Hale v. Cooper

261 N.W. 54, 271 Mich. 348, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 818
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1935
DocketDocket No. 52, Calendar No. 38,010.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 54 (Hale v. Cooper) 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
Hale v. Cooper, 261 N.W. 54, 271 Mich. 348, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 818 (Mich. 1935).

Opinions

Potter, C. J.

Plaintiff sued defendants to recover damages for injuries received in an automobile collision claimed to have been caused by the negligence of defendants. Prom a judgment for plaintiff, defendants bring the cause to this court on an appeal in the nature of a writ of error.

Several witnesses were sworn. The testimony is not conflicting as to the essential facts.

Plaintiff was riding as a guest passenger in an automobile driven by a Mr. Ladd. “It was a very bad night. The road was just a glare of ice. It was misting that night and the weather was freezing. As the mist fell it would freeze. Telephone poles, bushes, everything, was covered with a glare of ice. ’ ’ It was a cold sleet storm. Plaintiff had gone with the Ladds from Pontiac to Ann Arbor and says they left Ann Arbor to return at 10 or 10:30 p. m. Prank Barnett and wife were in an automobile ahead of the Ladd car in which plaintiff was riding. Barnett had no trouble. He was driving slowly. Ladd desired to go faster than Barnett w;as driving, turned out, increased his speed, passed Barnett’s automobile and came back to the right-hand side of the highway where it was down grade, took his foot off the accelerator and his automobile began to skid. Plaintiff says:

“The back end skidded toward the left and I can’t remember which way the front end went. It happened so suddenly. The car went back and forth across the road, or skidded, three times, and the fourth time we skidded over to the left-hand side of the' road. The car skidded three times clear across the pavement, and I think it went across the *350 fourth time and then there was an accident. At the time of the accident the Ladd car was on the north side of the pavement headed toward the south side. * * * I wouldn’t say the Ladd car was on the pavement, on the north side of the road. * * * We were headed toward the north side of the road, and we had turned and started back to the south side when the crash happened.”

Defendants’ automobile, it is conceded, was partially off the paved portion of the highway on the right-hand side thereof, and plaintiff would not have been injured had not the driver of the Ladd automobile shifted gears and accelerated his engine speed, the automobile gaining momentum from the rear wheels being on the gravel, and whipping his car around so as to head it in the opposite direction, with its rear wheels on the gravel north of the paved portion of the highway, immediately in front of defendants’ automobile so as to present the left side thereof to the impact of collision with defendants’ automobile.

It is argued defendants might have stopped. But the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding had greater cause to stop. He was in more or less danger after his automobile began to skid. His automobile, his wife says, was practically stopped on the north side of the highway the last time it went over onto' the north side, but she says her husband then shifted gears, applied the power, and the car whipped around in front of defendants’ automobile so it headed the other way. The automobile in which plaintiff was riding was in motion at the time when by the driver’s acts it was suddenly shot directly across the lane of traffic of defendants, making a collision inevitable. There is a dispute among plaintiff’s witnesses as to whether Ladd’s automobile stopped on the north side of the highway or continued in motion up to the time of the colli *351 sion. The driver thereof had, however, shifted gears and the automobile was struck at a time when its rear wheels were off the pavement on the north side of the highway. During all of the time after the first skidding of the Ladd automobile down to the time it stopped on the north side of the highway, if it did stop, just prior to the collision, the driver thereof was seeking to get the car under control. The driver of defendants’ automobile was going in a westerly direction. It is conceded by everyone defendants’ automobile was always on its own side of the highway. Defendants’ driver admits that at one time he saw the lights of the Ladd automobile shining in the field. Defendants’ driver was coming uphill on an icy pavement at a comparatively slow rate of speed and says he did not dare to use the brakes on his car for fear of sliding off into the ditch. He says he drove off' the pavement on his own side of the highway about 180 feet from the, Ladd car, but the Ladd car started up, whipped around and headed back across the highway with its rear wheels on the north side thereof and two or three feet off the pavement and in so doing placed itself immediately across his lane of traffic when he did not have an opportunity to avoid the danger, and because of the acts of the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding a collision was inevitable.

There is but one count in plaintiff’s declaration. It alleges that Arthur W. Ladd, the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was a guest passenger, was driving such automobile in a careful and prudent manner; the skidding of the automobile was due to no neglect or carelessness on Ladd’s part and at the time of the collision Ladd was in the exercise of due care and caution; that defendants’ driver was guilty of gross, wilful and wanton negligence, and such gross, wilful and wanton negli *352 gence consisted in driving defendants’ automobile at a high rate of speed in wanton and wilful disregard of the rights of others so the driver of defendants ’ automobile could not bring the same to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead; not having the windshield of the motor vehicle equipped with a windshield wiper; failure to have under control the motor vehicle; carelessly, negligently and recklessly driving into, over and against the Oldsmobile sedan in which plaintiff was riding; the gross, wilful and wanton negligence of defendants in driving their automobile into, over and against the Oldsmobile after discovering its position of peril; the subsequent negligence of defendants; and failure to observe ordinary care in the operation of defendants’ automobile.

The answer denied all the material allegations of plaintiff’s declaration and alleged the negligence of the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding caused or contributed to the injury. In opening the ease to the jury, plaintiff’s counsel claimed that even admitting the negligence of the driver.of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding, defendants were liable on the theory of subsequent negligence, and that is all he did then claim.

As stated by the trial court:

“This is a claim under what we term subsequent or discovered negligence where the contributory negligence of the plaintiff is not at issue as I understand the law. ’ ’

The declaration alleges two separate and distinct grounds of recovery, two distinct causes of action, joined together in one count. The case was not tried upon the theory of two distinct causes of action. Upon opening the case to the jury, plaintiff’s right to recover was planted upon defendants ’ subsequent negligence alone. That part of plaintiff’s declaration which specifies defendants’ gross negligence *353 and wanton and wilful misconduct may be discarded as surplusage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 54, 271 Mich. 348, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-cooper-mich-1935.