Brogetski v. Detroit United Railway

131 N.W. 810, 166 Mich. 91, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 486
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1911
DocketDocket No. 129
StatusPublished

This text of 131 N.W. 810 (Brogetski v. Detroit United Railway) 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
Brogetski v. Detroit United Railway, 131 N.W. 810, 166 Mich. 91, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 486 (Mich. 1911).

Opinions

Ostrander, C. J.

The plaintiff, with a team and load of lumber, was driving west on the right-hand side of a paved street, in the center of which were defendant’s tracks. Behind him, going in the same direction, was one of defendant’s cars. In front of him was a point where the pavement ended and where the road curved to the south, so that if plaintiff continued on his way he would be obliged to cross the defendant’s tracks. Plaintiff knew that the car was behind him; at least, he so testified. The motorman operating the car saw the plaintiff ahead of him. Both of them knew about the crossing which has been mentioned. The motorman testified:

“Q. Now, back to the original question, you knew if that wagon continued in the direction in which it was going it would eventually go over that crosswalk ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. So that you knew if the wagon kept on going, and your car going the same way you were going, they would meet ? •
“A. We would have to cross.
”Q. It was either up to you or the man to stop; is that right?
“A. I understand you; of course it was up to either one or the other of us to stop.
“Q. As a matter of fact, neither one of you did stop in time?
“A. No, sir. * * *
“Q. I believe it has been testified in this case by two or three witnesses that the brick pavement ends at the planks; now, if a person came along here driving a horse on the right-hand side of the street, is there anything when he gets here to prevent him from turning north at Lumley, just as well as south across these planks ?
[93]*93“A. No, sir.
Q. You cannot state positively when you see a man going along there that he is not going on Lumley avenue ?
“A. No, sir. I was not taking any chances on him doing anything. The fact that Lumley avenue was there made no difference to me in the way I was conducting the car. I knew Lumley avenue was there. I was not taking any chance on him turning up there.”

As a matter of fact, the plaintiff reached the crossing a little ahead of the car. The witnesses are not entirely agreed, some saying, as it is averred in the declaration, that the car struck the lumber sticking out from the rear of the wagon. Others say that the car struck the wagon. All agree that the car was going very slowly, under brakes, and that it moved not more than from one to three feet beyond the point where the collision occurred. It is clear, therefore, that if the car had been going a very little slower or the plaintiff a very little faster the plaintiff would not have been injured. The jury was called upon to determine where the fault lay.

I am not prepared to hold that the trial court was in error in advising the jury that the defendant’s agents were bound to take some notice of the known conditions, and to operate the car with some regard for the possibility that the plaintiff would attempt to cross the track ahead of the car. It was precisely what a prudent motorman would do, and, if his testimony is believed, it is what defendant’s motorman did do. The plaintiff testified that he knew a car was coming behind him. He knew that his way lay across the railway tracks. 'All of this is recognized in the instruction which the court gave to the jury. The fault in the instruction is in the intimation, which, with other portions of the charge, I think it conveys, that plaintiff was not required, equally with the motorman, to act with reference to known conditions, including the one that the defendant’s car had the right of way.

Beyond this I am impressed that plaintiff sustained none of the allegations of negligence alleged in the declaration. The declaration contains various allegations of [94]*94the duty of the defendant and of breaches of duty. The testimony does not tend to prove as a cause of the plaintiff’s injury that the car was operated in disobedience of an ordinance of the city of Detroit, nor to support the allegation that the defendant employed and put in charge of the car incompetent, incautious, reckless, imprudent, and negligent motormen, nor that the car was not run at a lawful and reasonable rate of speed, in compliance with said ordinance.

The alleged breach of duty upon which the plaintiff must rely is the following:

“And the plaintiff further avers that the said defendant on the said day and date aforesaid, by its servants, agents, employés and representatives in a careless, negligent, and grossly careless and improper manner, did then and there operate, propel, run, and move one of its said cars, in, along and upon, and over the said public street, to wit, Michigan avenue at and near the corner of Central avenue, upon its tracks located as aforesaid, and at such a high rate of speed, to wit, thirty miles an hour or thereabouts so as to lose the safe and proper control of the same, thereby and then and there colliding with and running into a certain wagon then and there loaded with lumber, upon which the said plaintiff was then and there lawfully riding, and which wagon was then and there pulled along and upon the said public street and highway at or near the point and location aforesaid, by a team of horses attached to said wagon, and which team was then and there being driven by the said plaintiff in, along and upon the said street at the point and location aforesaid in a westerly direction and in front of said car and in close proximity to the tracks of the said defendant and in plain view and vision of the said defendant, and its motorneer and representatives in charge of the said car when without notice or warning to the said plaintiff, the said defendant and its servants in charge of one of its said cars, then and there carelessly, negligently and in a grossly careless manner propelled and moved the said car with great force and violence against and collided with the lumber then and there sticking out from the rear of the said wagon of the said plaintiff, then and there and thereby striking the said lumber with such force and momentum that it upset and turned the said wagon and lumber over.”

[95]*95Whether the plaintiff gave no indication that he would cross the track until the car was within about 50 feet of him, as the defendant claims, within which distance it was impossible to stop the car, or whether the motorman made a miscalculation as to his own speed or the speed of plaintiff, or both, there is no testimony tending to prove any gross or wanton negligence on the part of defendant’s agent, and none that he lost safe and proper control of the car. The declaration was amended at the trial by adding the descriptive words:

“While partly across the car tracks which curved northerly at the end of the paved part of Michigan avenue, plaintiff’s loaded wagon was struck by defendant’s car.”

This amendment did not change the theory indicated in the original declaration. We think it unnecessary to notice other assignments of error.

The judgment is reversed, and a new trial granted.

Stone, J., concurred with Ostrander, C. J.

Hooker, J.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W. 810, 166 Mich. 91, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brogetski-v-detroit-united-railway-mich-1911.