Klanowski v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.

31 N.W. 275, 64 Mich. 279, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 701
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 275 (Klanowski v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.) 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
Klanowski v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 31 N.W. 275, 64 Mich. 279, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 701 (Mich. 1887).

Opinions

Campbell, C. J.

This was a suit brought to recover damages suffered by plaintiff in the same transaction that resulted in the death of his father, on behalf of whose estate a recovery was had, affirmed by division of this Oourt in the case of Klanowski v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 57 Mich. 525. In the present case some new facts were brought out, and the record presents some questions not fully developed before. Plaintiff recovered damages. It will not be necessary to give many details, as they would be to some extent a repetition of the old decision.

We observe that all of the counts in the declaration in this cause lay the injury as done at the crossing of Chene street, and lay the duties in reference to that crossing. The occurrence was not at that crossing, but at one north-east of it, on the Miller road. The briefs do not lay stress upon this variance, which is a very serious one. If the declaration is printed according to the original record, it is plain enough that it cannot maintain the verdict, as an error assigned is that the plaintiff could not recover on the showing. As, in our opinion, a new trial must be granted on other grounds, we make no further allusion to it.

The facts, as presented for plaintiff, though controverted in many respects in important details, are, in substance, these:

On June 23, 1883, at a little after 9 o’clock in the evening, 'the Grand Trunk Railway train, approaching from the northeast, struck a two-horse wagon in which plaintiff and his [282]*282father were sitting; the locomotive hitting it in the forepart, and throwing out the persons in it, killing the father and severely injuring the plaintiff. This was on Miller street or road, which at that place was crossed by the railroad at an angle of about 35 degrees. Chene street runs at right angles-with the Miller road, which it crosses about 10 rods northerly from the railroad track, and the Ohene-street railroad crossing is not far from 20 rods distant from the place of the accident. Plaintiff lived on Chene street, according to the map-in evidence, about 30 rods south of the railroad. Some of the testimony, which is vague, puts it further. About 135-rods along the railroad from the place of the accident, northeasterly, is a crossing on the Conet road, known as the Bigelow crossing. This Oonet road is nearly parallel with Chene street, and crosses the Miller road some 80 rods, or thereabouts, southerly from the railroad.

That afternoon plaintiff had walked up Chene street to the railroad, and along the track to the Miller crossing, and then followed the Miller road to the Conet road, and along that road, across the railroad, to a place where his father was at work plowing. In the edge of the evening they left the field, in a wagon drawn by two horses, and followed down the Conet toad to the Miller road, and then turned into that, and drove in the direction of the railroad and Chene street. They stopped at Miller’s house, about 30 rods from the railroad, and not far from three-quarters of a mile from the field, along the road they traveled. The father went into Miller’s, and stayed there a good while, the precise time not being fixed. He came out again, and got into the wagon, which the boy was driving, and they started up the road on a walk. The witnesses put the time not far from a quarter past 9. The boy, who was about 14 years old, sat at the right side of his-father, on a board seat laid across the wagon. The train from Port Huron was a few minutes past due, and running about 40 miles an hour, or a little more. The Miller road [283]*283was rather lower than the highest part of the railroad track, and began to rise when it approached the track, and crossed' the railroad ditch on a plank bridge, which was laid diagonally along the direction of Miller street, and was, as claimed by plaintiff, about eight or nine feet long.

Plaintiff says that when he came opposite the telegraph-pole, which is not exactly located, but seems to have been near the intersection of the Miller road with the railroad, he stopped and listened, but heard no noise and saw no light-lie then drove on, and paid no further attention to anything but his driving. The horses were on the track, and apparently just over it, or nearly so, when the locomotive struck the team and wagon.

The plaintiff’s claim is that he was careful, and not negligent, and that defendant was negligent in omitting the statutory signals, and in running too fast. Defendant denies-its own fault, and claims that plaintiff was careless himself. No specific neglect is charged, except omitting the statutory, signals. One of the counts puts the speed at 40 miles, and perhaps it charges inferentially that this was too fast.

On the trial, and in this Court, considerable stress was-laid on the fault of the railroad in leaving a growth of' bushes on its right of way in and beside the ditch, tending, as claimed, to obscure the view of the road. There was evidence that there was a growth of bushes along that part of the Miller road further than the telegraph pole. There was-a conflict of testimony concerning the bushes near the track, and concerning their height. Plaintiff represented that he saw the dim outline of those bushes between him and the-railroad when he stopped to listen. There was positive testimony on the other side, and some on his side, not consistent with any such difficulty. He testified he did not hear or see anything indicating the approach of the train. There was testimony of witnesses on both sides, of several persons who-were near by, who both heard and saw the train plainly.. [284]*284"There was positive testimony that all the proper signals were given. There was testimony, on the other hand, of persons who did not hear all the requisite signals.

Upon the two main issues, namely, defendant’s carelessness .and plaintiff’s care, the conflict of facts is alleged to have •existed.

All of the testimony concerning plaintiff’s own conduct is what he says himself. There is some further testimony intended to supplement it by showing the surroundings.

In dealing with the question of plaintiff’s care, less attention was given than should have been to the fact that plaintiff’s father was with him, and more or less familiar with the neighborhood. It is certainly remarkable that neither of them discovered what was seen and heard by so many others. There ean be no doubt that when they reached the bridge crossing, if plaintiff had gone to his horses’ heads, and looked up the track, he could not have failed to see the train, whether he could have heard it or not; and with two in the wagon, if both had their wits' about them, there should have been no difficulty in taking the necessary observations. It is very difficult to distinguish the case from many which appear in the reports where persons approach crossings with stolid indifference, and are injured by trains passing. Except the one stop near the telegraph pole, no attention seems to have been given to the situation. It is not necessary to the ■decision of this case to determine — and in the absence of • some explanations which the jury may have had, and we have not in a sufficiently tangible shape, we cannot fully determine — whether there was not evidence enough of care to go to the jury. It is evident the jury gave plaintiff the benefit ■ of all the doubts.

Objection was made to the testimony of Mr. Yoelkner, who represents plaintiff in this suit, and gave an account of some ■ experiments he made under what he supposed to be similar • circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 275, 64 Mich. 279, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klanowski-v-grand-trunk-railway-co-mich-1887.