Knarìan v. South Haven Sand Co.

106 N.W.2d 151, 361 Mich. 631, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 356
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1960
DocketDocket 29, Calendar 48,497
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 106 N.W.2d 151 (Knarìan v. South Haven Sand 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
Knarìan v. South Haven Sand Co., 106 N.W.2d 151, 361 Mich. 631, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 356 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

Plaintiff was injured on December 13, 1957, when the truck in which she was riding skidded while passing defendant South Haven Sand Com.pany’s parked double bottom trailer unit and collided with a Chrysler automobile driven by defendant Fisk.

A jury found defendant Fisk was negligent and assessed damages. It also found defendant South Haven Sand Company was not negligent. Motion for new trial was denied.

Defendant Fisk appeals, claiming the verdict is contrary to law and the great weight of the evidence *633 and that the court erred in instructing the jury and in denying defendant’s motion for directed verdict.

At the time of collision (about 6:30 p.m.) plaintiff was a passenger in a Chevrolet pickup truck operated by her adult son, traveling east on highway M-43 (a paved highway, 20 feet wide), and was going from her home in South Haven to spend the weekend with her children in Kalamazoo.

Plaintiff could give no information as to how the collision occurred, testifying she had no recollection of any of the events subsequent to her departure from South Haven.

The son, who lives in Kalamazoo, had traveled from Kalamazoo to South Haven on highway M-43 in the afternoon of that day, and at a point a little over a mile west of Glendale he observed 2 trailers hitched together which stood with their left wheels on the pavement and their right wheels on the berm. At that time there were snow banks that had been created along the highway and it appeared that the trailers were close to the snow banks on the south side of the highway.

A police officer who investigated after the collision testified: “The trailers were parked on the south side of M-43. The left wheels were 5 feet 6 inches south from the center line.”

Plaintiff’s son testified that he and his mother left South Haven about 6 p.m.; that the weather and roads were clear and that he drove at a speed of about 40 miles per hour; that as he came over the crest of a hill he could see the trailers some 500 or 600 feet to the east, parked as they were when he passed them in the afternoon; that he reduced his speed as he approached the trailers but increased his speed to pass; that as his truck was passing the rear of the trailers he observed oncoming lights' which he thought were far enough away to give him| ample time to pass; that he was regaining his posi-| *634 'tion on the right hand side of the road when his 'truck hit an icy patch that had formed around the •trailers and the truck started to skid with the rear sliding to the left; that his left front wheel had .passed the center line when the skid started; that when the skid started the lights of the approaching car were still several hundred feet away; that to stop the skid he turned his front wheels to the left and took his foot off the accelerator; that he was still skidding at the moment of impact, and while he had the front part of his truck over on the south side of the road where it belonged, the rear end was over the center line in defendant’s lane; that his truck was 17 feet long and he estimated the distance from the start of, the skid to point of collision as 100 feet.

From the testimony of those who made investigation after the collision, we conclude:

(1) Defendant’s Chrysler came to rest facing southeasterly across from the front or east end of the parked .trailers;

(2) The Chevrolet pickup was 140 feet east of the Chrysler with the left rear wheels 2 feet 8 inches north of the center line and the box of the pickup was 26 feet south of the pickup and a spare tire was out in the field 200 feet away;

(3) There were no skidmarks at the scene of the accident;

(4) After the collision the pickup skidded 40 feet 10 inches and the Chrysler traveled 99 feet 2 inches;

(5) The rear wheels and the rear end of the truck were badly damaged; there was damage to the rear of the cab immediately back of the left door, and the .frame was bent;

(6) The bumper of the Chrysler was not damaged ■to any degree, hut the left front of the car was ¡damaged.

*635 The collision threw plaintiff from the'truck to the highway, breaking her neck and causing other injuries requiring extensive hospitalization.

Gordon Castle, 27-year old acquaintance and friend of defendant Fisk, was called as a witness by plaintiff. He testified he had accompanied defendant in his car as they left Paw Paw to attend a basketball game at Bangor. The night was clear and the pavement was wet but not slippery; that he sat in the front seat next to the right window; that -while driving west on M-43 he observed “a string of flares on the south side of the road down ahead of us, as far as I could see, probably a mile when we first seen them-. * * * There was a line of them (flares) pretty well around that truck because they showed up plain when we came in view”; that he saw the headlights of an approaching car as it came over the crest of a hill in the eastbound lane; that he would estimate the flares to be “between an eighth and a quarter of a mile” from the crest of the hill; that the driver of the car he was riding in and the driver of the approaching car dimmed their lights; that when he was 200 to 300 feet away he could see the trailers as the approaching car swung out to pass them; that the approaching car’s lights disappeared as the car appeared to pass the trailers and that he next saw the truck 25 to 30 feet away sliding, facing south, and coming broadside toward the car in which he was riding.

On direct examination, Castle stated he did not look at the speedometer, but estimated defendant was traveling 50 to 55 miles per hour, and on cross examination stated that when he observed the flares “it f,elt to.me like he (defendant) let up on the gas.”

Defendant denied he saw the lights of the truck approaching him, stating that the first he knew that; the Chevrolet pickup was on the road was when it> was in front of him only 60 to 70 feet away. As to' *636 what happened from the time he saw the flares is set forth in the following direct examination of defendant :

“Q. Have yon an opinion as to the speed at which yon were traveling after you left Glendale ?
“A. At approximately 50 mile an hour.
“Q. Did yon continue that speed as yon approached the flares?
“A. Not after noticing the flares. I lessened the acceleration at that time.
“Q. Yon lifted your foot off the accelerator?
“A. Yes.
“Q. And what was the effect of that?
“A. As to speed?
“Q. Yes.
“A. I expect that I slowed down, maybe 10 or 15 miles an honr. I don’t know how long it takes to do that.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W.2d 151, 361 Mich. 631, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knarian-v-south-haven-sand-co-mich-1960.