Merrinane v. Miller

118 N.W. 11, 157 Mich. 279, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1093
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1908
DocketDocket No. 13
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 N.W. 11 (Merrinane v. Miller) 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
Merrinane v. Miller, 118 N.W. 11, 157 Mich. 279, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1093 (Mich. 1908).

Opinions

Montgomery, J.

This action was brought under the civil-damage act to recover against the defendant Miller and three different sets of bondsmen for damages sustained in her means of support by the plaintiff by reason of unlawful sales of liquor to her husband, John Merrinane, during the three years beginning, respectively, May 1, 1903, May 1,1904, and May 1, 1905. The case was before the court at a former term, and it was reversed mainly on the ground that the damages recovered were wholly inadequate. The case is reported in 148 Mich. 412 (111 N. W. 1050). On a retrial the plaintiff recovered a [281]*281verdict against all the defendants in the sum of $5,925, and the defendants have brought the case to this court for review.

The circuit judge charged the jury that:

“ The undisputed testimony shows that Miller has violated this law and is liable in this case. * * * The evidence is undisputed that unlawful sales began during the time the first bond was in force, and extended into the second bond, and into, if not through, the period covered by the third bond; so that all the sureties who are made parties to this suit and are joined with Mr. Miller are equally liable.”

And again the court charged:

“You don’t have to separate out what occurred the first year, and put it on to Mr. Miller and his bondsmen for that year, and then Mr. Miller and his bondsmen for the second year, and Mr. Miller and his bondsmen for the third year, provided it was, as the evidence shows now, they began during the first year and ran right along through until it culminated in making this man what he was made finally by the unlawful sales of the third year.”

These instructions present the principal question in the case. The statute (2 Comp. Laws, § 5398) provides:

“Every wife * * * who shall be injured in person or property or means of support or otherwise * * * by reason of the intoxication of any person, or by reason of the selling, giving or furnishing any spirituous, intoxicating, fermented, or malt liquors, to any person, shall have a right of action in * * * her own name, against any person or persons who shall, by selling or giving any intoxicating or malt liquors, have caused or contributed to the intoxication of such person or persons, or who have caused or contributed to such injury, and the principal and sureties to the bond hereinbefore mentioned, shall be liable severally and jointly with the person or persons so selling, giving, or furnishing any spirituous, intoxicating, or malt liquors, as aforesaid, and in an action provided for in this section, the plaintiff shall have a right to recover actual and exemplary damages.”

The theory of the plaintiff’s case was that during the [282]*282period covered by the declaration her husband had theretofore been a sober man, capable of earning a comfortable income for his family, but had been an habitual drunkard and wholly incapacitated to maintain his family, and that to this final result the various sales made during the three separate years had, in turn, contributed. In such a case, are the principal and the sureties on the bonds for each of the successive years responsible for the final consequences ? It would be difficult to reconcile all the authorities in the different States which deal with statutes differing somewhat in terms from those employed in our State. In Black on Intoxicating Liquors, § 299, it is said:

“ If the plaintiff’s cause of action is not founded upon a specific act of injury resulting from a particular fit of intoxication, but upon injury to her property or means of support caused by the habitual drunkenness of her husband, extending over a period of time, then all the dealers who furnish him with liquor during such time, knowing his habit of intemperance, and whose sales contribute to keep up such habit, are liable for the damages, though there was no concert or connection between them.”

In Steele v. Thompson, 42 Mich. 594 (4 N. W. 536), in dealing with a statute similar in terms, the question was whether the fact that the injury was helped on through the acts of others in furnishing liquor called upon the court and jury to make an apportionment of the liability among the separate contributors to the injury. In dealing with this question, Justice Graves said:

“The statute we are considering proceeds upon the idea that there has been an injury which the defendant, by some of the means indicated, has contributed to produce, and that he shall be liable for the whole injury, and not merely for such portion as a jury, if able to agree upon any scale of apportionment, may assign as his actual share or quota.”

This case was followed in Bowden v. Voorheis, 135 Mich. 648 (98 N. W. 406), in which case plaintiff was permitted to show frequent intoxications of her husband without proving that they were occasioned by liquor sold [283]*283by the defendant. It was held that there was no error in receiving this testimony; the testimony showing that the plaintiff’s husband had, during a long period, frequented this saloon and bought liquor there at least once a week. It was said:

“ Plaintiff does not claim damages resulting from any particular intoxication of her husband. It is her claim that the sales of defendant contributed to her loss of means of support, shame, and disgrace. If they did— and whether they did or not was a question properly submitted to the jury — defendant was responsible for the whole injury, even though the sales made by others also contributed to produce it ” — citing and approving Steele v. Thompson, supra.

An examination of the record in that case discloses that the period covered by the declaration was more than a single year. It happened that the bondsmen in the two separate years were identical. There may be a seeming conflict between Bowden v. Voorheis, and Jewell v. Welch, 117 Mich. 65 (75 N. W. 283). There is, however, this distinction: In Jewell v. Welch the offer of proof was to show that a sale was made to a minor son of the plaintiff, and the son became intoxicated in the saloon of the defendant. Such intoxication was distinct and separate from any intoxication induced by liquors received from Mr. Flegler or anyone else. The defense interposed was that a settlement of an action brought against Flegler and his bondsmen operated as a matter of law to release the defendant Welch from liability in his action. This contention was negatived. It is to be noticed that under another provision of section 5398, any person who sells liquor to any minor is made liable for both actual and exemplary damages therefor in a sum not less than $50 in each case, and while the opinion of the court in the Jewell Case does not refer to this provision of the law, it is perhaps distinguishable from the present case on that ground. In Johnson v. Johnson, 100 Mich. 326 ( 58 N. W. 1115 ), the court laid down the rule that, where the [284]*284plaintiff’s husband commenced a protracted and continuous debauch on a given day by drinking in defendant’s saloon, and his spree lasted for a considerable period the defendant is liable for all damages resulting therefrom. And in Franklin v. Frey, 106 Mich. 76 ( 63 N. W. 970 ), it was held that two several saloon keepers and the bondsmen of each may be joined in a single action for damages. While in

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Merrinane v. Miller
118 N.W. 11 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 N.W. 11, 157 Mich. 279, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrinane-v-miller-mich-1908.