Bahel v. Manning

36 L.R.A. 523, 70 N.W. 327, 112 Mich. 24, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 895
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 36 L.R.A. 523 (Bahel v. Manning) 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
Bahel v. Manning, 36 L.R.A. 523, 70 N.W. 327, 112 Mich. 24, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 895 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

Long, C. J.

This is an action on the case for damages for injuries caused by the defendant’s carelessly and negligently discharging a gun, the bullet from which passed through plaintiff’s right thigh and hip, permanently disabling him.

It appears that the defendant, at the time of the accident, was a resident of Saginaw, this State, and had gone to Otsego Lake on a hunting trip. He had formerly lived at that village for some years, and he and the plaintiff were well acquainted. On the evening of November 13, 1894, the plaintiff, learning that the defendant was at the hotel in the village,- called to visit him. As the plaintiff entered the public room of the hotel, he found the defendant seated in front of a wash-stand on the east side of the room, fixing his gun. He had taken the stock off and the works out, and was fixing the spring, the barrel of the gun lying across his lap. The plaintiff became seated near the defendant, when some conversation was had between them in reference to the gun. During the day the defendant had loaded the gun,—that is, had put a number of loaded cartridges into the magazine,—but had had trouble with discharging some of them. The gun had twice failed to explode the cartridges during the day, and he took it back to the hotel with the cartridges in the magazine. He testifies that, before he commenced working on the gun to take it apart, he worked the lever which extracts the cartridges from the gun until it failed to throw out any more cartridges, and then took the gun apart, and it was in that condition when the plaintiff [26]*26came in. The parties differ as to the position of the gun >and the position occupied by each after the plaintiff came into the room. The plaintiff testified that, after he had spoken to the defendant, he “asked him about the gun, and what was the matter with it, and defendant said the spring was not stiff enough; that it wouldn’t set the cartridges off,—meaning the fire. I said, ‘Perhaps, if you put a piece of leather under the spring, it will make it so it will stand during the hunting season.’ He finally took it apart and put the piece of leather under the spring, and put the spring, with the rest of the works, back into the gun, turned it up like that (indicating), and drew the gun up like that (indicating), and discharged it. * * * The gun was pointed so that when it went off it hit me in the leg.” He further testified that the gun was on the defendant’s knees, and that he put the works in, and “then it was ready to see if the spring was any stiffer. He just turned it and drew it onto me.” On cross-examination he testified that the gun was not pointed at him until the spring was fixed and defendant brought it up to try it. He was asked:

‘ ‘ Rid you say anything about trying it ?
“A. Yes, sir. After he put the leather under the spring, then I told him to try it,—see if he could get it any better.
"Q. There was only one way for him to try it?
“A. He could try it by raising the hammer and not letting it snap down.
“Q. Didn’t he do that,—raise it with his thumb?
“A. No; he raised the hammer and snapped it, and. drew it onto me. I didn’t tell him to draw it onto me. I leaned back in my chair. I saw him do this. In order to get away, I had to get forward. It happened so quick I didn’t have time to take a second thought. * * *
“Q. When you said to him to try it, of course the only thorough way to try that would be to cock the gun, and let it pull the trigger, and let it strike down ?
“A. But he needn’t point it .at anybody. * * *
“Q. Did you think the gun was loaded?
“A. No, sir, I didn’t; but I ain’t in the habit of point[27]*27ing a gun at anybody, or having it pointed'at me, whether it was loaded or not.”

The witness further testified that during all the time he was in the room, and up to the time when the gun was snapped off, he was not in range with the muzzle.

The defendant’s statement of the affair is that he had been in the woods, and had shot at a deer or two that day, and that the gun had failed to go off; that that evening he was trying to tighten the mainspring; that, when the plaintiff came in, defendant showed him the cartridge which the gun had refused to break, and had only dented the top of it a little; that, after fixing the spring, he was working the hammer, when the plaintiff said, ‘ ‘ Snap it off; it won’t hurt it; ” that he did snap it off, when it went off, and the plaintiff was injured. He testified further that the gun was in the same position from the time he started to work at it until it was discharged; that he believed it was entirely unloaded, and that there was nothing that occurred there that night to indicate that there was anything wrong with the mechanism of the gun; that the lever operated as it usually did when emptying the gun and magazine of the cartridges; that he had no recollection of any change in the plaintiff’s position or of his own after the plaintiff sat down there; that the gun pointed in his direction all the time from the time he sat down until it was discharged; that he did not pick it up, raise the hammer and bring it around towards the plaintiff, and then pull it off. The defendant further testified that he supposed he had all the cartridges out of the gun and out of the magazine; that his attention was called to this before the plaintiff came in by a Mr. Callahan, who asked, “Is there anything in that gun ? ” and defendant told him there was not, and that he said to him, ‘ ‘ Do you suppose I would go to work to fix a gun with any loads or cartridges in it ? ” that he pumped the lever to show him there was not, probably five or six times; that this was the usual way of throwing out the cartridges. It was shown, how[28]*28ever, by the testimony of other witnesses, that, if the cartridge was carried from the magazine to the barrel by working the lever after the works had been put back into the gun, the cartridge would come into plain view of the one working the lever.

The defendant presented several requests to charge to the court, relating to the question of defendant’s negligence. These the court refused, but charged the jury upon that question as follows:

“It seems from some cause,-—-the witnesses are not able to explain just how,—one cartridge was not removed, and the result was this accident. The pointing of the gun, under such circumstances, at another, is made an unlawful act by the statutes of this State. The fact that the defendant had used the precautions which he has enumerated, for the purpose of determining whether the gun was or was not loaded, will not relieve him from liability, from the consequences of his negligent act in pointing the gun at the plaintiff, raising the hammer, and pulling the trigger, which were the immediate acts which caused, a discharge of the gun and resulted in injury to the plaintiff. A man is not excused from his act in injuring another by pointing and discharging a gun at him from the fact that he supposed he had taken all necessary precautions prior to the doing of this for the purpose of ascertaining and determining that the gun was not loaded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 L.R.A. 523, 70 N.W. 327, 112 Mich. 24, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bahel-v-manning-mich-1897.