Schoenberg v. Berger

42 N.W.2d 466, 257 Wis. 100, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 208
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 42 N.W.2d 466 (Schoenberg v. Berger) 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
Schoenberg v. Berger, 42 N.W.2d 466, 257 Wis. 100, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 208 (Wis. 1950).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The main issue on appeal is the apportionment of negligence. It is the contention of defendants that deceased should have been held at least fifty per cent causally negligent as a matter of law because he failed to yield the right of way and to keep a proper lookout. The nature of these contentions requires a statement of facts in some detail to determine if there is evidence to support the jury’s findings.

*103 The accident occurred about 7 p. m. on August 19, 1947, on State Trunk Highway 71 between the villages of'Wilton and Kendall in Monroe county, Wisconsin. The weather was cloudy and it was getting dark.

Highway' 71 runs generally in an easterly and westerly direction. The black-top highway at the place of the accident was twenty-five feet wide. There is a sharp curve in the road which, when traveling easterly, veers to the north and also at this point there is a perceptible hill, the crest of which is approximately at the apex of the curve. Where the east end of the curve terminates, there is a side road intersecting Highway 71 on the south side of said highway.

Deceased had been working on a threshing crew that day. He and one Joseph Goetz started moving a threshing rig from a farm along the O’Rourke road to the Kennedy farm which was on Highway 71 about one-half mile west of the point of collision. Goetz drove the rig while Schoenberg parked the Goetz car at the southeast corner of the intersection. Since the rig was forty feet in length, it was agreed that Schoenberg would go to the point of the curve on Highway 71 and direct traffic while Goetz was bringing the rig from the O’Rourke road onto Highway 71. Goetz testified, “From the east they could see us.”

Schoenberg stayed in his position at the apex or point of the curve until the rig had successfully negotiated the turn, and the rig was proceeding westerly along the north side of the highway.

The following statement signed by Goetz on August 25, 1947, was brought out on cross-examination:

“I had the threshing rig on Highway 71 and had come far enough around the curve so I could see the straightaway when I met Otto Schoenberg. I was on my right side of the road and Otto Schoenberg was on my left side of the road, on the black-top, I would judge about three or four feet from the edge of the road. He was walking east back toward the *104 intersection of the town road and Highway 71, where my car and trailer was parked, so he could bring it to the Kennedy farm.”

The evidence shows that there is no shoulder or other place to walk on the north side of the highway. The road drops off abruptly into a three-foot ditch which is located between the black-top surface and the base of a steep hill.

The defendant Florence Berger was proceeding easterly toward Kendall on Highway 71. She testified as follows: She saw the threshing rig upon the highway but could not determine at that time its position on the highway, the direction that it was going, or the character of the rig. As she approached more closely, she saw that it was a tractor and separator used for threshing purposes traveling in its proper lane of travel to the north coming toward her and that she would be meeting it rather than passing it. Her usual rate of speed of approximately forty to forty-five miles per hour had slackened to less than thirty miles per hour, and she stepped upon the gas so as to negotiate the hill. At the time she met the threshing rig she was traveling in her right and proper lane of travel to the south of the highway at thirty miles per hour, and the lights on her car were burning.

Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy, who lived adjacent to the highway a quarter of a mile west of the hill upon which the accident happened, testified that they had watched defendant’s car as it rounded the curve at a high rate of speed and the lights were not lit.

Defendant stated further that when she first saw Mr. Schoenberg he was in the left lane of travel back of the threshing rig. He was on the north side of the highway close to the center line walking south with his side toward her. She saw Mr. Schoenberg when her vision was clear as she passed the threshing rig. She testified at one time that when she first saw the deceased he was only ten or fifteen feet from her and later that he was approximately forty to forty-five feet *105 away. She immediately applied her brakes and tried everything to avoid hitting him.

At the scene of the accident a week after it happened, defendant pointed out the respective locations of the deceased, the threshing rig, and her car to the deputy sheriff and county traffic officer, in the presence of her attorney. The measurements at that time disclosed that the front or west énd of the threshing rig was one hundred ninety feet from the deceased at the time Mrs. Berger’s car met the rig. These measurements correspond with the statement made by Mrs. Berger at the trial that when she approached the rig, it had already reached the apex or sharper point of the curve.

The damage to the automobile was to the right headlight and right fender. There was a large dent in the front of the right fender six or seven inches in diameter in the shape of a football. Mrs. Berger in June, 1948, on adverse examination, stated that there was no damage to the radiator but in August, 1948, went to the courthouse with her attorney and made a correction in this testimony that there was damage to the grille in front of the radiator.

There was crushed headlight glass strewn along the graveled shoulder a foot or two south of the black-top and extending from the point of impact eastward a distance of about twenty-five feet. There was no glass on the black-top. Mrs. Berger testified she heard glass rattle as it fell from the headlight onto the ground as she was driving away to notify Mrs. Schoenberg of the accident. There was a “black spot” on the south edge of the black-top which Mrs. Berger identified as the approximate point of collision with respect to east-west measurements. The broken headlight glass extended east from the black spot.

Deceased weighed about two hundred twenty pounds. He was thrown in a southeasterly direction at least thirteen feet beyond the point which Mrs. Berger claimed to be the point *106 of impact and was found lying south of the shoulder with the nearest part of his body, his feet, eleven feet south of the south edge of the black-top. His head was toward the south away from the highway. His eyeglasses were found eight feet south of the south edge of the black-top.

Father Timmerman, who came upon the scene of the accident while Mrs. Berger was getting out of her car, and the first officers there estimated that Schoenberg lay twenty or twenty-five feet from where the car came to rest.

There was a compound fracture of the tibia and fibula about the middle of the right lower leg. The principal break was seven and one-half inches above the ankle and the leg was fractured in such a manner that the foot was approximately at a right angle to the knee. There was some bruise at the right shoulder and extensive bruising of both buttocks, although somewhat less on the left.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W.2d 466, 257 Wis. 100, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenberg-v-berger-wis-1950.