Lotzspietch v. Watts

ELLISON, J.

Plaintiff brought this action for personal injury and for destruction of her buggy. She recovered $200 in the trial court.

The sole question presented by the record is, whether there was evidence sufficient to support the verdict. It seems that plaintiff was driving along the public highway and that defendant was also, the former being in a one-horse buggy and the latter some distance behind in a two-horse vehicle. Plaintiff met and passed some teams and shortly thereafter defendant met them. His horses got beyond his control, ran away, threw him out and running on, overtook plaintiff, ran into or over her buggy, demolishing it and injuring her. The defendant claims the accident was wholly unavoidable; that in passing the wagons and teams, his horses without his fault, became suddenly frightened, perhaps at the flapping of a wagon cover, ran off, threw him out and on over the plaintiff. Plaintiff claims that defendant was intoxicated and had been driving rapidly and recklessly without control of his horses, for a considerable distance. Counsel for either side have stated matters in argument which we have not been able to find in the record, but we of course must be bound by the case as it appears in the record. The law of a case like this is plain and the authorities are cited by each party in their respective briefs. That of defendant is that if there is no substantial evidence tending to support the verdict we should reverse the judgment. That of plaintiff is that if there is any substantial evidence tending to support the verdict, we must affirm the judgment. And that the plaintiff is entitled to call to her aid any reasonable inference which may be drawn from the testimony as detailed by the witnesses. Ve have gone over the record and found that if the witnesses for plaintiff are to be credited (and that is a *655question for the jury) defendant was grossly careless and negligent. If these witnesses (Bacon, Logue, Erickson, Blake, Jennings, Clark, Kyker and Brown) are to be believed defendant was unquestionably drunk and was driving a spirited team along the highway at a reckless rate of speed. The jury had the right to attribute the escape of the team to defendant’s condition and conduct. There can be no doubt of this.

It is quite true that there was ample testimony for defendant to have justified a verdict in his behalf. But that is not the question. The question for us, under the law, is not what might have been upheld had the verdict been the other way, but what ought to be done with the verdict as it is. We find ourselves without liberty to disturb the result and hence affirm the judgment.

All concur.