Johnson v. Secretary of State

280 N.W.2d 9, 406 Mich. 420, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 370
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1979
Docket60261, (Calendar No. 3)
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 280 N.W.2d 9 (Johnson v. Secretary of State) 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
Johnson v. Secretary of State, 280 N.W.2d 9, 406 Mich. 420, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 370 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

Levin, J.

(to reverse). Plaintiff, administrator of the estate of Mamie Jean Johnson, commenced this action for wrongful death against the Secretary of State pursuant to the unidentified owner/ driver provision of the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act. 1

We granted leave to appeal to decide whether, in an action based upon that act, evidence of the unidentified driver’s flight from the scene of an accident, in violation of the statutory duties to stop, give information and aid, and to make a report, 2 should give rise to a presumption of the *431 driver’s negligence. The trial judge held that evidence of flight was not probative of the driver’s negligence and directed a verdict for the defendant at the conclusion of plaintiff’s proofs. The Court of Appeals affirmed.

One can agree with our colleagues that

i) flight from an accident scene, taken alone, does not prove negligence,

*432 ii) violation of the statutory duties to stop, give information and aid, and to make a report, is not civilly actionable, absent proof of resultant aggravation of injury or death, and

iii) the mere happening of an accident is not evidence of negligence, and in an action against the Secretary of State, as in one against a hit-run driver if he is identified and can be sued, the plaintiff has the burden of proving negligence, without agreeing with their conclusion that the burden of producing evidence should be allocated

i) as if the unidentified driver had not violated those statutory duties,

ii) as if the violation of those duties had not resulted in a loss of evidence concerning the circumstances of the accident, a loss that plaintiff cannot overcome because the victim is unable to testify and no other witness provides evidence of the circumstances of the accident, and

iii) as if the state had not declared a public policy of compensating the victims of unidentified drivers and the defendant Secretary of State were not obliged to do so.

The burden of producing evidence is not invariably allocated to the pleader of the fact to be proved. That burden may be otherwise allocated by the Legislature or judicial decision based, among other factors, on an estimate of the probabilities, fairness and special policy considerations, and similar concerns may justify the creation, judicially or by law, of a presumption to aid the party who has the burden of production. 3

The action of the driver in concealing his identity and in failing to provide information about the circumstances of the accident, in violation of his statutory duties, is akin to the deliberate destruc *433 tion of or a failure to produce at trial evidence within a party’s control. In such a case a presumption arises that the evidence, if produced, "would operate against him; and every intendment will be in favor of the opposite party”. 4 On the same principle, an inference should arise, where the evidentiary gap is not closed by other evidence of the circumstances of the accident, that if the driver had complied with his statutory duties the evidence that would have been produced "would operate against him”; That inference, together with the inference of consciousness of wrongdoing which may be drawn from flight when there is a statutory duty to remain at the scene, should, in our opinion, give rise to a rebuttable presumption that the driver was at fault, and a prima facie case sufficient to avoid a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs proofs.

If the victim or other witnesses can provide information concerning the circumstances of the accident, the driver’s failure to stop and give information may not then result in a loss of evidence preventing the plaintiff from producing evidence of those circumstances. The inference drawn from the evidence of flight can be weighed with the circumstances of the accident as one of the factors in deciding whether the driver was negligent. A fair allocation of the burden of production of evidence does not then call for an evidentiary presumption.

Such a presumption should, however, arise in the atypical case where, as here, the circumstances of the accident are unknown because the victim is *434 unable to testify, there were no known witnesses to the accident, the driver is unidentified and unsuable and his failure to comply with his statutory obligations caused a loss of evidence which compliance would have provided.

The presumption is fair in that it arises where the driver’s breach of statutory duties results in a loss of evidence that the plaintiff cannot otherwise provide. It is in accord with the probabilities as it is unlikely that a non-culpable driver would subject himself to a prison term on a hit-run charge. It serves the special policy considerations of compensating the victims of unidentified hit-run drivers implicit in the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act.

I

There was no evidence substantiating plaintiff’s allegation that Mamie Johnson was killed while walking across a street, although there was evidence tending to show that she was killed as a result of being struck by a vehicle or of being involved in an automobile accident.

Mamie Johnson’s body was apparently found by Hubert Ingram and transported to a hospital. An attempt was made to depose Ingram at a time when he was in the Wayne County Jail. He refused to cooperate and no effort was made to compel his testimony. Ño other witnesses came forward and no driver of an automobile that may have caused the injuries was identified.

An assistant Wayne County medical examiner described in detail the nature of the injuries— laceration of the head, contusions of the scalp, abrasions on both knees, abrasions on back, fractured ribs, both lungs torn, liver lacerated, bleed *435 ing in abdominal cavity. 5 He concluded that her death was the result of an automobile accident: "[T]he injuries that I see in this case are such that are seen by me and my colleagues in the cases of car accidents * * *. [T]his injury that I see here is very characteristic to the automobile accident.” He did not remember any case "like it” except an automobile accident.

The trial judge said that the evidence was sufficient for the jury to find that Mamie Johnson was struck by an automobile but that evidence of flight was not alone sufficient to permit an inference that the fleeing driver was negligent. The Court of Appeals said that the medical examiner’s opinion was an inference drawn without facts.

We all agree with the judge that there was evidence that Mamie Johnson’s death resulted from an automobile accident. The Court of Appeals erred in concluding that the medical examiner’s opinion was not factually supported. The medical examiner, a physician, had examined thousands of bodies over a ten-year period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 N.W.2d 9, 406 Mich. 420, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-secretary-of-state-mich-1979.