Manchuk v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.

294 N.W. 42, 235 Wis. 579, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 219
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 294 N.W. 42 (Manchuk 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
Manchuk v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co., 294 N.W. 42, 235 Wis. 579, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 219 (Wis. 1940).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The collision in question occurred on the morning of December 28, 1937, at the right-angled intersection of West Lapham street, running east and west, and South Seventh street, running north and south.. The streets were icy and plaintiff claims that on the east half of Seventh street there were wheel-track ruts made by -northbound traffic. The width of the roadway between curbs was forty-five feet eight inches on Seventh street and forty feet on Lapham street. There was a six-feet-wide crosswalk con *581 necting the south sidewalks on Lapham street, which were four feet south from its south curb line. Plaintiff, in approaching the place of the collision from the south, drove north on the east half of Seventh street. The bus driver, in approaching the intersection, drove west on the north half of Lapham street toward the intersection, and upon entering it turned southwest across the southeast quarter thereof to the west half of Seventh street. The impact was between the left front wheel and fender of plaintiff’s automobile and rear part of the left rear fender and wheel of the bus, when that wheel was near the south edge of the south crosswalk and the center line of Seventh street. Upon the issues submitted to the jury, it found that plaintiff was not negligent in respect to (a) keeping a proper lookout, (b) the speed at which he was operating, and (c) the management and control of his automobile; but that the bus driver was causally negligent in each of those respects. On this appeal and also on the trial the defendant contends that as a matter of law the evidence did not admit finding that'the bus driver was negligent in any respect, or that, if he was, his negligence was not a proximate cause; and that, on the other hand, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, which as a matter of law was the sole proximate cause, or at least as great as any negligence of the bus driver.

A review of the evidence discloses that causal negligence on plaintiff’s part in respect to keeping a proper lookout was established as a matter of law. He testified that he did not see the bus at all until his automobile was five or seven feet from the bus. It appears, upon giving the evidence the construction most favorable to the plaintiff-respondent of which it reasonably admits (as we must on this appeal, Trautmann v. Charles Schefft & Sons Co. 201 Wis. 113, 228 N. W. 741), that the impact between the left front fender and wheel of his automobile and the left rear *582 fender and wheel of the bus occurred when that wheel was, at most, four or five feet south of the south crosswalk, and five or six feet east of the center line of Seventh street; if so, the front of the twenty-eight and one-half feet long and nine feet two inches wide bus had traveled in the intersection, up to the time its rear end reached the place of impact, at least seventy-five' feet from the place where it entered the intersection at the east side of the crosswalk on the north half of Lapham street; and that at all times while the bus was traveling from that place to the point of impact, and while the plaintiff was approaching on Seventh street for .the last one hundred .and seventy feet south of the place of impact, he could and ought, in the exercise of ordinary care, to have observed the course of the bus long prior to when he was but five or seven feet from it, and in ample time to have avoided the collision. Even if the bus traveled, as plaintiff claims, at fifteen miles per hour in passing over the intersection, and he approached at fifteen to nineteen miles per hour and then slowed down to six or seven miles per hour, he certainly had ample opportunity to observe and should, in the exercise of ordinary care, have observed that the bus had entered the intersection from his right and was turning left within the intersection when he was at least seventy-five feet south of the point of the collision; and, if he had so observed by keeping a proper lookout, he undoubtedly could _ and would, with that distance intervening, have avoided the collision by reducing his speed, or by swerving but a foot or two to his right and thus passing the bus in the space of at least sixteen feet which remained available for his passage in safety between the bus and the east curb. In view of these facts and circumstances, his failure to keep a proper lookout constituted negligence as a matter of law. As this court has said, “Had he maintained a proper lookout as he approached the intersection, it is but fair to assume that he could have detected *583 the approach of defendant’s car in time to avoid the collision, and his admitted failure to maintain such lookout constitutes negligence as a matter of law, under the circumstances of this case.” Haggerty v. Rain, 177 Wis. 374, 376, 186 N. W. 1017; Bodden v. John H. Detter Coffee Co. 218 Wis. 451, 261 N. W. 209. And as plaintiff had ample opportunity to avoid the collision, and could and ought .to have done so by the exercise of ordinary care in managing and controlling his automobile but for that negligent failure to keep a proper lookout and thereby sooner observe the presence of the bus, his negligence in this respect constituted a proximate cause as a matter of law. Peterson v. Simms, 189 Wis. 517, 208 N. W. 264; Haggerty v. Rain, supra. Consequently the court erred in submitting these issues to the jury instead of finding the plaintiff guilty as a matter of law of causal negligence in failing to keep a proper lookout. However, in relation to the issues as to whether plaintiff was causally negligent in respect to the speed and the control and management of his automobile, there are such conflicts in the testimony bearing thereon that the court rightly submitted these issues to the jury.

On the other hand, the evidence does not sustain the jury’s finding that the bus driver was negligent in respect to keeping a proper lookout, or warrant the submittal of that issue to the jury. The driver’s testimony as to keeping a lookout is not contradicted or in conflict with any other evidence or such inferences as can reasonably be drawn therefrom. He testified that from the time he looked to the south on Seventh street, when he was on the east crosswalk of the intersection, he continued to observe plaintiff’s automobile as it approached from one hundred and seventy' feet south of Lapham street up to the point of impact; and that during that time the bus traveled seventy or eighty feet and he saw the automobile' as it began sliding when it was maybe twenty or thirty or forty ' feet south of him, and *584 that thereupon he applied the brakes and slowed up the bus just before the impact, so that it went only five, six, or seven feet after the impact. As there is no proof in conflict with this testimony or which rendered it incredible, the jury’s finding that the driver was negligent in respect to lookout cannot be sustained; and the court erred in submitting this issue to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W. 42, 235 Wis. 579, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manchuk-v-milwaukee-electric-railway-light-co-wis-1940.