Amley v. Saginaw Milling Co.

161 N.W. 832, 195 Mich. 189, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 672
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1917
DocketDocket No. 166
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 N.W. 832 (Amley v. Saginaw Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amley v. Saginaw Milling Co., 161 N.W. 832, 195 Mich. 189, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 672 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Stone, J.

This suit was brought under the survival act (3 Comp. Laws, § 10117 [3 Comp. Laws 1915, §• 12383]) to recover damages for injuries received by Joseph Amley, on August 20, 1915, at Linwood, Mich., and resulting in his death two weeks afterwards. Plaintiff is administrator of decedent’s estate. The deceased would have been 71 years old had he lived until April 7, 1916. He had lived in Linwood a number of years, was a blacksmith by trade, owned a blacks smith shop, and worked up to the time of his injury. His hearing, eyesight, and health were good for a man of his age, and he was possessed of all his mental faculties.

On the day upon which plaintiff’s decedent was injured, one William Miller, an employee of defendant, was at the village of Linwood, engaged in behalf of his employer in the purchase of hay. Between eleven and twelve o’clock in the forenoon Miller drove to the village in a Ford automobile furnished by defendant, There was but one street in the village. It was a county stone road running east and west. The road was about 66 feet wide, and there were sidewalks on the north and south sides of the road, but there were no crosswalks. The distance between the sidewalks was from 47 to 48 feet. On the day in question, upon arriving at Linwood, Miller drove the automobile to the Harris store on the south side of the road, and left the machine standing facing east, and he and his companion, another employee of defendant, walked across the road to the Rosebush Hotel on the north side of the road. The door of the store in front of which the machine was standing was 30 to 40 feet east of the door of the hotel. To go from the store to the hotel, one would go in a northwesterly direc[191]*191tion. After being at the hotel 10 or 15 minutes, Miller and his .companion crossed the road to the machine, and after cranking the machine, Miller, the driver, proceeded a short distance east and turned the machine north in a circle in the road and ran it in a westerly direction.

At the trial there was some conflict in the testimony of the witnesses, as to the position of the parties from the time Miller and his companion approached the car from the hotel. David Cummings, who was with deceased when he was injured, testified on behalf of plaintiff that he saw the automobile on the south side of the road facing east, as he and deceased started to cross the road, and that at this time the driver was about to get into the machine, and that the machine was standing still when deceased and Cummings started across the road, deceased going ahead, and that deceased was in the middle of the road when Miller got into the car. On his direct examination Mr. Cummings, among other things, testified:

“Mr. Amley came out of the store door. When he came out of the store door he spoke to me. * * * When I came out of the store there was a car standing in front of the store. * * * The day of the accident the weather was dry and fine.
“Q. Was the entire road space open to the driver on that day?
“A. Entire street was clear.
“Q. You say you saw a machine in front of the store?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you notice the machine particularly?
“A. Yes, sir. Mr. Amley attracted my attention to it. I noticed the lettering on the car, ‘Saginaw Milling Company.’ It was printed on the door of the car; the side of the car. The car was on the south side of the street. The car was facing east. After I met Mr. Amley we crossed the street. We crossed in a kind of angle over toward the hotel. The hotel is not directly across the street from the store that we were coming from. * * *
[192]*192“Q. To go from the door of the store to the door of the hotel you would go in a northwesterly direction?
“A. Yes, sir. If you made a straight line across the street from the door of the hotel to a point at right angles across the street, that point would be west from the store on the right about 30 or 40 feet. There is a scale across the street from the store. It is pretty directly north opposite the entrance of the store, pretty near direct straight across. After I met Mr. Amley and noticed this machine, I started to walk across the street on a little angle in a northwesterly direction.
“Q. Just describe to the jury, stand up and show where Mr. Amley stood with reference to where you were.
“A. Well, Mr. Amley was in this shape, and I was right opposite him here on the right, alongside of him, on the east side of him.
“Q. What did you do then?
“A. Well, the car approached right onto us, and I said to the old gentleman, ‘Watch out, he’ll run into us.’
“Q. Did you see this car when it started?
“A. I didn’t pay any attention to it; no.
“Q. Was there any one in the car when you noticed it?
“A. There were two men in it.
“Q. When you first noticed it?
“A. When they came towards us, yes.
“Q. Were they facing east at that time?
“A. They were facing east, the car was; yes.
“Q.'Was the car in motion?
“A. Not when I first noticed it.
“Q. When you were crossing the street was your back to this car, or was your face to it?
“A. Back. The car hit Mr. Amley. We had not got across the street yet when the machine hit Mr. Amley. We were about eight feet from the walk on the north side. Eight feet south of the north walk. ' The machine did not give us any warning.
“Q. Did you know it was coming west?
“A. Not until I turned my head; I heard the noise about '30 feet from me. The car was facing east. The driver took a circle and came back west. I called Mr. Amley’s attention to watch out. The machine [193]*193was then 30 feet east of us. It was just about on the scale. The scale was 30 feet east of where we were. * * * I stepped to one side, and just cleared myself, and it struck him. The machine was moving when it hit Mr. Amley. It was coming around there with a good fast speed. * * *
“Q. How close was the machine to Mr. Amley after you got done calling his attention to it?
“A. I don’t know how close it was. I just had' my face to him; told him to watch out; and I jumped myself and cleared myself; that is all the time I had.
“Q. After you got done telling him, where was the machine?
“A. It had run into- Mr. Amley.
“Q. Was it on him at that time you got done?
“A. It was just as quick as I could reverse around, the machine was onto him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.W. 832, 195 Mich. 189, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amley-v-saginaw-milling-co-mich-1917.