Nicoud v. Wagner

81 N.W. 999, 106 Wis. 67, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 15
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 N.W. 999 (Nicoud v. Wagner) 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
Nicoud v. Wagner, 81 N.W. 999, 106 Wis. 67, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 15 (Wis. 1900).

Opinion

MAR.R7TAT.T., J.

The most important question presented on this appeal was raised below by the motion of defendant’s counsel for a verdict in his favor for want of evidence to show that the crane in use at the time of the accident was defective, or that the injury complained of was caused by any such defect or any negligence on the part of the defendant. The same question was raised by a proper motion after verdict.

The rule is elementary that, on appeal, a judgment cannot be reversed for want of evidence to support the verdict on which it is based, unless it clearly appears that there is no credible evidence which, in the most favorable view that can reasonably be taken of it, will support the verdict.

Within the range of reasonable probabilities, viewing the evidence from the standpoint of common sense and experience, the province of the jury to say where the truth lies as to the facts is exclusive, subject only to the discretionary control of the trial court when the finding is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. When the reasonable probabilities are all one way, so clearly that different minds cannot reasonably differ about it, a jury has no more right to say the truth is otherwise, and have that stand as bind[72]*72ing between parties, than the court has in a jury case to say what are the proper deductions of fact to be made from conflicting reasonable evidence or inferences therefrom.

■ By keeping the principles stated clearly in mind, not invading the legitimate province of the jury or allowing the jury to invade the province of the trial court, or such court to shift its legitimate responsibility onto the jury, our system of jurisprudence in legal actions will demonstrate perfection as near as human wisdom, up to the present time, has been able to attain in that field of civil government.

So it follows, as before indicated, that the judgment appealed from cannot be disturbed as contrary to the evidence, unless there is an entire absence of credible evidence to support some essential fact or facts in the case, and that reasonable minds cannot reasonably differ in that regard, keeping in mind, however, that the trial court, having better facilities for determining that question than this court, has determined it in the negative, and that such determination should prevail unless clearly wrong. Maitland v. Gilbert P. Co. 97 Wis. 476; Powell v. Ashland I. & S. Co. 98 Wis. 35; Lewis v. Prien, 98 Wis. 87; Flaherty v. Harrison, 98 Wis. 559; Cawley v. La Crosse City R. Co. 101 Wis. 145; Clifford v. M., St. P. & S. S. M. R. Co. 105 Wis. 618.

The foregoing stated doctrine is particularly applicable to this case, because the character of the evidence is such that the trial judge and jury had superior facilities in a high degree, to what are possessed here, for understanding and weighing such evidence. The principal witness on the part of the plaintiff,— the one whose evidence, as it seems, appellant’s counsel concedes, if credible, is fatal to his contention that the verdict of the jury is wholly without evidence to support it,— was a person of such limited knowledge of the English language that the placing of his ideas of the facts intelligently before the jury was attended with considerable difficulty. Then again, the trial court and jury [73]*73bad tbe benefit of seeing a device of the kind used on the occasion of plaintiff’s injury, of examining its working parts, and of having them carefully explained, and the particular location of the alleged defects in the crane that caused the mischief complained of, and the nature and probable effect of such condition, carefully pointed out by witnesses.

Applying what has been said to the evidence, from all the light we can glean from it, we are unable to come to a satisfactory conclusion that the trial judge was wrong in deciding that there was credible evidence which a jury had a right to believe, and upon it to base a finding in plaintiff’s favor, as to the alleged defective condition of the crane, knowledge of it by the defendant, and that such condition was the sole proximate cause of the injury. It is useless to say how the evidence strikes us as we read it, as regards where the clear weight thereof is; for that is not before us. As to the question on which side the major probabilities are, where there are reasonable probabilities both ways, however much those on one side may appear here to overbalance the other, the judgment of the jury, approved by the trial court, must, as before indicated, stand as the infallible truth. Eor that reason, trial courts should exercise their power freely and firmly, to prevent injustice, when a jury goes plainly against the preponderance of the evidence.

No need appears to prolong this opinion by a careful and extended discussion of, and quotation from, evidence, to show the grounds of our conclusion that the verdict of the jury is not clearly against all reasonable probabilities. ¥e may safely say that a person, looking at the evidence from the standpoint of a partisan, intensely interested for his client, and with that interest intensified by an honest conviction that injustice has been done, might reasonably conclude that the verdict of the jury is not only against the preponderance of the evidence, but contrary to every reasonable probability. That situation may, and probably does, often [74]*74happen, yet an unbiased judicial study of the evidence lead to a different conclusion. The line between reasonable probability and mere conjecture is not infrequently so indistinct that whether it be discovered or not depends upon the point of view from which the mental observation is taken.

. The point urged here with greatest confidence by appellant’s counsel, on the subject of the verdict being contrary to the evidence, is that there is no evidence whatever to identify the crane in use at the time of the accident with that previously reported to defendant as defective and unsafe i that the jury were permitted to find the fact in that regard by mere conjecture. The witness Much, who gave the only evidence on the subject, said there was no other crane on that track, speaking of the track the crane was worked on at the time of the accident. To the question, “ Are you able to say that it was the same crane that you told the foreman about ? ” the witness said, “ It was on the same track. Yes, sir. It was on the same track as was the other crane.” The witness, however, said, that after he complained to. the foreman about the defective crane he kept watch of it and knew where it was. True, the evidence is not entirely satisfactory as it reads in the record, but it is not beyond reason to say that the witness intended to be understood to testify that, from the time he observed the defective crane down to the time of the accident,-it remained on the track where he first observed it, and was in use at the time of the accident. After some controversy as to whether the witness had identified the defective crane as the one in use at the time of the accident, this question was asked him: “ I will ask you now whether the crane through which Mr. Micoud got hurt was the same crane that you saw fall down several times within a day or so previous to the time that Niooud got hurt ? ” to which he answered, “Yes. There was only one crane on that track.” He further said, “ I saw [75]*75it come apart and fall down two or three days before the accident. I saw the chain slip and let the load down five feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.W. 999, 106 Wis. 67, 1900 Wisc. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicoud-v-wagner-wis-1900.