
    Will, Appellant, vs. West Side Railroad Company, Repondent
    
      December 8, 1892
    
    
      January 10, 1893.
    
    
      Street railways: Negligence: Injury to person: Court and jury.
    
    Upon the evidence in an action for injuries sustained in a collision between defendant’s electric car and plaintiffs wagon,— tending to show, among other things, that while plaintiff was driving on defendant’s track with his heavily loaded wagon he saw the car ap- ■ proaching and tried to turn out, but owing to the slipperiness of the rails his team was unable to pull the wagon from the track; and that the motorman of the car saw the plaintiff trying to get off the track, and his difficulty in doing so, in ample time to have stopped the car,— it is held that it was error to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Milwaukee County.
    Action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligence of the defendant’s employees. The answer alleged contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. At the close of the testimony the court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant. From the judgment entered On such verdict the plaintiff appeals. Other facts are stated in the opinion.
    For the appellant there was a brief by Bose efe Bell, and oral argument by A. W. Bell.
    
    For the respondent there was a brief by Turner & Tim-lin, of counsel, and Boznforili Beaker, attorney, and oral argument by W. J. Turner.
    
   Oeton, J.

On the conclusion of the testimony, and on the motion of the respondent’s counsel, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and judgment was rendered accordingly. If the testimony of the plaintiff and'his witnesses made a clear prima facie case in his favor, then it follows that the court erred in so directing a verdict. If the testimony of the defendant tends to rebut such prima facie case, then it is quite likely a case of contradictory or conflicting evidence, and it should be submitted to the jury,

The testimonJSfc the plaintiff and his witnesses is not long or difficujj^Hfmderstand. On the 9th day of Janu-uary, 1891, o’clock P. M., the plaintiff and four other men wgj^BWpig their teams to wagons loaded with large stone, onWel'Is 'street, in the city of Milwaukee, going east. A short distance back the plaintiff drove in and upon the south track of the defendant’s railroad, and was driving along on that track. The four other teams were being driven on the street outside and south of said track, following each other. One or two of said teams were nearly opposite the team of the plaintiff, and the others were following closely behind. They saw an electric car of the defendant company, when it was about two or three blocks off, coming towards them with considerable speed on the track on which the plaintiff was driving. The plaintiff at once turned his team off the track north, and tried to have them pull the wagon off also; but there was snow and ice on the track and rail, which made the rail slippery, and the left forward wheel of his wagon slid along the rail, and his team was unable to pull the wagon off. He whipped and urged his team, and did what he could to get them to pull the wagon over, but without success. The wheel glided along the rail in this way from 15 to 100 feet. The plaintiff was sitting on one of the large stones on his wagon, and as soon as he saw the car coming towards him he at once did everything in his power, and continued to do so, to get his wagon off the track. He could not have turned to the right, and attempted to drive off the track on that side, on account of the other teams and loaded wagons being in his way. If he had attempted to drive off the track on that side, and there had been nothing in his way, there was no certainty that his wheel would not have slid along the rail on that side just the same. Indeed, the probability was that he would not have been more successful in driving off on that side than on the other. The motqrman of the car,, two blocks off, could have seen, and pr^^^v did see, that, there was a wagon loaded with stonel^^Mlriven on his car track, and that the driver was tryy^^Mfet his wagon off the track. He could have seen, afjHMHIkbly did see, that the horses were turned clear off the. track north, and were trying to pull the wagon over and off the track. The right wheel of the wagon and that corner of the load were directly in front of him. He must have known when near, and in time to stop his car, what the trouble was, and that probably the plaintiff would not be able to get his wagon off the track in time for him to pass. The motorman, however, did not stop the car, or even lessen its speed, but drove ahead and square against the right wheel and corner of the loaded wagon, which drove the wagon and horses, with the plaintiff sitting on the load, several feet to the north of the track in a general wreck, and the plaintiff was taken out from under one of the wagon wheels, apparently lifeless. This is the testimony of the plaintiff and the four teamsters who were with him, with scarcely any disagreement. One of the teamsters did say that the plaintiff might have turned to the right, as no team was opposite to him; but all the other witnesses testified that two teams were nearly opposite the plaintiff, and one of them testified that he was talking to the plaintiff, who was on the north side of him. Rut that was not material. The plaintiff had a right to exercise his own best judgment as to which side he should turn out, and there is no evidence that he could have been more successful on one side than on the other. At least he did not know that he could, and after he had attempted to turn out on the north side it was too late to try the other side, even if there had been no obstruction on that side.

It may be proper to say that the testimony of the motorman, Cummings, does not make a good case for the company. He saw the trouble with the plaintiff’s wagon, with the wheel sliding along the rail, and then put all his force on the brakes when he got about twenty feet from. Thirty-second street, the place of the accident, and stopped the car just as it struck the wagon. He saw the plaintiff trying to get off the track when he got to Twenty-ninth street, nearly three blocks away; and he thought the plaintiff got his wheel nearly over once, and then pulled it back again. So the motorman must have understood the reason why the plaintiff could not get off the track, in ample time to have stopped the car before it struck the wagon. It appears that he might, and should, have stopped the car before it came so dangerously near the wagon as twenty feet.

But I do not intend to pass upon the merits of the whole case on the conflicting evidence. It is sufficient that the plaintiff’s evidence made a good prima facie case in his favor, for the jury would have had the right to believe that evidence rather than the conflicting testimony on behalf of the defendant. The plaintiff’s evidence showed very clearly that the motorman was guilty of nearly, if not quite, gross negligence, and that the plaintiff used all reasonable means, under the circumstances, to get out of the way of the approaching car and avoid a collision, and was unable to do so.

The plaintiff cannot be charged with negligence in driving on the track, for he had a lawful right to use any part of the street to drive on. He could only be held liable for not getting off the track and out of the way of the car when it came along and had the prior right to the use of the track. This he tried his best to do, and would have done so but for the accident that the rails of the track were wet and slippery and held his wheel by reason of the ice and snow. According to the evidence, the rails of the track are not in all places so high above the ground as at this place, and would not catch and hold a wagon wheel in this manner. There is no evidence that the plaintiff had any reason to anticipate or expect that he would be unable to drive off the track at any time, and get out of the way of the cai’, when he drove upon the track at this time. What evidence the defendant may be able to introduce on another trial to rebut the case made by the plaintiff, or to contradict his testimony and that of his witnesses who were present at the time and place of the accident, we know not; and the jury may be able to reconcile the conflicting evidence, and they have the right to believe the testimony on one side or the other. I do not wish to say any more than necessary to affect the result of another trial. This was evidently not a case for the court to direct a verdict for the defendant. It was a very proper one to be submitted to the jury.

By the Court.— The judgment of the superior court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.  