Kowalczyk v. Detroit & Mackinac Railway Co.

55 N.W.2d 805, 335 Mich. 220, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 338
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1952
DocketDocket Nos. 8, 9, Calendar Nos. 45,462, 45,463
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 805 (Kowalczyk v. Detroit & Mackinac 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
Kowalczyk v. Detroit & Mackinac Railway Co., 55 N.W.2d 805, 335 Mich. 220, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 338 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Reid, J.

These 2 cases were consolidated for purpose of trial and are consolidated on this appeal. The one case is brought by Marie M. Kowalczyk as plaintiff (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff) to recover because of her personal injuries incurred by reason of the automobile which she was driving-being struck by the 1-car gas-electric powered train of defendant railway. The other case is brought by her husband because of damages occasioned because of loss to the. consortium.

The accident occurred at the crossing of defendant’s track north of Bay City at State Highway M-47, also known as State Park drive and also known as Henry street.

Plaintiff had traveled over M-47 from her home on Lagoon Beach drive to Bay City twice a day every day for about 2 years, while she was attenclingschool and frequently thereafter. She had been a licensed driver ever since she moved to Lagoon Beach drive in 1940 but she had been absent from that neighborhood for about'2 years with her hus[222]*222band while he was in the armed service. Pembroke road ends at M-47, which runs due north and south, and Pembroke road comes in .from the east at a right angle. The main line of defendant’s single-track railroad crossed State Park drive, also known as Henry street, from the northwest toward the southeast at about 45 degrees angle with the highway and at a point about 58 feet southerly of the center line pf Pembroke road extended westerly into Henry street. The crossing was protected by flasher light signals on each side of the crossing. One railroad sign and flasher was located on the west side of M-47 at a point due west of the southerly line of Pembroke road and 12 feet westerly of the west side line of M-47. Each flasher was marked on a large striped black and white base and at the top had crossbuck warning signs. On the morning in question the bases were covered with snow.

A spur track of defendant’s railway paralleling M-47 crossed Pembroke road about 50 feet east from where the pavement of M-47 intersected Pembroke. There was a regular highway stop sign on Pembroke road just east of the spur track. Pembroke road fanned out where it joined M-47 both ways, to the north and the south.

On the morning of the day in question, January 24, 1946, and preceding the accident, plaintiff had driven her car to take her father-in-law to work .and had crossed the railroad highway crossing in question going toward Bay City and returned over the crossing later, returning on Lagoon Beach drive, .a dirt road running east and west, 4/10 of a mile north of Pembroke road. Shortly before noon she started out again from her home on Lagoon Beach drive, drove to Lincoln road, southerly on Lincoln road to Pembroke, intending to bring her father-in-law back from his work. It had been snowing all the morning of the accident. The train was running [223]*223from Alpena to Bay City at about 30 miles per hour as it approached the crossing of M-47 going-southeasterly. The car had space for the motive-power and for baggage, express, mail and passengers, and the warning devices were an air horn, or whistle, blown by main reservoir pressure and a bell “that rings by air all the time.”

It was testified by defendant’s witnesses that the volume of noise from the air whistle was about the same as from a steam whistle. Plaintiff engineer-testified that he blew the whistle at the regular crossing whistle post. He said that when he “hit the post” he started the horn and blew it “2 long-then a short, and the next one I took ahold of the cord and hung on until I hit the car.” He also-testified the bell was ringing continuously.

Among other things, plaintiff testified as follows r

“Where Pembroke joins State Park drive pavement it fans out both ways to the north and south. As I approached State Park drive from the east I came to a single railway track similar to the railway track that crosses Lagoon Beach drive. I knew there was a railway track in that vicinity running parallel with State Park drive. When I came to that track I stopped along side of a highway stop sign. It was a yellow or orange octagonal sign with the word ‘stop’ on it. That sign is located just before you get to the railroad track. There-is no railway crossing sign there. After I stopped I looked both ways down the track. I knew there was a track there; I didn’t see it, but I knew it was there; I know it runs along there, but I don’t know where it ends.
“Q. All right. Well, you looked down the track both ways. What else did you do?
“A. Well, I started my car and as I did, I heard a ‘beep beep’ and it was like a horn. That’s what I was looking for, a motor vehicle of some kind.
“Q. You say it’s like a horn; what kind of a horn?'
[224]*224“A. Well, it seemed like a truck.
“Q. You have heard those horns on trucks?
“A. Yes, I have.
“Q. And motor vehicles?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. That ‘beep beep’ was the same sound?
“A. It was.
“Q. All right. You say this was just after you had started up from stopping at that track crossing Pembroke road?
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“Q. What did you do after that?
“A. Well, I approached the highway and just before I got to the main highway I looked both ways down to see if there was a motor vehicle approaching. And it was all clear, so I started ahead. And as I did, I heard another ‘beep beep.’
“Q. All right. You say as you did — where were you when you heard the other ‘beep beep’?
“A. Turning; making the curve in the road. Turning onto the highway.
“Q. And wms your car on the pavement or off it?
“A. It was on the pavement.
“Q. On the pavement. When you heard that second ‘beep beep,’ what did you do ?
“A. I looked in my rearview mirror. I thought I had missed a motor vehicle some way — rather how it could have got up to me that fast, but I thought I had missed one, and I looked in the rearview mirror to see.
“Q. You say it was snowing quite heavily then?
“A. It was.
“Q. What’s the next thing that you remember after looking in the rearview mirror?
“A. That’s all. .
“Q. What happened to you?
“A. I got hit.
“Q. By what?
“A. By a train.
“The train was travelling on this Detroit and Mackinac crossing there. I have been back there [225]*225since the accident and the railroad track runs at' an angle across the pavement in a diagonal direction at about 45 degrees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 805, 335 Mich. 220, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kowalczyk-v-detroit-mackinac-railway-co-mich-1952.