Plesko v. City of Milwaukee

120 N.W.2d 130, 19 Wis. 2d 210
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 120 N.W.2d 130 (Plesko v. City of Milwaukee) 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
Plesko v. City of Milwaukee, 120 N.W.2d 130, 19 Wis. 2d 210 (Wis. 1963).

Opinion

Currie, J.

The issues on this appeal are:

(1) If there is liability to plaintiff, is such liability solely that of the city?

(2) Did the trial court err in permitting Allied’s former employee, Ewald Menke, to be examined by plaintiff as an. adverse witness?

*214 (3) Is there sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the jury’s answers to the questions with respect to Allied’s negligence?

(4) Did the trial court err in permitting plaintiff’s expert medical witness, Dr. Montgomery, to testify with respect to the history of subjective complaints given him by plaintiff?

(5) May the plaintiff, by reason of her acceptance of the option to take judgment for $5,500, raise on this appeal the issue that the trial court abused its discretion in reducing the damages found by the jury?

' (6) Did the trial court abuse its discretion in determining that $5,500 was a reasonable sum to award plaintiff for her injuries?

Liability of Allied.

Plaintiff’s cause of action against both Allied ¿nd the city is grounded on nuisance. Allied contends that when a tree which has been growing between the sidewalk and the curb in a city falls and injures someone, the sole liability, if any, is upon the city. This identical contention was advanced by Allied in its former appeal from the order overruling its demurrer to this cause of action and was decided adversely to Allied. Plesko v. Allied Investment Co. (1961), 12 Wis. (2d) 168, 107 N. W. (2d) 201. The determination made of this issue on the prior appeal constitutes the “law of the case” and precludes Allied from again raising it. Langer v. Stegerwald Lumber Co. (1952), 262 Wis 383, 385, 55 N. W. (2d) 389.

Examination of Menke as an Adverse Witness.

Plaintiff called Ewald Menke, the janitor at Allied’s ápartment building from 1946 to 1951, as an adverse witness. Counsel for Allied objected on the ground that Menke had left Allied’s employ about five years prior to trial. *215 This objection was overruled. The controlling statute is sec. 325.14 (1), Stats., which provides in part as follows:

“Any party or any person for whose immediate benefit any civil action or proceeding is prosecuted or defended, or his or its assignor, officer, agent, or employee, or the person who was such officer, agent, or employee at the time of the occurrence of the facts made the subject of the exorna ination, may be examined upon the trial as if under cross-examination, at the instance of any adverse party.” (Italics supplied.)

Since Menke was Allied’s employee at the time of the occurrence of the facts with respect to which he was questioned by plaintiff’s counsel, namely, whether Allied knew of the tree’s condition during Menke’s term of employment, the statute authorized Menke’s being called and examined as an adverse witness. Allied’s contention that this was error is without merit..

Sufficiency of Evidence on Negligence Issue.

Although plaintiff’s cause of action is . grounded upon nuisance, the liability of Allied is dependent upon whether its negligence caused plaintiff’s injuries. Nuisance may be based on either intentional or negligent conduct unless defendant is engaged in an ultrahazardous activity (which is not involved in this case). Walley v. Patake (1956), 271 Wis. 530, 541, 74 N. W. (2d) 130, and Schiro v. Oriental Realty Co. (1956), 272 Wis. 537, 546, 76 N. W. (2d) 355. Since plaintiff has raised no claim here of intentional conduct on Allied’s part, it follows that its liability, if any, must be grounded upon principles of negligence.

The tree which fell was an elm between fifty and eighty years old. Its trunk had a diameter of two.feet, eight, inches. After the tree fell, the remaining stump was about six and a half feet high on the side nearest the sidewalk and *216 about three feet high on the side nearest the curb. This stump, because of interior decay, was a hollow shell with about three inches of bark and sapwood forming its outer circumference. There is ample evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that the tree was in a dangerous condition at the time of the accident.

The next question is whether the evidence sustains the jury’s findings that Allied was chargeable with knowledge of the dangerous condition of the tree for a length of time sufficient to have enabled it to remove the tree prior to the accident. Allied had owned the abutting property on the east side of North Cass street for about thirty-one years prior to the accident. Located on this property was an apartment building having 33 apartments. Allied’s janitors mowed the grass between the sidewalk and the curb and were familiar with the tree.

Menke, who was one of these janitors, testified that he had observed a large hole on the side of the tree nearest the sidewálk. This hole extended upward about two and a half feet from the base of the tree, where it was about a foot wide, and narrowed near the top. Sawdust-like material came out of this hole from time to time, and in November, 1948, city firemen extinguished a fire .in this hole. On the day after the fire, Menke called the tree’s condition to the attention of Wechsler, president of Allied, who made frequent visits to the, premises,, but Wechsler did not want to discuss the matter. The city forestry department later painted the hole with an asphalt preparation. Decayed material from the interior of the tree continued to come out of this hole and accumulated at times in such quantities that it had to be swept off the sidewalk.

George Schmidt, who was the janitor in charge of the premises commencing in 1951, talked on occasion with Wechsler about the bad condition of the tree. Barbara Schmidt,, his wife, testified to having overheard a con *217 versation between her husband and Wechsler about three months before the accident at which time Wechsler expressed the fear that the tree would fall on the apartment building and damage it.

The district superintendent in the city forester’s office examined the stump after the accident. He testified that it was badly butt-rotted and had been in a rotted and decayed condition for many years.

The foregoing testimony amply supports the jury’s findings with respect to Allied’s negligence.

Allied also contends that the strong wind, and not its negligence, was the cause of the tree’s falling. This argument is apparently premised on the assumption that the wind was an intervening force which superseded Allied’s negligence as a legal cause of the accident. Within an hour of the accident, the wind averaged 35 to 37 miles an hour with gusts reaching 46 to 52 miles per hour. United States weather bureau records showed that in the past, winds in the area had reached velocities of 80 to 90 miles per hour. Therefore the velocity of the wind on the night of the accident was not an intervening force which Allied could not reasonably have anticipated.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.W.2d 130, 19 Wis. 2d 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plesko-v-city-of-milwaukee-wis-1963.