Court Opinion

ID: 4011660
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 11:15:11.137993+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:45.989996
License: Public Domain

These cases were tried and considered together in the circuit court, and they have been presented in this court in the same way, although there were separate judgments in the court below and separate appeals to this court.
The first case was begun on the 25th day of September, 1937, by Ella Wilmet, as administratrix of the estate of Ernest Wilmet, deceased, and Carl Carlson, as administrator of the estate of Andrew Carlson, deceased, plaintiffs, against the Chicago  North Western Railway Company, a corporation, Charles P. Megan, trustee, and Emma Smet, as administratrix of the estate of John F. Smet, deceased, and General Casualty Company of Wisconsin, the automobile insurance carrier of John F. Smet, deceased, defendants, to recover damages sustained by the plaintiffs due to a grade-crossing accident in the city of De Pere.
The second case was begun by Emma Smet, as administratrix of the estate of John F. Smet, deceased, plaintiff, against the Chicago  North Western Railway Company, a corporation, and Charles P. Megan, trustee, defendants, to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff due to the same grade-crossing accident involved in the first case.
Upon the trial the jury found for the plaintiffs in each case.  There was a motion by the defendant Chicago  North Western Railway Company, Charles P. Megan, trustee, hereinafter referred to as the "Railway Company," to set aside the verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict for the defendant Railway Company in each case.  The defendant Railway Company's motion was granted, judgment was awarded against Emma Smet, and from the judgment entered in each case on March 22, 1939, the plaintiffs in each case appeal.
This accident occurred in the city of De Pere where the tracks of the Railway Company cross Main street at grade. *Page 337 
The physical situation is most readily understood by reference to Exhibit 8 reproduced herewith:
[EDITORS' NOTE:  EXHIBIT 8 IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 338 
Main street runs practically east and west.  The railway tracks cross it at a slight angle running northwesterly and southeasterly.  On May 25, 1937, at 6:15 o'clock in the morning, with the weather clear and dry, Carlson, Wilmet, and Smet started from De Pere to the place where they were employed in Green Bay about five miles distant.  Smet was the host and driver of his 1928 Chevrolet coach.  Carlson and Wilmet were guests and sat upon the rear seat.  Carlson lived on the south side of Main street about sixty-six yards west of the railway crossing.  Wilmet lived on the south side of Main street about two hundred yards east of the crossing. Smet lived on Reid street about seventy yards west of Carlson's residence.  The lot of the Smet home and the Carlson home were back to back separated by an alley.  All three of the men had lived in the vicinity for some time and were familiar with the physical characteristics of the crossing. All of the men were employees of the Northwest Engineering Company at Green Bay and had been so employed for several years.  Carlson had ridden regularly with Smet for the last two years prior to the accident.  Wilmet had ridden with Smet three weeks immediately preceding the accident and some years back had ridden with him regularly.  Carlson was sixty-four years of age, Wilmet forty-three years of age, and Smet forty-seven years of age at the time of the accident. With his two passengers Smet proceeded to drive easterly out of the alley back of his home to a public way known as Carabin lane.  As the car turned into Carabin lane it was one hundred ninety feet from the center of the crossing on Main street.  From that time until the accident occurred the automobile apparently moved forward at a uniform rate of speed of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. The undisputed testimony is that the car did not slacken its speed before it was struck.  At the junction of Carabin lane with Main street there was an arterial sign on the south side of Main street.  Directly across Main street on the *Page 339 
north side of the street was a wigwag maintained by the Railway Company.  The car apparently made no stop either for the arterial or for the crossing.  At the same time that the Smet car was approaching the crossing a railway train was approaching it from the south.  This train was composed of seventeen cars and caboose and engine.  The train was fully equipped with air brakes.  The evidence with respect to warning is that the wigwag signal was in operation except that no bell was being rung.  A whistle sounded one long blast at the station post about one mile south from the depot.  There was a crossing just north of the station post. There the crossing signal was blown consisting of two long and one short blast.  There was a crossing just north of the depot, that is, between the depot and the crossing where the accident happened and here a second crossing signal, consisting of two long and two short blasts, was sounded.  As the train approached Main street the engineer was in the act of sounding the crossing signal for Main street when he was signaled and told to stop the train whereupon he dropped the whistle cord and applied the full braking power of the engine. The engine came to a stop about six hundred sixty feet north of the crossing.  The Smet car was struck squarely by the front of the engine.  Smet was thrown from the car, was mangled by the passing train, and was instantly killed. He was found about three hundred fifty feet north of the crossing.  Wilmet and Carlson were removed from the automobile. while it was still on the engine.  Wilmet died about five minutes after he entered the hospital.  When Dr. Kerstan arrived Carlson and Wilmet were alive.  Carlson died at 7:10.
Upon the trial the jury found that at the time of the collision the train crew were negligent with respect to operating the train at a speed in excess of twenty miles per hour, and that the Railway Company was negligent in permitting trees and brush to grow upon the right of way, and that such *Page 340 
negligence was a natural and probable cause of the collision. They found that Wilmet and Carlson were not guilty of contributory negligence and made the same findings with respect to the Railway Company's negligence as is found in the Smet case.  The jury found that Smet was negligent in failing to look for approaching trains, failing to listen for approaching trains, failing to observe the automatic signal at the crossing, failing to stop his automobile before driving over the sidewalk area of Main street and into Main street, failing to stop his automobile before attempting to drive over the crossing; that he operated his automobile unlawfully with respect to operating it carelessly and heedlessly, operating it without due caution and circumspection under the existing circumstances, operating it in a manner so as to endanger or be likely to endanger the property, life, or limb of any person, operating it without due respect to the grade crossing there existing, and found that each of such acts of negligence was a natural cause of the collision; that of the whole negligence resulting in the death of Smet, seventy per cent was that of the Railway Company and thirty per cent that of Smet.  The jury assessed the damages:

In the Wilmet case:
      Funeral expenses . . . . . . . . . . . $   266.00
      Pain and suffering . . . . . . . . . .     100.00
      Money loss to estate . . . . . . . . .  14,000.00
      Wife's loss of society and
        companionship. . . . . . . . . . . .   1,400.00
                                             ----------
          Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15,766.00
In the Carlson case:
      Funeral expenses . . . . . . . . . . . $   430.00
      Pain and suffering . . . . . . . . . .     200.00
      Money loss to estate . . . . . . . . .   4,000.00
      Wife's loss of society and
        companionship. . . . . . . . . . . .     800.00
                                             ----------
          Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 5,430.00
 *Page 341

In the Smet case:
      Funeral expenses and damage
        to automobile. . . . . . . . . . . . $   325.00
      Money loss to estate . . . . . . . . .  10,000.00
      Wife's loss of society and
        companionship. . . . . . . . . . . .   1,200.00
                                             ----------
          Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,525.00

Upon motions after verdict the trial court was of the view that if the accident was caused by the defendant's negligence it was attributable alone to speed; that the shrubbery, if there, was not a proximate cause of the accident because while still on Carabin lane, Smet had a clear, unobstructed view down the railroad right of way before he reached Main street; that at that point the brush no longer obscured his view.  The trial court was further of the opinion that the speed of the train did not cause Smet to drive upon the crossing, and that Smet's negligence was the sole and proximate cause of the injuries sustained.  Judgments were entered accordingly on the 22d day of March, 1939, from which the plaintiffs appeal.  Other material facts will be stated in the opinion.
Upon this appeal the assignments of error present three principal questions:  (1) Was the negligence of the driver Smet the sole proximate cause of the collision? (2) If Smet's negligence was not the sole *Page 342 
proximate cause of the collision were Wilmet and Carlson guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law?  And (3), Was Smet's negligence as found by the jury greater than that of the defendant Railway Company as a matter of law?
In considering what caused the collision it is necessary to have in mind the physical situation as disclosed by the maps and photographs.  The depot is one thousand twenty-five feet south of the crossing in question.  A part of Exhibit 4 is reproduced.  This is a photograph taken at a point seventy-five feet north of the crossing facing south.  Carabin lane runs in a northerly and southerly direction just west or to the right of the poles carrying telephone wires having four crosspieces.  Just beyond the depot the track curves. Along the westerly side of the right of way and near the line of the telephone poles appears the shrubbery frequently referred to in the evidence.
[EDITORS' NOTE:  EXHIBIT 4 IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 343 
[EDITORS' NOTE:  EXHIBIT 7 IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
Exhibit 7 reproduced herewith is a photograph taken with the camera standing at the east edge of Carabin lane thirty-seven feet south of the center of the crossing facing north. The occupants of the car had this view as they approached the south line of Main street.  The exact location of the shrubbery is indicated on the map by the stumps.
It appears that some time after these pictures were taken the shrubbery was cut down and removed.  The most southerly clump was two hundred sixty-three feet from the center of Main street and is marked "B" on Exhibit 8.  The next clump was two hundred thirty-one feet south of Main street marked "C."  The southerly end of the next clump was one hundred fifty-one feet south of the center line of Main street marked "D."  Between "C" and "D" there was a distance of eighty feet.  The most northerly clump was eighty-three feet south of the center line of Main street and is marked *Page 344 
"E."  Between clump "E" and "D" there was a distance of thirty-six feet.  These statements are made on the basis of actual measurements, although there are estimates and opinions in the evidence not in accord with these statements.
As Smet turned from the alley into Carabin lane he was one hundred ninety feet from the point of collision.  The witness Zimdars testified that when he last saw the.  Smet car traveling toward Carabin lane the train was not yet in sight although he had a clear view down to the depot.  If the Smet car was traveling at the rate of fifteen miles per hour, or approximately twenty-two feet per second, it was nine or ten seconds away from the point of collision.  If the train was traveling forty miles per hour, or approximately sixty feet per second, it was six hundred feet away from the place of collision; if the train was traveling fifty miles per hour, the highest speed mentioned, it was traveling approximately seventy-five. feet per second and was approximately seven hundred fifty feet south of the point of collision, and so between the depot and the place of collision.  Zimdars must have been in error when he says the train was not in sight.  He checked himself by saying that he took seven steps and four or five seconds additional had elapsed when he heard the crash, so whether we take the assumed rates of speed or depend on his statement of the lapse of time, if the train was traveling at any rate of speed mentioned in the testimony, it must have been north of the depot when Zimdars last saw the Smet car. However, the material thing is that during the last sixty feet that the Smet car traveled its occupants had a clear and unobstructed view to the south of at least nine hundred feet. Assuming that in the last three seconds the car traveled sixty feet, the train traveling fifty miles per hour would have traveled two hundred twenty-five feet and must therefore have been in plain sight during that time.  In addition to that it is undisputed that the bell was ringing, the whistle was being blown, the engine was emitting a volume of smoke, the wigwag was operating, and it was a bright, clear morning. *Page 345 
The testimony of the fireman and head brakeman is that they saw the car at a point about one hundred feet south of Main street; that they continued to watch it, supposing that it would stop or turn to the left.  At the instant they observed that the car was turning right or east they signaled the engineer and the train was stopped with all possible speed.  At a time when the Smet car might have stopped and an observation been made and at a point where so far as the train crew were concerned they had a right to, assume it would stop, it was in a place of safety, if the train had been going at a speed of twenty miles an hour it would have been eighty-seven feet from the crossing; if its speed was forty miles per hour it would have been one hundred eighty feet from the place of collision.
It is the contention of the appellants here that the Railway Company was guilty of negligence because of its failure to cut the brush as required by sec. 195.29 (6), Stats., which provides:
"View at crossings; trees and brush near crossings.  Every railroad shall keep its right of way clear of brush or trees for a distance of not less than three hundred thirty feet in each direction from the center of its intersection at grade with any public highway, and for such further distance as is necessary to provide an adequate view of approaching trains, from such highway."
Violation of a regulatory statute by one upon whom a duty is imposed, although the violation may be an act of negligence, does not give rise to a cause of action for an invasion of an interest of another unless the interest invaded is one which the enactment is intended to protect.  Osborne v.Montgomery (1931), 203 Wis. 223, 240, 234 N.W. 372; Restatement, Torts, § 286.
Our first inquiry then is, Were the occupants of the Smet car within the class of persons whose interests were protected by the statute?  The statute expressly provides that the clearing away of brush and trees shall be done so as to *Page 346 
provide an adequate view of approaching trains from such highway.  The highway referred to is the public highway which crosses a railway at grade.  It is manifest that the interest sought to be protected is that of the travelers upon an intersecting highway.  The slightest consideration must show this to be true.  A highway not intersecting the railway at grade can never become a source of danger or involve a risk of harm to persons traveling upon it.  The statute therefore had no application to the occupants of the Smet car until they reached Main street, which was in this case the intersecting highway.  When they reached Main street the evidence is undisputed that from that point on they had an unobstructed view of the railway track to the station, a distance of one thousand twenty-five feet.  So that it clearly appears from the evidence in this case that failure to cut away and clear the brush had no causal relation to the collision. It is not claimed that the failure to cut and clear away the brush was negligence under the common law.  The occupants of the car not being within the class protected by the provisions of the section, violation of the statute cannot be assigned as a ground of negligence.  See comment and illustrations, Restatement, Torts, § 286, already cited.
Both upon reason and authority, the trial court correctly held that the presence of the brush and shrubbery in violation of the statute had no causal connection with the injuries sustained by the plaintiffs.
The trial court was of the view and so held that the negligence of Smet was the sole legal cause of the collision and therefore of the injuries sustained by the plaintiffs.  The plaintiffs contend that in reaching this conclusion the court asserts the last-clear-chance doctrine which has been expressly repudiated in this jurisdiction.  See Switzer v. Detroit InvestmentCo. (1925) 188 Wis. 330, 206 N.W. 407.  This contention involves a misapprehension of the nature and purpose of the last-clear-chance doctrine.  In Restatement, Torts, *Page 347 
§ 479, comment a on clause (a), occurs the following statement:
"The rule stated in this section is applicable only when the plaintiff has negligently placed himself in a position of peril from which he cannot, at the time of the accident, extricate himself.  If the plaintiff's negligence consists in a failure to exercise that degree of vigilance for his own safety which as a reasonable man he is bound to exercise, he can recover, if at all, only under the rule stated in section 480 [last-clear-chance doctrine].  However, if at the time of the accident he is incapable of averting harm by the exercise of reasonable care, he can recover under the rule stated in this section, even though his inability is because of some antecedent lack of preparation since he is required to exercise with reasonable attention, care and competence only such ability as he then possesses."
Comment e on clause (c):
"It is not necessary that the defendant should have been negligent prior to the time at which he discovered or should have discovered the dangerous position in which the plaintiff has negligently put himself.  It is enough that thereafter he fails to utilize with reasonable care the ability which he then has to avert the plaintiff's harm."
There is no claim in this case that the defendant might or in the exercise of ordinary care should have discovered that the plaintiffs were in a place of peril prior to the instant when the car turned toward or upon the railway track.  As the trial court pointed out, up to the time when the plaintiffs reached the southerly side of the traveled track of Main street they were in a position of complete safety; they were subject to no risks of harm of any kind.  It is undisputed that at that moment the engine was at or near the southerly boundary of Main street, and it clearly appears that the train crew could have done nothing to prevent the collision whether the train had been traveling twenty miles an hour, forty miles an hour, or fifty miles an hour.  When Smet turned *Page 348 
his car to the right or east in violation of every duty which he owed to himself and his passengers and went upon the track in front of the approaching engine in plain sight, his conduct must be held to be the sole cause of the collision. If an actor should place a person upon the tracks of a railway company at a time when an approaching train could not be stopped, no one would have any difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that the conduct of the actor was the cause of the person's injuries, no matter at what rate of speed the train was coming or whether or not it was proceeding in violation of a statute or ordinance.  While of course Smet is acquitted of any intention of harm either to himself or the occupants of his car, nevertheless when he turned in front of the oncoming train at a point in time when it was impossible in the exercise of the utmost vigilance to prevent the injuries of the plaintiffs, he is equally the cause of the collision. We are unable to distinguish upon its facts this case from Brager v. Milwaukee E. R.  L. Co. (1936) 220 Wis. 65,264 N.W. 733.
It is considered that the trial court correctly held that the act of Smet was the sole legal cause of the collision.  The collision having been caused solely by the negligence of Smet, we need not consider other questions raised in the case relating to the degree of care which plaintiffs Wilmet and Carlson were required to exercise under the circumstances.
By the Court. — Judgment in each case affirmed. *Page 349