Clark v. Shefferly

78 N.W.2d 155, 346 Mich. 332
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketDocket 12, Calendar 46,793
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 78 N.W.2d 155 (Clark v. Shefferly) 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
Clark v. Shefferly, 78 N.W.2d 155, 346 Mich. 332 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Black, J.

This negligence case was tried to court and jury in Detroit common pleas. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1,133.33 resulted in appeal to and affirmance by the Wayne circuit court. Defendants appeal to us for reversal of such affirming judgment.

The circuit judge, by careful opinion, assembled the facts and declared his decision on appeal as follows:

“Plaintiff boarded and became a passenger in defendants’ cab at about 6 a.m. on February 12, 1955. He entered the cab in the vicinity of Adams and St. Antoine and directed the driver to take him to 2355 Fullerton avenue in the same city. It was a dark night and it had been snowing. There was ice on the streets. When the cab arrived at the Fullerton destination, plaintiff paid his fare while still in the cab and opened the right-rear door and started to get out of the cab.
“The plaintiff then testified to the happening of the accident as follows:
“ T got out of the cab right into the street. I had my left hand on the door and the cab started moving and then he caused me to slip and grab with the right hand and the door closed on that smail finger (indicating), and then I hollered ever since. He didn’t hear me. He increased his speed at the .time when the door snatched the finger off.
■ “ ‘Q. {By Fineberg, continuing): Did the driver stop ?
*334 “ ‘A. Well, I had to run and I was hollering and running; he finally stopped on LaSalle.’
“The plaintiff’s small finger on, this right hand was injured. The defendant, Nabato, who was driving the cab, took the plaintiff to the Highland Park General Hospital. The plaintiff had 2 operations on his finger which entailed grafting. He was unemployed for 3 weeks and 2 days. The hospital bill was $247, and the doctor bill was $140.
“At the conclusion of plaintiff’s proofs, the defendants made a motion for no cause for action, which was denied. The case went to the jury, and the jury returned a verdict of $1,133.33 against both defendants. The defendants appealed.
“The defendants cited the cases of McIntyre v. Kunsky Theatres Corporation, 256 Mich 634; Camp v. Spring, 241 Mich 700; Abent v. Michigan Cab Company, 279 Mich 617; Kerr v. City of Detroit, 255 Mich 446, in support of their appeal. In each of those cases the plaintiff was found to be guilty of contributory negligence. Plaintiff having placed his fingers or hand in the jam of the door, which, was a dangerous position, was found to be the negligence. In the Abent Case, supra, the Court stated (p 618) :
“ ‘Ordinarily a door jamb or crack is no place for finger.’
“However, the facts in the present case are in no way similar to those cases cited. Plaintiff hired a taxicab to take him to his destination. The cab driver, when he arrived at his passenger’s destination, stopped the cab in the center of the street instead of at the curb. It was dark and the street was icy and slippery. Plaintiff paid his fare and started to alight. He placed-his left hand on the door- of the cab and as he stepped down the cab started moving. The movement of the cab caused him to slip and he grabbed the edge of the door with his right hand. The door closed on plaintiff’s right hand, causing the injuries to the little finger.
“The negligence of the defendant in starting up his cab before the plaintiff had alighted and reached *335 a place of safety was the proximate cause of the accident. The plaintiff was not guilty of any contributory negligence. Taxicabs are common carriers and as such owe a high degree of care to the passengers.”

First: The initial question is fairly disclosed in the circuit judge’s aforesaid ruling. He rightly appraised as inapplicable the cases cited by defendants and found that they afforded no ground for direction of a verdict. This is a simple case of averred negligence and freedom from contributory negligence presenting questions of fact only on the proof, and it is controlled so far as right to a directed verdict is concerned by common-law rules given in Detroit & Milwaukee R. Co. v. Van Steinburg, 17 Mich 99. * The jury was entitled to find in accordance with plaintiff’s theory and favorably-viewed testimony that the cab driver should have delayed his start until plaintiff, whose left hand rested on the opened door of the cab, was safely clear of the cab. It, the jury, was' likewise entitled to find from such testimony that the cab driver could and should have perceived, considering slippery condition of the pavement and the fact of the open door, that plaintiff was momentarily steadying himself by such means *336 and might be injured by immediate forward movement of the cab. Indeed, it cannot be seriously questioned that the proof when favorably viewed discloses causal negligence on the part of the cab driver. *

So the real question in the case is the issue of contributory negligence. When we undertake to test a motion for direction of verdict addressed to contributory negligence, our duty is to judge the plaintiff’s conduct, not alone by what he did or did not do, but by the conjoining facts pertaining to conduct of his adversary litigant. Mr. Justice Cooley picks up from here. I quote as follows from pp 118, 119 of report in the Van Steinburg Case:

“Negligence, as I understand it, consists in a want of that reasonable care which would be exercised by a person of ordinary prudence under all the existing circumstances, in view of the probable danger of injury. The injury is, therefore, one which must take into consideration all these circumstances, and it must measure the prudence of the party’s conduct by a standard of behavior likely to have been adopted by other persons of common prudence. Moreover, if the danger depends at áll upon the action of any other person under a given set of circumstances the prudence of the party injured must be estimated in view of what he had a right to expect from such other person, and he is not to be considered blamable if the injury has resulted from the action of another which he could not reasonably have anticipated. Thus the problem is complicated by the necessity of talcing into account the 2 sets of circumstances affecting the conduct of different persons, and is only to be satisfactorily solved by the jury placing themselves in the position of the injured person, and ex *337 amining those circumstances as they then presented themselves to him, and from that standpoint judging whether he was guilty of negligence or not.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W.2d 155, 346 Mich. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-shefferly-mich-1956.