Kornwolf v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.

185 N.W. 546, 176 Wis. 160, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 128
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 N.W. 546 (Kornwolf 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
Kornwolf v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co., 185 N.W. 546, 176 Wis. 160, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 128 (Wis. 1922).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed December 13, 1921:

Doerfler, J.

Defendant first assigns as error the refusal of the court to grant his motion for a nonsuit.

Unless it can be said that the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was so clear and decisive as to leave no room for unbiased and impartial minds to come to any other con-' elusion, the proper inference to be drawn must be determined by the jury. Bassett v. M. N. R. Co. 169 Wis. 152, 170 N. W. 944; Dahinden v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 169 Wis. 1, 171 N. W. 669.

It has also, however, been held: “But, where the plaintiff’s own evidence conclusively shows contributory negligence on his part, a nonsuit will be granted.” Rhyner v. Menasha, 97 Wis. 523, 526, 73 N. W. 41; Cawley v. La Crosse City R. Co. 101 Wis. 145, 154, 77 N. W. 179.

[164]*164It was conceded on the trial that there was no necessity for plaintiff driving partially on the tracks, and that there was sufficient space to the west of the tracks and á good roadbed where he could have driven in perfect safety. It was also the duty of the plaintiff, before entering upon the tracks, to look and listen in order to ascertain the approach of a car. Defendant’s counsel cited a number of cases applicable to persons driving on the tracks of a steam railroad. Under the decisions of this court a marked distinction has been drawn between cases based on facts similar to those involved in the instant case, where the person travels along and in the street-car tracks, and cases involving the driving onto or crossing of steam railroad tracks. The late Mr. Chief Justice Winslow, therefore, in the case of Kowalkowski v. M. N. R. Co. 157 Wis. 473, 476, 146 N. W. 801, in the opinion of the court says:

“When, however, the question arises as to the duty of a person traveling upon the street lengthwise of the street railway track, it is plain that there can be no very close analogy between steam railroads operating cars upon their own right of way and street railroads operating cars upon the public street. The difference of situation necessarily creates different standards of -conduct. The traveler has no right to travel upon the inclosed right of way, but he has a right to travel upon that part of the highway covered by the street railway track when it is not required for the passage of street cars in the performance of that duty which street-car companies assume to the public.”

i

In the same opinion it is also held:

“The question of .ordinary care is generally a relative question, depending upon the facts surrounding each case. For this reason the citation of adjudicated cases is not very helpful, as there is always a difference in the facts.” ■

It was the duty of the plaintiff, upon entering the streetcar tracks and in driving lengthwise thereon, not only to make his observation at the time of such entry, but to make frequent observations from time to time in order to dis[165]*165cover an approaching car so as to enable him in time to give way to such car. In the Kowalkowski Case, supra, the plaintiff was driving slowly lengthwise along the street-railway tracks with a horse and vehicle, and looked backward within a distance of about each half of a block. The street car was running at an excessive rate of speed and bore at the front thereof only a sixteen candle-power incandescent light, with the reflector on the forward part of the roof. In the opinion in that case it is said:

“It may well be that this comparatively feeble light in the position in which it was would not necessarily attract the attention of a man taking occasional glances backward, or if seen would not be identified as the light of an approaching car.”

The testimony in the instant case shows that the defendant’s car was running at a rate of speed of from twenty-five to thirty-five miles an hour; that no signal or gong was sounded heralding its approach; and that the speed of the car was not perceptibly diminished before the collision, and that such car bore down upon plaintiff’s automobile while running at full speed. Plaintiff did not look backward because he saw the approaching lights of defendant’scar, but because he was hailed by the officer at the intersection of Douglas avenue and Jackson street, and in looking around he saw the light of defendant’s car and the car approaching at a distance of about forty feet, too íate for him to clear the tracks. While the night in question was apparently a clear, moonlit night, it must be assumed that the reflection of the headlight on defendant’s car would not be as effective to call attention to the approach of the car under those circumstances as it would on a dark night. It was also a conceded fact that defendant’s car -was belated, and that at the time of the collision it was overdue at the car barn a period of twenty minutes. Had the plaintiff not been hailed by the officer as detailed by the facts as herein stated, his car while in motion could have, within the period [166]*166of a second or two, readily cleared the tracks and thus have avoided the collision; however, it can well be assumed that being hailed at that time of the night by the officer, at the intersection of Jackson street, the plaintiff’s first impulse naturally was to stop his car immediately, particularly in view of the thought that he expressed, that some one might have suffered injury who needed immediate attention.

Therefore, in view of the fact that defendant’s car was the last car to travel south on the tracks that evening and that it was approximately one-half hour late; that plaintiff was prompted to stop his car by being hailed by the officer as detailed, and in consideration of the excessive speed at which defendant’s car was running prior to the collision, and that no signal of its approach had been sounded and no effort made to diminish its speed, we are of the opinion that the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence, under all the facts and circumstances in the case, was one properly to be submitted to the jury.

• The fact that the motorman on defendant’s car testified that he did not see plaintiff’s automobile until the time of the collision is very persuasive in showing that the headlights on the car were very dim, for it is established by the evidence that the tail light on plaintiff’s car was burning at the time of the collision.

The fifth assignment of error, based upon the refusal of the court to change the answer of the jury to the third question of the special verdict from “No” to “Yes” and to order judgment for the defendant upon the verdict as so changed; and the sixth assignment of error, based upon the refusal of the court to order judgment in favor of the defendant notwithstanding the verdict; and the seventh assignment of error, based upon the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial, are substantially covered in this' opinion with reference to the first assignment of error and will therefore receive no further comment herein.

Defendant’s' counsel requested the submission, as'a ques[167]*167tion of the special verdict, whether the plaintiff exercised ordinary care in allowing his automobile to be on the streetcar track at the time and place of the collision, and the refusal of the court to submit such question constitutes defendant’s second assignment of error.

In Fandek v. Barnett & Record Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 N.W. 546, 176 Wis. 160, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kornwolf-v-milwaukee-electric-railway-light-co-wis-1922.