Lemke v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.

■TimliN, J.

By questions 2, 3, and 4 of the verdict three of tbe six grounds of negligence in tbe complaint are established. Tbe other grounds are not found and were dropped out of tbe case, apparently because not supported by evidence or relevant under tbe evidence as tbe facts finally appeared therein. This is tbe usual and proper practice. Tbe third question is faulty, especially because tbe court failed to specify by instructions what are tbe legal tests of a proper and sufficient headlight. This left tbe case exposed on this point to tbe danger of a jury setting up a standard of its own in this particular. But it is not faulty in that tbe fact covered is irrelevant or nonactionable. Tbe fifth question is very comprehensive and sweeping, but verdicts in this form have been approved (Halwas v. American G. Co. 141 Wis. 127, 123 N. W. 789) or tbe error held nonprejudicial (Twentieth Century Co. v. Quilling, 136 Wis. 481, 486, 117 N. W. 1007). Tbe appellant criticises this question on tbe ground that tbe jury may have found the defendant guilty of a want of ordinary care which was tbe proximate cause of tbe accident in some particular not covered by tbe complaint or even not actionable. This appears to raise tbe question whether we must presume error or regularity. We have a situation where at *538least two grounds of negligence averred in tbe complaint are specifically found, one additional ground submitted in too general words, then a sweeping question covering the defendant’s negligence and proximate cause without specifying of what such negligence consisted. The defendant requested the submission of four questions, three of which related to contributory negligence of the plaintiff and one related to the negligence of both plaintiff and defendant and was as follows: “Did the motorman sound his gong before the collision in time to have enabled the plaintiff, in the exercise of ordinary care, to have left the track and thus avoided the collision?” The situation presented is not that presented in Sladky v. Marineite L. Co. 107 Wis. 250, 83 N. W. 514. There by the first question of the special verdict the court submitted to the jury a non-issuable fact not charged in the pleadings as a ground of negligence, and by instructions made this cover almost everything that could have been covered by a general verdict. Neither is the situation analogous to that in Lee v. C., St P., M. & O. R. Co. 101 Wis. 352, 77 N. W. 714. In the latter case the defendant requested special findings upon facts put in issue by the pleadings, and the court refused and merely asked the jury whether the defendant’s servants in charge were guilty of a want of ordinary care in backing the train at the time of plaintiff’s injury. The case last cited and the case of Bigelow v. Danielson, 102 Wis. 470, 78 N. W. 599, are explained and distinguished in Baxter v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 104 Wis. 307, 80 N. W. 644. There the defendant proposed four questions which were rejected, and all covered by one more general question submitted. In the instant case three charges of negligence contained in the complaint were dropped out by failure of proof, three were retained and specifically found on, one, however, by a question defective in form. A situation arising upon special verdict similar in some respects to that in the instant case is disclosed in the report of Halwas v. American G. Co. 141 Wis. 127, 123 N. W. 789.

*539Where four separate grounds or acts of negligence are found and four other separate answers declare that each is a proximate cause of the injury, if either of the first four is supported by evidence it is not material whether the others be or not. Szewczyk v. E. W. Ellis L. Co. 146 Wis. 452, 131 N. W. 977. Examples of special verdicts upheld where several acts of negligence were found and each found to be a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury: Fonder v. General C. Co. 146 Wis. 1, 130 N. W. 884; Driscoll v. Allis-Chalmers Co. 144 Wis. 451, 129 N. W. 401. Under the statute of this state which requires the affirmance of judgments by this court except where both error and prejudice to the appellant are made to appear, we cannot disturb the judgment on account of such informalities in the special verdict. While the third question of the special verdict is disapproved as to form, especially when unaccompanied with proper instructions, no more appropriate question was suggested by appellant in its stead, and the facts found by that question may be dropped out of consideration and the question treated as if the jury had answered it in the affirmative, and still there is sufficient in the^ verdict to support this judgment. For the second and fourth questions itemized certain grounds of negligence, and the general finding of negligence which was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury in the fifth question must be held to refer by fair implication to the items of negligence found by the second and fourth questions. Any other disposition of this case would be the result of a presumption of prejudicial error in which we cannot indulge. The form of the second and fourth questions submitted is criticised. They cannot be considered models, but they are fairly within the discretion vested in the circuit judge with reference to form of questions submitted. On the whole we must decline to reverse on account of alleged errors in the form of the special verdict under the circumstances here appearing.

The trial court in its instructions defined ordinary care and *540proximate cause, stating, among other tilings, that negligence is the proximate canse of an injury only when that injury is the natural and probable result of such negligence and when in the light of attending circumstances the injury ought to have been foreseen by a person of ordinary care and prudence. Such instructions have been approved by this court. The jury was further instructed that it was the duty of the defendant to operate its street railway in such maimer as not to obstruct or prevent the common public travel of the highway and to provide its cars with suitable fenders or pilots so arranged and constructed as to protect the lives, limbs, and bodies of all persons that may be upon the highway against injury by striking or running over them. This appears to be a sort of a paraphrase of the statute law on the subject. It was not applicable to any question arising upon the evidence or submitted to the jury. It is not'incorrect in law, and if it can be made ground for reversal it must be because the jury was thereby misled. It was stated by the trial court as a sort of introduction or prelude to a statement of the duty of those traveling in other vehicles upon the highway. It should not have been given in this case, considering the issues submitted by the special verdict. But we are not satisfied that the jury was misled or that the appellant was prejudiced thereby, consequently it affords no ground for reversal.

We have considered the instructions requested by the appellant. We consider that all matters correctly covered by these requests were also sufficiently covered by the instructions given, at least to such extent that we cannot say that any prejudicial error resulted from the refusal. Under present statutes and rules we cannot find in the record sufficient cause for reversal

By the Gowrt. — Judgment affirmed.