,” etc. Tbe statute should be administered in its spirit. That requires, only, in case of mutual fault, that tbe verdict shall determine whether the fault of the defendant was the greater. The better way, it seems, is to submit the simple question: If you find that mutual fault of the defendant and the plaintiff proximately caused the injury, was the fault of the defendant the greater ?

The foregoing is in strict harmony with the decisions heretofore rendered respecting the law of 1907. It gives full effect thereto, as it has been construed, and will enable trial courts to readily apply it in all situations calling therefor. It leaves the practice- before the new enactment, with which the bench and bar are familiar, entirely undisturbed, except, whereas, formerly the trial court was not required to submit the cause for a special verdict -unless requested to do so by counsel for at least one of the parties, now the cause should be so submitted regardless of any request, and, added to the usual form for a verdict in such cases, where the situation requires it, should be a question as to whether contributing fault of the defendant was the greater.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 N.W. 982, 145 Wis. 326, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-wisconsin-central-railway-co-wis-1911.