Cousino v. Briskey

114 N.W.2d 365, 366 Mich. 1, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 466
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1962
DocketDocket 62, 63, 64, Calendar 48,876, 48,877, 48,974
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 N.W.2d 365 (Cousino v. Briskey) 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
Cousino v. Briskey, 114 N.W.2d 365, 366 Mich. 1, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 466 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Souris, J.

(for reversal). Two automobiles approached a virtually blind rural intersection at speeds in excess of 40 miles per hour. The intersection was uncontrolled by any sign or. signal indicating right-of-way. Neither driver applied brakes prior to the collision. The automobiles met in the intersection, with plaintiffs’ car striking defendants’ car at about the right rear wheel. Trial was to a circuit judge without a jury and resulted in judgments for plaintiffs. Among other errors claimed to have been committed, defendants claim that plaintiff driver was guilty of contributory negligence and the trial judge’s finding to the contrary was against the great weight of the evidence.

We agree. CLS 1956, § 257.649 (Stat Ann 1957 Cum Supp § 9.2349), which gave precedence to the plaintiff driver on the right, did not warrant her crossing a blind intersection at unslackened speed under the circumstances disclosed by this record. Her own testimony, elicited both on direct and cross-examination, summarized and quoted below, compels reversal.

Mr. Justice Black has written for affirmance. As this Court recently said in Schneider v. Pomerville, 348 Mich 49, at p 55, “When evidence is appraised to determine clear preponderance thereof, forceful argument each way subsists to the last and usually survives final judgment,” a circumstance from which we would expect not infrequently to encounter “forceful argument each way” even in the opinions rendering final judgment.. However, no such “force *3 ful argument” is here made in the opinion for affirmance. It does not consider the evidence of plaintiff driver’s contributory negligence, an issue properly pleaded by defendants as required by section 3a of Court Buie No 23 (1945) and, in our view, proved by them by a clear preponderance of tbe evidence. Tbe opinion for affirmance reserves its evidentiary comment only for tbe proofs relating to defendant driver’s unquestioned negligence. Its sharp shafts are, instead, aimed straight at tbe heart of our undertaking—the right of this Court to review a trial judge’s findings of fact in a nonjury law action. If tbe views expressed in that opinion are right, we approach the day of judicial fact-finding infallibility by abdication' of our power, and denial of our duty, to review tbe findings of fact made by our trial judges in such actions. It is said that: “Surely, on this distinctive record of disputed facts and inferences, we have no more right to disturb tbe trial judge’s conclusion in such regard than if it bad been reported by a jury.” If this be tbe law of this State, we have indeed traveled great distances since Schneider v. Somerville, supra; Northwest Auto Co. v. Mulligan Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., 348 Mich 279; and Barnes v. Beck, 348 Mich 286, all written for a unanimous Court in 1957.

Tbe scope of our review of a trial judge’s fact findings is different from, and broader than, our review of a jury’s findings. This Court put it this way in Schneider, at pp 54 and 55:

“Our duty under * * * Court Buie No 64 (1945), the question being duly posed and saved for review, is to sift tbe evidence for determination whether it clearly preponderates in favor of tbe appellant’s cause. Necessarily, tbe judicial sieve *4 will be of finer mesh than the one correspondingly-employed here on review of denial of motion for new trial in a jury case. This is as it should be. A jury’s verdict-view of facts is .entitled to an even higher degree of appellate respect than is a judge’s verdict-view of the same facts, learned though the judge may be in law. For reasons known well to students of American history, a finding of fact by ‘the twelvers’ is more apt to be sound than that of one man. If this be right, our task at bar is bound to be a more difficult one than if the judgment below had been entered on verdict of a jury. When in rare instance a jury’s verdict is judged contrary to overwhelming weight of evidence, the conclusion must be so obvious that verdict-sustaining argument loses all force. On the other hand, when evidence is appraised to determine clear preponderance thereof, forceful argument each way subsists to the last and usually survives final judgment.”

In Northwest Auto Co. v. Mulligan Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., at p 284, the Court added the limiting qualification that critical proof has been overlooked or ignored before we may reverse or remand qn a clear preponderance assignment of error:

“Defendant’s proof, supporting its claim for such damages, seems quite persuasive so far as this printed record can or does disclose. Ha'd this Court been constituted and authorized to try law cases anew on pleadings and transcripts, we might agree with defendant that its said proof appears more convincing than that received in opposition. But such is not our province. We must continue to point out to the profession what is now a commonplace— that the function of deciding credibility and finding facts is committed to our courts of original jurisdiction; that We cannot reverse or remand simply because the facts found below are forcefully opposed by others shown in the record, and that we do not reverse or remand on bid of a ‘clear preponderance’ assignment in the absence of convincing circum *5 stances disclosing that crucial proof has been overlooked or ignored. No more need be said in view of recent treatment of this apparently troublesome rule of practice (Schneider v. Pomerville, 348 Mich 49; and Barnes v. Beck, supra).”

And in Barnes v. Beck, in a footnote at p 290, the Court succinctly and accurately states the nature and the scope of, and the limitations upon, our review of nonjury law actions brought to us on a claim that judgment was contrary to the preponderance of the evidence:

“In short, it takes convincing proof (as in Schneider v. Pomerville, 348 Mich 49) that the judicial trier of facts has overlooked or ignored and thus did not test crucial testimony to warrant reversal or remand by force of an assignment addressed to clear preponderance. Indeed, to sustain such an assignment, we must be shown what is rightly known as a ‘glaring error’ (Besser Manufacturing Co. v. United States, 343 US 444, 448 [72 S Ct 838, 96 L ed 1063]).”

With due regard for our limited role in this appeal, we conclude that a clear preponderance of the evidence established plaintiff driver’s negligence as a contributory cause of the collision and that the trial judge would have so found had he not overlooked crucial proof concerning obstructions to the observations plaintiff driver attempted to make along the intersecting road. The facts with which we deal are as follows:

One sunny, clear, dry, June afternoon, Mrs. Cousino was driving west on the gravel surface of Erie road. Melvin Briskey, one of the defendants, was driving north on Douglas road. Douglas has a blacktop surface until it passes the intersection at Erie, after which it, too, becomes a gravel road. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.W.2d 365, 366 Mich. 1, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousino-v-briskey-mich-1962.