Elbert v. City of Saginaw

109 N.W.2d 879, 363 Mich. 463, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 480
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1961
DocketDocket 11, Calendar 48,100
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 109 N.W.2d 879 (Elbert v. City of Saginaw) 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
Elbert v. City of Saginaw, 109 N.W.2d 879, 363 Mich. 463, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 480 (Mich. 1961).

Opinions

Dethmers, C. J.

{dissenting). Plaintiff’s ward,, his son, while 2 years and 8 months of age, fell into a water-filled street excavation 4 feet deep, 4 feet wide, and 16 feet long, sustaining personal injuries. Defendant Fattore Company had made and maintained the excavation under a contract with defendant city to lay water mains. Suit is for damages resulting from the injuries. The jury returned a verdict of no cause for action. From an order denying plaintiff’s motion for new trial he appeals.

The excavation was near an intersection in the street and 12 feet from the nearest point in the sidewalk. It was across the street and a couple of houses removed from plaintiff’s residence. It was surrounded by a long, sawhorse-type of wooden barrier on the street side; on the opposite side, between it and the sidewalk, by the pile of dirt, higher than the wooden barrier, which had been removed from the excavation, and at each end by boards laid across from the top of the wooden barrier to the top of the dirt pile. It was in a well-developed residential area. Children passed it in going to a nearby school.

The child and his mother had been in their back yard where she was engaged in hanging up clothes. After a few minutes there, the child went into the-house through the back door. The mother went into the house to look for him and, not locating him there, found him, according to her testimony, 5 to 6 minutes after he had left her, floating, head down, [465]*465in the excavation. No one testified as to how or from what place he had fallen into it.

Plaintiff claims as error that defense counsel injected into the trial, and the court permitted to be considered as an issue, the contributory negligence of the child’s parents as a defense to his action. The incidents relied upon for this contention are: (1) Inclusion in defendant Pattore Company’s answer of a paragraph which, so plaintiff says, amounted to raising the defense of contributory negligence of the parents. This, upon plaintiff’s motion, was ordered stricken from the answer before trial. (2) The statement of defense counsel at pretrial conference that the defendant company claimed that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the parents in permitting so young a child to be out on the street alone and unattended, and, upon plaintiff’s objection, the court’s failure to comment thereon. (3) The defendant company’s motion to consolidate the child’s case with that of the father for his medical and out-of-pocket expenses and the court’s refusal on the grounds that the contributory negligence of the parents, while a defense in the latter, could not be so in the former case. (4) Plaintiff’s motion, before trial, that the court instruct defendants not to inject the issue of the parents’ negligence into the trial, and the court’s refusal so to do, the court saying that it had already ruled the matter of contributory negligence out of the case and that it could not and would not rule on the propriety of counsel’s trial tactics until they occurred. (5) Defense counsel’s questions to plaintiff’s witness as to whether the mother previously had permitted the child to play outside alone, to which, upon plaintiff’s objection, the court held the answers would be inadmissible, declining, however, to instruct defense counsel about future references to this matter during trial, saying that it would rule on questions as they arose. (6) [466]*466The court’s overruling plaintiff’s objection to the question whether the mother had told the witness where she was when the child fell in. (7) Defense counsel’s saying, in his opening statement, that they maintained that they had a right to assume that parents of children of such tender years would take such care as is obvious. (8) The court’s giving defendants’ request to charge that they claimed they had a right to assume that children too young to protect themselves would not be allowed by their parents in the street without care or supervision and that defendants claimed that they could not have foreseen that parents would have permitted this.

Any of these incidents occurring before trial are without. significance insofar as plaintiff’s claimed right to a new trial is concerned.

Plaintiff cites Keyser v. Chicago & Grand Trunk R. Co., 56 Mich 559 (56 Am Rep 405), as holding that a child of this age cannot legally be guilty of contributory negligence, and cases beginning with Shippy v. Village of Au Sable, 85 Mich 280, and ending with Conners v. Benjamin I. Magid, Inc., 353 Mich 628 (67 ALR2d 1001), to the effect that the contributory negligence of the parents is no defense to the action of their child. In the instant case the court expressly charged the jury that they were not to consider the question of the contributory negligence of either the child or the parents because these would be no defense to this action.

To plaintiff’s claims of error in this connection the answer of defendants and of the trial court is that the defendants were not raising as a defense the contributory negligence of the parents, but, instead, were undertaking to establish that defendants were guilty of no negligence which was a proximate cause of the child’s injury and to invoke the related doctrine of foreseeability. They contend that their [467]*467claim as to their right to assume that such child would not be permitted alone on the street goes to the matter of what dangers they were obliged to foresee when they undertook to safeguard the public by placing barriers around the excavation, that whether they were negligent in what they did or failed to do in that respect depended on whether they had adequately protected against such dangers as they might reasonably have foreseen, that this presented a question of fact for the jury, thus entitling defendants to submit to the jury their theory as to what they should have foreseen, and that this depended on what they had had a right to assume.

In Nash v. Mayne, 340 Mich 502, 508, we quoted with approval from Luck v. Gregory, 257 Mich 562, 569, the following:

“ ‘In order to constitute proximate cause, it must appear the injury to plaintiff was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence or wrongful act of the defendant, and that it ought to have been foreseen, in the light of the attending circumstances.’ ”

In Roberts v. Lundy, 301 Mich 726, 730, this Court quoted with approval from Clumfoot v. St. Clair Tunnel Co., 221 Mich 113 (syllabus), as follows:

“ ‘In an action for personal injuries alleged to be the result of defendant’s negligence, in order that the plaintiff may recover it must appear that his injury was the natural and probable consequence of a negligent act or omission of the defendant which under the circumstances an ordinarily prudent person ought reasonably to have foreseen or anticipated might possibly occur as a result of such act or omission.’ ”

In Clumfoot this Court held that the question of what should have been foreseen or would have been [468]*468by an ordinarily prudent person was one of fact for the jury.

In the instant case it was for the jury to decide whether defendants were guilty of negligence which was a proximate cause and, as a preliminary thereto, whether they should have foreseen the possibility of an injury resulting from no greater barricading than they placed around the excavation.

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Bluebook (online)
109 N.W.2d 879, 363 Mich. 463, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elbert-v-city-of-saginaw-mich-1961.