The following opinion was filed October 2, 1894:
WiNslow, J.The grounds of negligence claimed by the plaintiff were failure to fence the right of way and failure *525to give signals of the movement of the cars, as well as failure to keep a proper lookout. The verdict of the jury establishes the fact, in answer to the first three questions, that the train was negligently moved when the plaintiff was injured; but in response to the fourth question it was found that such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury. There is nothing inconsistent with this fourth finding elsewhere in the verdict, nor is it claimed that any material fact in controversy was not submitted to the jury ; hence it is very clear that if this fourth finding is founded upon sufficient evidence, and no error was committed by the trial court in its submission to the jury, the plaintiff cannot recover. To this question, therefore, we shall address ourselves.
There was but one error claimed in the admission and rejection of evidence, and as that alleged error related solely to evidence bearing on the first three questions, and could have no possible bearing on the answer to the fourth question, it is unnecessary to consider it.
The instructions applicable to the fourth question and to which plaintiff excepted will be given at length. After instructing the jury that the burden of proof with reference to certain questions was on the plaintiff, the court said:
“ You are instructed that it is incumbent on the party upon whom the burden of proof rests to establish the existence of a fact in controversy, to satisfy you by a preponderance of evidence that such fact does exist; otherwise, you should find to the contrary. That is to say, you should carefully weigh all the evidence produced by both parties bearing on any such controversy, and determine upon which side such evidence preponderates, if you can. If the same is so evenly balanced that you cannot determine on which side the same preponderates, or if you conclude that the preponderance of evidence is against the party on whom the burden of proof rests, or if, not with*526standing there is to your minds a preponderance of evidence tending to establish a fact in controversy, you are yet not satisfied of its existence, your finding should bo against the party on whom the burden of proof rests. Such fi nding should be in favor of the side on which the burden of proof rests only when joa are satisfied that the preponderance of evidence in respect to the controversy tends to establish the existence of the fact involved, and you are satisfied to a reasonable certainty that the fact does exist which such preponderance of evidence tends to establish. You are further instructed that the term ‘ preponderance of evidence,’ as here used, does not necessarily mean the greatest number of witnesses. It frequently happens that there are more witnesses on one side of a controversy than on the other, yet the greatest weight of evidence be on the side of the lesser number of witnesses; and in all such cases it is the weight of evidence that counts and should govern the finding of a jury. Keep in mind what is here said in regard to the degree of certainty to which you should arrive in respect to the existence of a fact in controversy in order to warrant a finding in favor of the party on whom the burden of proof rests, and the explanation of the term £ preponderance of evidence,’ and apply the same to each question submitted. . . .
“ The fourth question, which is as follows: ‘ If to the third question you say “ Yes,” was such failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence the proximate cause of the injury complained off ’ is a very important one in the case; for whatever failure of duty there may have been on the part of the trainmen, if such failure was not the proximate cause of the injury, then such injury cannot be attributed, in a legal sense, to any failure of duty on the part of the railway company; and to make it respond in damages to the injured party would, under such circumstances, be robbery, under the forms of law. Generally speaking, as the *527term ‘ proximate cause ’ is used in the question, it means the first or the efficient cause, the cause acting first and directly producing the injury, or which sets other causes in motion producing such injury; there being an intimate and close causal connection between such first cause and the final result. In either case such producing cause is held to reach to the injury, and to be, in a legal sense, proximate to it; but you are instructed in this connection that, in order that want of ordinary care on the part of the trainmen may be found to be the proximate cause of the injury, it is not enough to show, and for the jury to find, that such injury was a consequence of their acts; but, to.warrant such finding, it must appear to your satisfaction, from a preponderance of evidence, that it might reasonably have been expected by such trainmen, in the- exercise of ordinary care as men of intelligence having the knowledge that they may be reasonably expected and ought to have had in doing such work, that such accident might probably result from their conduct. If you do not find such to be the fact, or if you find, under all the circumstances, that, though the trainmen had exercised ordinary care, the accident would probably have happened just the same, then you cannot say that want of ordinary care on the part of such trainmen was the proximate cause of the accident. To illustrate: If the trainmen, in the exercise of ordinary care, before moving the cars should have blown the whistle and rung the engine bell, and they omitted so to-do, yet the child was so young that he probably would not have understood such signal and retired out of the range of danger, and the person, in charge of the child would not, in the exercise of ordinary care, have had time to have rescued the child from the place of danger before the car struck him, or have kept him out of such danger, and you so find the fact from the evidence, then you cannot say that want of ordinary care on the part of the trainmen in omitting such signal was the proximate cause of the injury. Bear in mind, *528in considering this question, that there is no evidence to show that the trainmen knew the child was on .the track •or near it; but whether they might have known such fact by the exercise of ordinary care, and omitted to exercise such care, is for your consideration.”
The errors which appellant claims in these instructions will be considered in their order.
1. It is claimed that it was error to say that the jury must be satisfied by the preponderance of the evidence, to a reasonable certainty, that a fact existed, before they could could find such fact; and it is said that this expression means practically the same as the expression “ satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt.” The expression used by the court was criticised in Allen v. Murray, 87 Wis. 41, but it did not become necessary to pass upon it in that case. We have examined the question, and are satisfied that the instruction is not erroneous. In the case of Beery v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 73 Wis. 197, an instruction that the jury must feel “ reasonably certain ” of a fact on which plaintiff’s case depended was held correct; and it was said that this did not mean that the proof must be clear and most satisfactory, but only that “ the preponderance of the evidence must convince their judgment of the truth of the fact found.” In Gores v. Graff, 77 Wis. 174, an instruction to •the effect that there need only be “a fair preponderance of the evidence tending to show the existence of a fact,” was distinctly disapproved; and it was held that the instruction should have been that, “if the jury were satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that all the facts essential to a recovery were proved, they should find for the plaintiff.” The instruction in question here seems to be entirely justified by the doctrines laid down in these two cases. It is very pertinently said by Mr. Justice Lyojst in the last-named case that “ there may have been a preponderance of evidence tending to prove such facts, or some or nil of them, and yet the evidence be quite insufficient to *529prove those facts.” A verdict in favor of the party who has the burden of proof in any case is a solemn determination that certain facts exist. Should such a determination be made merely because the evidence upon one side is a trifle weightier than that upon the other, when the evidence is so unsatisfactory that the judgment of the jury is not satisfied nor the reason convinced of the existence of the facts? We think not. The expression frequently used by the trial courts and frequently announced by appellate courts is that the minds of the jury must be satisfied or convinced by the preponderance of the evidence of the existence of a fact. Whitney v. Clifford, 57 Wis. 156. When the mind is satisfied or convinced of the existence of a fact, is not the mind reasonably certain of the fact? It seems to us that this question must be answered in the affirmative. Expressions may be found in text-books and decisions to the effect that a mere preponderance of the evidence is all that is required in civil cases, but it will be found that this principle is generally laid down in contradistinction to the rule of proof in criminal cases. Whitney v. Clifford, supra. In a general way this statement of the rule is correct, but that does not make the'amplification of the rule as given in this case incorrect. Telford v. Frost, 76 Wis. 172, was much relied on by appellant, but examination of the case clearly shows that the question here raised was not there presented. The only question there presented was as to the correctness of the general charge that the verdict must be in accord with the greater weight of evidence, and no request was made to charge the jury more specifically. Upon principle and authority, therefore, we hold that the charge of the court' upon this subject, though expressed more strongly and emphatically than is usual or perhaps advisable, was not error.
2. It is claimed that it was error for the trial court to charge the jury that, if the negligence of defendant’s serv*530ants was not the proximate cause of the injury, it would be robbery, under the forms of law, to compel it to respond in damages to the injured party. We perceive no error in this statement. This cannot be fairly understood as an intimation that the plaintiff is seeking to rob the defendant, but rather as a timely caution to the jury in a case-where human sympathy would naturally tend to lead the-judgment astray.
3. It is claimed that there was error in the definition of proximate cause. The only error pointed out is that in the illustration given to the jury the element of the want of a lookout on top of the car is left out. The jury had been previously fully and correctly charged, in connection with the third question, as to the duty of the company to keep a lookout in such a place as the one in question. The remarks excepted to were simply by way of illustration of the meaning of the term “ proximate cause,” and did not purport to state- the whole case. Furthermore, the instruction closes with the caution that the question whether the trainmen might have known that the child was on or near the track, by the exercise of ordinary care, and failed to exercise such care, is for the consideration of the jury. This plainly left to the jury the question whether a proper lookout would have avoided the accident. We see no error here.
We have reviewed the only questions which require attention as to the correctness of the fourth finding, and find no error. There was sufficient evidence upon which the-jury might properly find that no signals or lookouts would have been of any avail in avoiding the accident. This renders unnecessary the discussion of the question whether the contributory negligence of the mother would defeat the plaintiff’s recovery.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied November 13,1894.