Hinkley v. Town of Rosendale

Wisconsin Supreme Court
Hinkley v. Town of Rosendale, 95 Wis. 271 (Wis. 1897)
70 N.W. 158; 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 181
Ftewmast

Hinkley v. Town of Rosendale

Opinion of the Court

FTewmast, J.

Three grounds of error are alleged: (1) Instructions refused; (2) instructions given; and (3) new trial denied. The case lacks novelty. The facts are few and simple and easy of comprehension. The legal principles which govern are so well settled by repeated adjudications of this court as to be elementary and familiar. The trial ■court could not well err, unless through excess of painstaking. The fundamental question was whether the presence •of the stump in that place was such negligence as made the town liable for the plaintiff’s accident. This question, under familiar principles, was for the jury. The plaintiff asked that it be taken from the jury, by the instructions asked, to the effect that the presence of the stump was negligence, and that, if the plaintiff was herself without negligence, she is ■entitled to recover. These proposed instructions the court rightly refused to. give. On the contrary, it submitted the question of the defendant’s negligence to the jury, with ap*273propriate and accurate instructions. The plaintiff asked, also, special instructions bearing upon the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, which the court did not give, in form, as requested, but which it did give, in substance, fairly, in the general charge. The failure to give these instructions as asked is alleged as error.

The following is given as a sample. It is complained especially that the court did not give in the general charge the substance of this sentence, taken from the instructions requested: “What might be negligence in the daytime might not be such in the nighttime.” That simply imports nothing but that the darkness may be an element to be considered. What the court said was, among other things to ■be considered, “You may consider that the time of the accident was in the nighttime.” This also imports that the -darkness is an element to be considered. It lacks nothing ■of the substance of the requested instruction.

The plaintiff excepted to the general charge, by piecemeal, to nearly every sentence. Many of the exceptions are little more than verbal criticism, and are too numerous and too attenuated to be examined in detail with profit. Certainly the instructions seem to be fair and free from bias, and to cover the whole case with sufficient clearness and accuracy. They are not so fervidly inclined to plaintiff’s view of the •case as the proposed instructions, but for that very reason are more to be preferred. The charge is to be construed together, as a whole, and not piecemeal, or by detached portions or sentences. If it is found, as a whole, to be consistent and right in its entire tenor and effect, it is to be upheld, even although it may be subject to minor criticism in some of its subordinate details. This charge well bears that test. There was no ground requiring a new trial.

By the Court.— The judgnient of the circuit court is affirmed.

Reference

Status
Published