Blair v. Consolidated Freight Co.

41 N.W.2d 512, 327 Mich. 167, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 425
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1950
DocketDocket 84, Calendar 44,506
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 512 (Blair v. Consolidated Freight 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
Blair v. Consolidated Freight Co., 41 N.W.2d 512, 327 Mich. 167, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 425 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Reid, J.

This is an action at law brought to recover damages claimed to have been suffered as a result of collision between a tractor with attached trailer, owned by defendant and driven by defendant’s agent, Robert Pittsford, and a 1938 Plymouth coach automobile owned and driven by plaintiff Burt Blair.

Plaintiffs claim that Pittsford’s sole negligence caused the collision. Defendant claims the collision was caused by the sole negligence of plaintiff Blair.

Plaintiff Blair had been without sleep for 22 hours at the time of the accident. After working all day on November 22, 1946, he left the city of Ypsilanti, Michigan, at 5 p. m. He proceeded to Lansing, where he arrived at approximately 7:30 p. m. He *169 left Lansing at approximately 12:30 a. m. of the next morning, November 23d, and arrived at Jackson at 4 a. m. On leaving Jackson he took highway TJS-12 toward Ann Arbor. About 3 miles west of Ann Arbor, and at approximately 4:45 a. m., plaintiff’s vehicle, traveling in an easterly direction, collided with a tractor and trailer owned by the defendant, Consolidated Freight Company, a Michigan corporation, and driven in a westerly direction by defendant’s agent, Robert Pittsford. Defendant’s vehicle caught fire as a result of the collision and was destroyed. Pittsford was trapped inside the vehicle and burned to death. Plaintiff suffered certain in-' juries as a result of the collision, and his vehicle was damaged. It is the claim of the plaintiffs that the collision occurred in the extreme south lane , of US-12, a 3-lane highway. Defendant claims that the collision occurred in the extreme north lane of said highway.

Plaintiff Old Colony Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, was the insurer under a certain policy of insurance covering plaintiff Burt Blair’s vehicle for property damage insurance and became a party to the cause as subrogee to the rights of the plaintiff Burt Blair.

The cause proceeded to trial before a jury and a verdict in the amount of $5,417.63 was found for the plaintiff Burt Blair, and in the amount of $385.33 for the plaintiff Old Colony Insurance Company. Defendant made a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a motion for a new trial, both of which motions were denied by the trial court. Defendant appeals.

Defendant claims the verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence and that the court erred in admitting testimony of plaintiff Blair as to *170 matters equally within the knowledge of Pittsford, deceased ag*ent of defendant.

As to the latter point, the trial court ruled, in accordance with Noonan v. Volek, 246 Mich 377, Hanna v. McClave, 271 Mich 133, and Kalbfleisch v. Perkins, 282 Mich 27, that if the jury found any of plaintiff Blair’s testimony was on a matter equally within the knowledge of defendant’s deceased driver Pittsford they should disregard that part of plaintiff Blair’s testimony. Accordingly we do not find the court in error in that particular.

As to the evidence in the case at bar, the skid marks from the apparent point of impact to the overturned vehicles as they came to rest after the accident and the debris left at the apparent point of the impact are relied on by defendant to establish that the collision occurred in the northerly lane of the 3-lane highway, to-wit, the lane in which defendant’s tractor and trailer were properly proceeding westerly. The indicia thus relied on by defendant are opposed only by the testimony of plaintiff Blair.

Plaintiffs’ witness Koernke, a deputy sheriff, who arrived at the scene of the accident promptly after receiving a call on account of the accident at about 4:52 a. m., testified that he found defendant’s truck burning very fiercely, lying on its right side on the north side of the road, and the left real- tire of the Plymouth car (plaintiff’s car) on the south side of the road about 1 foot on the south edge of the 3-lane highway, the Plymouth car sitting at an angle, and the rear end of the trailer about 105 feet from the rear end of the Plymouth; that in the extreme north lane there was a crescent or “C” shaped gouge about 4 feet long in the pavement, appearing as though rubber, dirt and some other foreign matter had been there rubbed into the pavement, also chips out of *171 tlie pavement; that two sets of tracks (skid marks) led from the gouge northwest to the north edge of the pavement; that there were skid marks on the pavement leading from plaintiff’s car across the center lane and to the crescent. The witness also without objection testified that in his opinion the point of the collision was in the farthest north lane of traffic.

Defendant’s witness Fox, also a deputy sheriff, testified that he arrived at the scene of the accident between 5 and 5 -.30 of the morning of the accident and took photographs (later introduced in evidence) ; that there was a crescent-shaped heavy gouge in the north lane of the highway; that there were marks leading from the Plymouth into the highway; that there were 2 very distinct deep scratches in the pavement, one of which led from the horseshoe-(crescent) shaped gouge mark over to where the motor (of plaintiff’s Plymouth) was (shown in photograph, plaintiffs’ exhibit A, to be lying somewhat in front of the Plymouth car and on the south berm near the south edge of the south lane of the highway). The second mark led from the gouge mark and ran parallel to the first mark up to the left front axle of plaintiff’s car “where there was no wheel on and was apparently a scrape mark from that axle.”

Witness Fox testified against objection that in his opinion the impact took place at the crescent-shaped gouge which was in the north lane of the highway.

Defendant’s witness, Cecil N. Booth, a truck driver, testified that as he approached the scene of the accident he saw a billow of ñame and stopped, parking his car on the north berm; that he saw tracks of defendant’s truck wheel marks “before and after the point of impact and the crescent on the westbound lane of the pavement;” that at the point of impact one wheel track was off the pavement, that “the *172 tracks led from the point of impact off onto the shoulder and to the gouge on the shoulder off the ditch on the north side of the ditch on the road and then back in a curve to where the truck lay on the pavement;” that the Plymouth lay on the south shoulder and edge of the pavement; that there were tracks leading to the Plymouth in a southeasterly direction, angling across the pavement from the crescent-shaped mark in the pavement to the location of the gray car (plaintiff’s Plymouth); that at the crescent mark in the pavement he found small parts of the passenger automobile, the hub cap and tiny particles of glass the size of peanuts, together with vehicle dirt that was fresh, and hadn’t any road tracks through it.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 512, 327 Mich. 167, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-consolidated-freight-co-mich-1950.