Fulton v. Ewing

57 N.W.2d 441, 336 Mich. 51, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 448
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1953
DocketDocket 86, Calendar 45,621
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 N.W.2d 441 (Fulton v. Ewing) 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
Fulton v. Ewing, 57 N.W.2d 441, 336 Mich. 51, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 448 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Reid, J.

This is an action at law in which plaintiff seeks damages for injuries which he claims he' received by reason of an unprovoked shooting by •defendant, from which plaintiff sustained a wound in his right thigh and hip. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $14,000. The court required a remittitur of the sum of $2,500, otherwise the verdict would be set aside and a new trial would be granted. The remittitur was timely filed. Defendant appeals from a judgment against him for $11,500. Plaintiff cross-appeals.

Plaintiff claims that on the morning of December 26, 1948, while at the residence of Frank Friday, 6342 West Jefferson, Detroit, he had won a bet of $2 from defendant in a card game known as “Georgia Skin;” that defendant claimed the bet was for only $1; that plaintiff told defendant to “stop and think;” that defendant thereupon stated, “I am going to pay this money off, but you S O B I am going to get it back;” that defendant pulled his gun out, aimed it at plaintiff’s heart; that plaintiff knocked the gun down to prevent being shot in the heart; that then defendant fired the gun and hit plaintiff in the leg and knocked him to the floor. Plaintiff says that “from the looks” of defendant’s face, ■defendant meant to kill plaintiff, and plaintiff says he did nothing to require or provoke defendant to shoot plaintiff. Plaintiff’s testimony to the foregoing effect was supported in general by his wife and 3 other res gestae witnesses, who also testified that plaintiff’s wife and other bystanders intervened to prevent defendant from again shooting plaintiff.

*54 Defendant claimed and testified that he shot the gun in self-defense and because plaintiff pulled out a knife before defendant shot. Defendant produced a witness who testified that witness took the gun from the floor as witness came into the room immediately following the shooting, that the gun fell from defendant’s hand, and that there was also a knife on the floor.

Defendant claims error on the part of the court for not permitting police officer Zilliek to answer the question, “What did the plaintiff, Jesse Fulton,, say to you regarding prosecution?” This question does not appear in the printed record of the testimony, the transcript of the testimony .in its original full form is not returned, and the only information we have available concerning this question is what is recited by the court in the following excerpt from the judge’s opinion on denial of motion for new trial:

“The third reason has for assignment the refusal of the court over what the court deemed was a proper objection to permit Peter Zelek [Zilliek], a police officer of the department of police of the city of Detroit, who was called as a witness for the defendant to answer the following question: What did the plaintiff, Jesse Fulton, say to you regarding prosecution?’ The court felt at that time, and still is of the opinion, that this was a method of getting' some evidence before the jury on a collateral matter that did not rightfully belong in the record. The court does not recall that Jesse Fulton was questioned at length on cross-examination as to any conduct in this respect that would authorize the foregoing question to be asked of one of the investigating officers. Not only was the court of the impression that it was a collateral issue but smacked somewhat of entering the area of proposed composition of litigation or settlement or adjustment of claims; and the court is still of the opinion that a *55 proper ruling under all the circumstances was made by the court in sustaining the objection of plaintiff’s counsel.”

With no record showing of the context, we find no basis for determination that the court’s refusal "to permit an answer to this question was reversible error.

Defendant also predicates error on the court’s refusal to permit an answer by witness Zillick to the following question, .“What did the plaintiff, Jesse Fulton, say to you regarding the amount of money to be paid by Mr. Ewing?” This question is also not in the printed record. It is not referred to in the judge’s opinion. We have no means of knowing that this question was actually asked, what ruling if any the court made, if it was asked, nor the connection in the testimony in which it was asked. There is no basis for a finding of error in this particular.

Defendant also predicates error because the court permitted the jury to consider plaintiff’s tuberculosis, which became apparent 9 months after the shooting, as a proximate result of the shooting.

Dr. George Kinsley testified on the trial as follows :

“In my opinion there is a causal relationship between the gun shot wound—there could be a causal relationship between the gun shot wound and the .accident as described; and the pulmonary tuberculosis which later became evident, because of the shock ■of the accident, the anaesthesia, the rather prolonged hospitalization and post-operative convalescence, all with subnormal intake food, or subnormal nutrition intake; all of those things could have contributed to the clinical precipitation of the pulmonary tuberculosis, in my opinion.”

There is other testimony in the record about the •development of the tuberculosis.

*56 A careful review of the record impels us to affirm the ruling of the court, permitting consideration by the jury of tuberculosis as resulting from the shooting.

Defendant predicates error on the instruction given the jury by the court on the subject of the burden being on the defendant to show by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff unlawfully attacked him.

Defendant’s statement of his question involved fails to give a correct impression of the court’s charge. The charge as actually given by the court on this subject is in practically the very words and is in substance as the defendant in his written request requested the judge to charge the jury. Defendant has no just ground for complaint in such particular.

The court elsewhere in his charge, substantially instructed the jury that the plaintiff in order to warrant a verdict in his favor must prove by a preponderance of evidence that defendant was the aggressor.

Defendant claims that the court erred in not granting unconditionally a new trial, and seems to claim that the amount of the verdict for $14,000 is excessive.

There is testimony to show that at and until the time of the shooting, plaintiff was in good health; he was about 26 1/2 years of age and was earning $1.35 an hour. Plaintiff sustained a fracture of the neck of the femur. The broken parts were nailed together. Plaintiff testified that after his injury he worked but 2 weeks, after which he was unable to obtain employment, due to his injury; that after he was shot on the evening in question, he was knocked down by the pistol; that he spent 22 days in the Receiving hospital; that the bullet had entered his right leg; that after he was taken to the hospital, he lost consciousness for an hour or 2; that in operat *57 ing Ms right leg was split (i.e.,

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.W.2d 441, 336 Mich. 51, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-ewing-mich-1953.