Court Opinion

ID: 8192797
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:15:54.998754+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:39.787647
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed March 4, 1919:
Owen, J.
The notice of appeal in this case states that plaintiff appeals from the order made and entered “in this action by said court on the 8th day of December, 1917, by which order the judgment of the civil court rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants in this action was reversed and ordering that the action be tried in this court by a jury, and also from the whole of the judgment made and *178entered in this action by said court on the 20th day of April, 1918.” We are asked to review the order of the circuit court by which the judgment of the civil court in the original action of Holub v. Cootware was reversed. Whether upon an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court for Milwaukee county this court will review an order of that court reversing the judgment of the civil court in the same action is a question that has not been determined. A somewhat similar question was, however, considered in Bonnell v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 158 Wis. 153, 147 N. W. 1046, but whether what was there said is decisive of this question we do not decide. The question is not here presented, for the reason that after the judgment rendered in the civil court in Holub v. Cootware was reversed by the circuit court, this new and independent action was commenced in the circuit court. We are really at a loss to understand the position of counsel for appellant in this matter. He seems to assume that this action is the same action that was originally started in the civil court, and it is not altogether clear that it was not so regarded by the circuit court, as a plea in abatement filed by the defendant Cootware, in which the pendency of the former action was pleaded, was overruled by that court. However, there can be no doubt that this is a new, separate, and independent action, brought in another court, against different parties, and asking for the recovery of an amount over which the civil court has no jurisdiction. A mere statement of this situation is sufficient to indicate that we cannot on this appeal review an order of the circuit court reversing the judgment rendered in the civil court in the original action brought in that court.
The jury found that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which proximately contributed to the accident. Appellant insists that this finding of the jury is not supported by the evidence. An ordinance of the city of Milwaukee, introduced in evidence upon the trial, provides that “Sufficient lights shall be displayed and maintained during the whole of every night at each excavation, pile of material, *179fence, or other obstruction on any- public highway to so cast their rays that such excavation, pile -of material, fence, or other obstruction shall be in full view of the public.” There was testimony in the case that the pile of wood was six feet along the curb,'extending out in the street seven feet, and was three and one-half feet high in the center of the pile. The son-in-law of the plaintiff testified that he was at the plaintiff’s house shortly after the accident and that the woodpile could not have extended into the street more than a yard and that there were, at the most, twelve baskets of wood in the street then. It therefore pretty conclusively appears that there was more or less wood in the street. It appears that the accident occurred October 12, 1916, somewhere around 6 o’clock in the evening, and that it was dark at the time. The jury had a right to find that the ordinances of the city of Milwaukee required that a light should be displayed upon this wood after it became dark. If so, failure to comply with the ordinance constituted negligence which the jury could find proximately contributed to the accident and the injury. Yahnke v. Lange, 168 Wis. 512, 170 N. W. 722. The verdict of the jury in this respect was supported by the evidence.
Appellant further contends that a new trial should have been granted for the reason that the jury, or some of them, did not understand the ninth question, which related to the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, as appeared by the affidavits of two jurors which were filed in support of the motion for a new trial. Each affidavit is to the effect that affiant “was one of the jurors in the above entitled case and that the ninth question of the special verdict was so worded that it was misleading, and that as one of the jurors he never intended to convict the plaintiff of contributory negligence, and if he had so understood it he would not have consented to the verdict as returned into court.” The court refused to consider said affidavits in deciding the motion for a new trial.
Appellant strenuously contends that the court should have *180considered the affidavits thus presented, and likens the situation to that considered in Shaw v. Fisk, 21 Wis. 368, where the verdict of the jury was set aside because it appeared by affidavits that two of the jurors did not understand the English language. That went to the competency of the jurors to act at all. The affidavits presented did not tend to impeach the verdict of the jury. “The general rule is very ancient and often reiterated that the statements of the jurors will not be received to establish their oto misconduct or to impeach their verdict.” Butteris v. Mifflin & Linden M. Co. 133 Wis. 343, 113 N. W. 642; Wolfgram v. Schoepke, 123 Wis. 19, 100 N. W. 1054; Owen v. Portage T. Co. 126 Wis. 412, 105 N. W. 924; Hempton v. State, 111 Wis. 127, 86 N. W. 596; Imperio v. State, 153 Wis. 455, 141 N. W. 241; Dishmaker v. Heck, 159 Wis. 572, 150 N. W. 951. If verdicts thus may be impeached they have little stability. If they cannot stand because a juror is willing to say that he misunderstood a question of the special verdict they must, by the same logic, be set aside upon a statement of a juror that he did not understand the court’s charge or obtained a mistaken impression of certain testimony. As said in Dishmaker v. Heck, supra: “Any such rule would place every verdict at the mercy of weak or corrupt jurymen.” Verdicts must be given greater dignity and finality than would be accorded them under such practice. Their impeachment cannot be permitted in the manner here attempted.
Appellant preserved a number of exceptions to the charge of the court which are assigned as error. These alleged errors have received our careful consideration. The criticisms thereof seem to be without merit. They do not call for special treatment.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on April 29, 1919.