Griggs v. Griggs

132 N.W.2d 163, 374 Mich. 268, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 322
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1965
DocketCalendar 70-74, Docket 50,094-50,098
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 N.W.2d 163 (Griggs v. Griggs) 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
Griggs v. Griggs, 132 N.W.2d 163, 374 Mich. 268, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 322 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The jury rendered a no cause verdict in the case of each of the five plaintiffs. Prom an order denying new trial, plaintiffs have appealed. In a written opinion giving his reasons for denying a new trial, the learned circuit judge conceded that one of the special .questions propounded by him to the jury was erroneous in that it contained a “mixed *270 law and fact proposition.” Plaintiffs had argued this as one of several grounds for new trial. Despite' the erroneous instruction, the circuit judge held that plaintiffs were not entitled to a new trial because-under the Ontario law, 1 plaintiff Owen Griggs had “supplied the causal negligence out of which the accident grew, and that this negligence was a new or intervening cause, even assuming a duty and breach of duty by Maceo Griggs,” defendant. Viewing this, then, as an issue of proximate cause under Ontario law, the trial judge concluded that plaintiffs had not been entitled to go to the jury anyway, and therefore he denied the motion for new trial. 2

Two carloads of people set out in tandem on the night of July 4-5, 1958, to go from Detroit to Buffalo, New York, via the Ontario peninsula. They were going to Buffalo to a funeral of a deceased relative. However, the destination was never reached because both cars failed to negotiate a curve in the highway some miles east of St. Thomas, Ontario, and, one after the other, plunged over an embankment with one car coming to rest, bottom side up, on top of the other. The cars were demolished, killing and injuring occupants in both.

The first or lead car was owned and driven by defendant, Maceo Griggs. The second car was owned and driven by plaintiff, Owen Griggs. Other plaintiffs are administratrices of three passengers-in the second car who died in the crash, and a fourth passenger, Emery Davis, who was injured but survived.

It was plaintiffs’ theory that before the parties left Detroit, defendant Maceo told plaintiff Owen that he, defendant, would lead and Owen would fol *271 low, and, it was alleged, that defendant “then and there assumed the role and responsibility of leading and directing” plaintiff in the operation of his automobile. It was asserted that defendant had -a duty “to exercise and perform the role undertaken by defendant of leading and directing” plaintiff in a careful and prudent manner. Defendant allegedly breached this duty in a number of ways; of principal reliance by plaintiffs, after all proofs were in, was that defendant breached his duty by operating his ear in disregard of curve signs and thereby failed to negotiate a curve in the highway. In so leaving the highway and plunging down an embankment, defendant is said to have thereby drawn, led, or directed plaintiff into following a similar course.

Defendant answers by admitting he drove off the highway and down an embankment, but denies that he either drew, led, or directed plaintiff Owen Griggs to follow. . Defendant says that when Owen left the highway it was because he failed to see what there was to be seen, and by failing to control his car was author of his own injuries and that of the other plaintiffs.

Insofar as review-pertinent proofs are concerned, we center upon testimony of the second-car survivors, Owen Griggs and Emery Davis. They describe first-car (defendant’s) movements immediately prior to the accident, and those of plaintiff Owen Griggs. The following is Owen’s testimony on direct examination :

“A. After we left St. Thomas I was still following Maceo and we were traveling along and we run into these pockets of fog, you could see Maceo’s car when it would go into them and then after we would get into it you could see his car further down the road then. It would just be a pocket of fog. Tou were right in it and right out. The last pocket of fog I remember I saw his ear %yhen it went into it *272 and the way it looked his taillights, he was either 'going around a corner, the luay they went out of sight or either going over a hill. So, for a minute I started to mash down on my accelerator, maybe I did. Something seemed to tell me to he careful and at that time I hit my brakes. I hit my brakes going into it and my cousin Emery he hollered, ‘Owen, watch out’ and at that time I slapped on my brakes but the car wouldn’t turn. I could see the curve where the road was curving. I could see where the road was curving and the car wouldn’t turn, it kept right straight off and hit the soft shoulder on the left and kicking gravel and stuff up. I could hear it coming under the fender of the car and the next thing I know the car was going over a cliff and that is it.” (Emphasis supplied.)

On cross-examination, Owen Griggs testified as follows :

“Q. Let’s put it this way: you were following Maceo’s taillights, is that rightf
“A. That is correct.
“Q. I understand that Maceo disappeared in a fogf
“A. That is correct.
“Q. And you were still out of this fog?
“A. Yes.
“Q. He was in the fog and you were out of the fog, correct?
“A. That’s correct.
“Q. You could no longer see Maceo?
“A. No, I couldn’t.
“Q. And you didn’t know whether Maceo had gone around a curve or hadn’t?
“A. That’s right.'
“Q. And you didn’t know whether Maceo had gone over a hill or hadn’t?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. You didn’t know whether he had gone off the road or he hadn’t? ■
“A. That’s right.
*273 “Q. As soon as ho disappeared you were 75 to 100 feet ahead of him, is that correct?
“A. No. Wait.
“Q. I’m sorry. Behind him. He was 75 or 100 feet ahead of you, and as soon as he disappeared, being ahead of you, you accelerated your speed, is that correct?
“A. Yes; instinct prompted me to mash the accelerator. * * *
“Q. You couldn’t see anything?
“A. No, 1 couldn’t.
“Q. You wére driving blind?
“A. I wasn’t driving blind.
“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.W.2d 163, 374 Mich. 268, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griggs-v-griggs-mich-1965.