Jacob Marion v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 2022
Docket352355
StatusPublished

This text of Jacob Marion v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company (Jacob Marion v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacob Marion v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JACOB MARION, by Guardian and Next Friend, FOR PUBLICATION MONICA MARION, March 10, 2022 9:00 a.m. Plaintiff-Appellant

v No. 352355 Wayne Circuit Court GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD LC No. 18-005516-NO COMPANY, STEVEN GOLOMBESKI, and JESSIE WILSON,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and CAVANAGH and LETICA, JJ.

GLEICHER, P.J.

Jacob Marion, age 14, was struck by a train as he walked down the tracks while listening to music on his earbuds. According to plaintiff’s expert witness, the train’s engineer saw the teenager in time to have stopped the train. The circuit court acknowledged that a question of fact existed regarding when the train’s engineer applied the brakes. Nevertheless, the court granted summary disposition in favor of defendants, ruling that the engineer had no legal duty to stop the train, or to even slow down, after spotting Jacob on the tracks and realizing that he was not responding to the train’s horn.

The circuit court’s opinion rested on cases decided by the Michigan Supreme Court between 1899 and 1933. The court incorrectly interpreted those cases, ignored more recent and relevant caselaw, and overlooked fundamental components of the concept of duty. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. UNDERLYING FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Jacob Marion, age 14, regularly walked on or near the railroad tracks between his home and his high school. Approximately three-quarters to one mile before the train struck Jacob, the train’s conductor and engineer saw the young man walking “in the middle of the tracks” with his back to the train. The engineer, Jesse Wilson, routinely sounded the train’s horn as the train approached the Oak Street crossing. At approximately the same time, Wilson and the conductor,

-1- Steven Golembeski, spotted Jacob in the distance. Golembeski remarked: “The kid doesn’t look like he’s going to move.” According to Wilson, both he and Golembeski realized Jacob’s peril before the train reached the Oak Street crossing. Under questioning by his counsel, Wilson testified as follows:

Q. When you had the conversation with Mr. Golembeski where he indicated that he didn’t think maybe the pedestrian heard the - - the horn, were you at the crossing or almost upon the crossing at that time?

A. We were - - we were approaching the crossing.

Q. Were you very nearly on it?
A. Excuse me?
Q. Were you very nearly on the crossing?
A. Yes.

Mr. Cafferty: The Oak Street crossing, is that - -

Q. The Oak Street crossing.
A. It was before - - that conversation was before the - - the crossing.
Q. But it was after you had started blowing the horn.

When the train “got over the crossing,” Wilson again recounted that Jacob was “just not responding.” Wilson then sounded the horn in emergency mode but still did not apply the brakes. When asked whether he also applied the brakes at that point Wilson responded, “No, not until after I was giving him all of the warning that I could give him.” Wilson conceded that he could have applied the brakes at that point, but in his view, it would have been impossible to have stopped the train in time.

According to plaintiff’s expert’s interpretation of the train’s event recorder, Wilson did not activate the brakes until seven-tenths or eight-tenths of a second before the train struck Jacob. Plaintiff’s expert testified that when the train crew spotted Jacob and observed that he was not reacting to the horn, they should have immediately activated the brakes. Once an emergency brake was finally applied, the train stopped in 719.5 feet. If the brake had been applied when Jacob was first observed to be nonresponsive to the horn, the expert opined, the accident would have been avoided.

The circuit court granted summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), concluding that “children . . . are well aware of the dangers of trains,” and that “no negligence can be imputed” to train operators if they attempted to alert Jacob and he did not respond. Relying largely on Piskorowski v Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee R Co, 121 Mich 498; 80 NW 241 (1899), a

-2- case involving a deaf plaintiff who was struck by a hand-car, the court summarized that “unless . . . train operators are aware of [a] person’s deafness, no negligence can be imputed to them if they attempted to alert the person.”

II. ANALYSIS

The central question presented in this appeal is whether a train operator has a duty to attempt to preserve the life of a trespasser in peril on the tracks. Defendants contend that a train crew has no duty to stop or slow a train until the crew determines that a collision is “imminent.” The circuit court agreed. The caselaw does not support such a rule. We begin by setting the historical legal stage.

The doctrine of contributory negligence, which eliminated a plaintiff’s ability to pursue a claim if the plaintiff bore any fault at all for his or her own injury, permeated tort law for most of Michigan’s history. Our Supreme Court’s first description of the doctrine summarized: “It is a well settled principle of law, that where an injury, of which a plaintiff complains, has resulted from the fault or negligence of himself, or where it has resulted from the fault or negligence of both parties, without any intentional wrong on the part of the defendant, an action cannot be maintained.” Williams v Mich Central R Co, 2 Mich 259, 265 (1851). Williams arose from a train accident. So did a subsequent case in which Justice CHRISTIANCY pointedly criticized the contributory negligence rule:

The law is too well settled by the overwhelming weight of authority, both in England and the United States, to be now disputed, that, in an action like this, to recover for an injury arising from negligence of the defendant in carrying on their lawful business without wanton or intentional wrong, the plaintiff can not recover if his own negligence directly or proximately contributed to produce the injury, though the defendant’s negligence may also have concurred in producing the result. This rule, it is true, often, and perhaps generally, fails to produce justice; and, upon abstract principles of right and wrong, may be said to be frequently unjust in its operation. Justice might seem to require that each should bear the loss in the proportion they had respectively contributed to the injury. [Lake Shore & Mich Southern R Co v Miller, 25 Mich 274, 276-277 (1872) (emphasis added).]

It is no coincidence that both Williams and Lake Shore involved trains. Before the automobile—and for many years after the first cars hit the roads—trains were the predominant form of transportation in Michigan. Like the cars that replaced them as instrumentalities of regular travel, locomotives caused countless accidents, deaths, and injuries. The contributory negligence doctrine shielded railroad companies from liability for most of them.

In Williams, 2 Mich at 260, a train struck and killed the plaintiff’s horses which had been grazing on a track. The Supreme Court unhesitatingly applied the contributory negligence rule. Justice CHRISTIANCY’s misgivings about the doctrine arose in a far different context. In Lake Shore, 25 Mich at 275-276, a woman sitting in a wagon was hit by a train at a highway crossing. The “unjust” nature of contributory negligence was not lost on the Court.

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Jacob Marion v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-marion-v-grand-trunk-western-railroad-company-michctapp-2022.