Blake v. Brama

72 N.W.2d 10, 343 Mich. 27, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 295
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1955
DocketDocket 12, Calendar 46,268
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 10 (Blake v. Brama) 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
Blake v. Brama, 72 N.W.2d 10, 343 Mich. 27, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 295 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Boyles, J.

Plaintiff, administratrix with will annexed of the estate of Wayne Earl Blake, deceased, brought this suit in the circuit court for Wayne' county against the defendant as administrator of the estate of Ludwig Brama, deceased, to recover damages for the death of Blake caused by an automobile collision, which occurred in Nebraska. The case was tried in Wayne county by jury and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s proofs the trial judge granted a motion of the defendant for a directed verdict of no cause for action. Judgment for the defendant was entered accordingly, from which plaintiff appeals.

Defendant’s motion was planted on 3 grounds— that the plaintiff had not introduced sufficient proof to go to the jury (1) as to who was driving the defendant’s automobile at the time of the accident or (2) to show gross negligence under the Nebraska guest statute; and (3) even if it was shown that the defendant’s decedent was driving the car, plaintiff’s dee'edent had assumed the risk of excessive speed. *29 The court charged the jury that there was sufficient proof to submit plaintiff’s proofs to the jury as to the first and second questions raised, as issues of fact, but directed a verdict for the defendant on the third ground that under the Nebraska law the plaintiff’s decedent had assumed the risk of the manner in which the defendant’s decedent was driving the car when the accident occurred. The court also said, “at least they were engaged in a joint enterprise,” but that question is not raised or briefed here on the appeal. Of course the plaintiff-appellant agrees here with the trial judge in holding with the plaintiff on the first 2 questions raised on the motion — that there was sufficient proof to go to the jury as to who was driving the ear, and as to gross negligence of the defendant’s decedent. But plaintiff-appellant disagrees with the trial court’s holding that plaintiff’s decedent, as a matter of law, had assumed the risk of the defendant’s decedent having been grossly negligent in driving at an excessive rate of speed when trying to pass to the left of another automobile on the highway.

The defendant-appellee argues here that even if the trial court gave a wrong reason by directing a verdict for the defendant on the third question raised in the motion, nonetheless the directed verdict for the defendant should stand, on either 1 or both of the other 2 grounds urged by the defendant for a directed verdict.

Necessarily, decision here must depend on the facts adduced by the plaintiff, and the Nebraska law to be applied. For the purposes of decision on the motion for a directed verdict, plaintiff’s proofs must be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. On or about September 8, 1950, the 2 decedents, Blake and Brama, left Michigan in the automobile of the defendant’s decedent, Brama, on a hunting trip to Wyoming. They were to take *30 turns- driving. There was testimony tending to show ■ that when they arrived at a point about a mile west of Cody, Nebraska, on TJS-20, defendant’s decedent was driving. However, this is a question of fact now disputed by the defendant. The claim of the plaintiff that the car was being driven at a very high rate of speed, claimed to have been 85 miles per hour, is also now disputed. Plaintiff’s proofs show that the defendant’s decedent driver attempted to go to the left of another car traveling in the same direction approximately 15 miles per hour, .the driver of which had signaled intention to make a left turn into a connecting highway. Mr. Wobig, the driver of the slower car, a Ford pickup truck, testified:

“I was going up the highway and I looked back and seen this car coming a considerable distance, 3 or 4 hundred yards to the rear; I had a short distance to travel before it would be reasonable to signal; just a short distance, 150 feet or so, then I started my signal for a left-hand turn, straight out, like that (witness demonstrated arm signal); as I approached' the turn I was moving up toward the center of the-road, I started to turn past the center of the road and I kind of took a half look to see how close this car would be — it was up to the back end of my pickup — within about 3 feet of the back end of my pickup, clear over to the extreme left side of the highway, going around me; I tried to stop, and this car, the car from Michigan, kind of swayed over and caught my bumper and the fender on my pickup and then it kept going; it went across the intersection and 1 wheel went over the edge of the highway; went up the shoulder of the highway for — oh ■ — 250 feet; then it was pulled hack to the center of the highway where it turned over about 3 times; there was so much dust I couldn’t just exactly see it all. * * *
*31 “Q\ And to your best judgment, about how far were you from the place where you would turn south across the highway when you first saw this car coming from the east ?
"A. Well, it was quite a ways back down the road when I first saw it; l looked back before I got'anywiieres near the turn off,- — oh-—I would say it was 300 or 400 yards possibly more, back.
"Q. Then after you saw it that far back about how far did you travel before you started to turn to the left?
“A. Well, I moved up a short distance; otherwise it would be too long a signal; I didn’t think that was necessary; so I moved up; possibly 150 feet before I started my signal, then 1 signalled for a city block, or better tñan 300 feet.
“Q. Then you turned off to the left?
- “A. Yes, from where I was to turn.
“Q. Then about how far, when you did signal that you were' going to turn to the left, about how far pack of you was this car that later turned over ?
"A. Well, I took a second look; it was almost up to my pickup; it was over on the .left side and going around me already, when I went to take the second look.
“Q. Were you able to form an opinion, by that time, from and after when you first saw this car, ■as to the speed that this car was travelling?
“A. About 85 miles an hour.”

He testified further that he was not able to see of identify the man who was driving the Michigan car; that the smaller man (Brama) was found about 30 feet closer than the other man to the turned-over car; also, that the time of the accident was near sundown, but that he could still see for quite a distance and that the headlights of both cars were lighted. There was no other traffic in sight. Mrs. Wobig, his wife, who was with him in the front seat of the pickup with their children, also testified (without *32 objection) that in ber opinion the Michigan car, from the speed which she had looked back and observed its approach, was at least 80 miles per hour. There was further testimony for the plaintiff from the owner of a filling station where the 2 decedents had stopped, about 38 miles before they reached the place of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 10, 343 Mich. 27, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-brama-mich-1955.