Kaminski v. Wayne County Road Commissioners

121 N.W.2d 830, 370 Mich. 389, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 400
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1963
DocketCalendar 73, Docket 49,794
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 121 N.W.2d 830 (Kaminski v. Wayne County Road Commissioners) 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
Kaminski v. Wayne County Road Commissioners, 121 N.W.2d 830, 370 Mich. 389, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 400 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

O’Hara, J.

Darlene Kaminski, a child 8 years old at the time of the happening of the events here involved, was grievously and permanently injured in a collision of 2 vehicles on Grand River avenue in the township of Wayne, Wayne county,

Darlene was a passenger in an automobile owned and operated by her father. It collided with a motor driven street sweeping machine owned and operated by the Wayne county road commission. The collision occurred at about 12 -.30 a.m. on April 15,1959.

Grand River avenue at the place of collision runs northwest-southeast. It is a boulevard with the lanes of travel separated by a 75-foot strip of grass. There are 4 lanes for northwest traffic. In the record for purposes of clarity and convenience, they are designated lanes 1, 2, 3, and 4 from a northwesterly bound driver’s left. The westernmost lane nearest the grass strip is then lane 1, the next easterly thereof lane 2, the next easterly lane 3, and the one closest to the east curb, sometimes used for parking, is lane number 4.

At the place in question, near Wakendon, an intersecting street, the speed limit is 45 miles per hour. Darlene’s father was traveling 40 miles per hour, or thereabouts, in lane number 2. Darlene was in the front seat with him. She had requested that she be allowed to accompany him to his church league bowling league, a privilege her younger brother had been granted the week before. On a promise to do her home work after school and take a nap before the 9 p.m. starting time for her father’s team, she *391 was allowed to go. It was on the return trip at the time previously specified the collision occurred.

Contemporaneously with Mr. Kaminski’s use of Grand River avenue that night, the Wayne county road commission was performing its statutorily imposed duty of maintaining the highway also designated as ITS-16. Through its agent and employee, it was operating a large mechanized street sweeping machine; its overall width some 9 feet. Mr. Kamin-ski’s automobile struck the street sweeper, occasioning thereby to Darlene, the injuries previously mentioned. Sophia, Darlene’s mother was appointed her next friend and in that capacity brought action against the board of Wayne county road commissioners, which owned and operated the street sweeper.

In her declaration, the next friend alleged that the sweeper was negligently operated in particulars specified as subparagraphs (a) through (g) of paragraph 5. Subparagraphs (b) and (g) are purely conclusionary; subparagraph (a) charges a failure to equip with safety and warning devices; (c) alleges failure of observation of the “conditions of the road and of vehicles about the site of its operation”; (d) complains that the sweeper and its attendant created a “hazardous and unsafe road condition”; (e) asserts that defendant allowed improperly trained personnel to operate the sweeper; (f) is a restatement of (a) substituting “equipment” for “devices.”

On these somewhat general allegations issue was joined by answer denying them categorically and by alleging that defendant equipped the device with adequate and proper warning devices and that the operator was in the exercise of due care.

The pretrial statement frames the issue as “largely factual” and particularizes the alleged negligence as the operation of the sweeper in a manner that *392 “obscured tbe vision of approaching vehicles (drivers?).”

A factual question was created by the following téstimony which really contains the solidly joined issue of negligence.

A witness for plaintiff who passed the sweeper shortly before the accident testified as follows:

“All of a sudden through this haze-like affair, I noticed a glow of light, rather high, and I was no more than maybe, oh, 2 car lengths, roughly 2 car lengths, from this, and I immediately pulled to the right into the next lane to avoid this, this object. I didn’t know what it was at that time. When I got beside it, I noticed that it was a sweeper, and when I got in front of it then I could see on the front there were lights, and I knew for sure then that it was a sweeper.” (Emphasis supplied.)

There follows additional testimony which identifies the haze as dust, “just a mass of dust” and testimony that the subpoenaed witness, Miss Wolfe, had to swerve her car “very sharply” to avoid a collision.

Charles A. Quigley, another witness not only to the operation of the sweeper at the time and place involved but to the accident itself, thus testified:

“Q. Now will you tell the jury how much, if any, dust there was in the vicinity of this sweeping device at the time this happened, if you recall?

“A. I think the best way to answer that is that there was not enough dust to obscure my vision or view of this red beacon light. How much dust I don’t know.”

Clearly then with the background of the pretrial statement, the declaration, the testimony of the operator as to the watering device provided on the machine to allay dust, and Mr. Quigley’s admission on cross-examination that he had previously de *393 scribed in a deposition, road sweepers as “creating a hell of a lot of dust” the hard core issue was : Did the road sweeper in question create enough dust so that the lighting equipment carried, would not adequately warn other motorists of its presence and operation on the highway?

The jury apparently answered “no” for its verdict was no cause of action. Or at least if its answer was “yes” then it determined that such inadequacy, if any, was not a proximate cause of Darlene’s injuries.

Here then rises the meritorious issue on appeal. In preparation for the defense of this action, defendants at night, in June of 1961 and in October of 1961 (the accident happening on April 15, 1959), took photographs, both colored and black and white, together with motion pictures at the scene. The same sweeper was placed at a point fixed by witnesses as some 200 feet and 50 feet back from the point of impact. The same operator was placed on the machine, and almost incredibly except in television trials, the same witness, Mr. Quigley, who witnessed the accident came by and stopped while the pictures were being taken. He testified on cross-examination :

“A. I had a curiosity as to what was going on; it looked so similar to the original scene.

“Q. In other words, it was taking place at Waken-don?

“A. Yes.

“Q. But there is no question in your mind that back in the early morning hours of April 15, 1959, there was considerable dust from this equipment?

“Q. When they re-enacted this thing on October 3, 1961, did you see any dust?

“A. Oh, no. * * *

*394 “Q. When you saw this being re-enacted in June of 1961, this vehicle had a yellow oscillating light?

“A. Yes, sir.

“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 N.W.2d 830, 370 Mich. 389, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaminski-v-wayne-county-road-commissioners-mich-1963.