Nosa v. Munising, Marquette & Southeastern Railway Co.

162 N.W. 970, 196 Mich. 104, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 755
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1917
DocketDocket No. 80
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 N.W. 970 (Nosa v. Munising, Marquette & Southeastern 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
Nosa v. Munising, Marquette & Southeastern Railway Co., 162 N.W. 970, 196 Mich. 104, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 755 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the circuit court of Alger county against defendant for personal injuries, resulting from being struck by a gasoline car, driven by defendant’s foreman, as he was walking along its track on Sunday evening, June 29, 1913. Plaintiff is an Austrian by birth, at the time of his injury about 60 years of age, had been employed for 27 or more years as a woodsman, and was at this time working “at Frank Double-jack’s camp,” on the east branch of defendant’s line. Defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of a common carrier steam railway company in Alger county and elsewhere.

The fact that plaintiff was seriously injured in some manner while walking along defendant’s line to the camp where he worked does not appear to be questioned. The reasons urged for reversal are concisely stated in defendant’s brief as follows:

“This case presents but a single question. It is not claimed on the part of the defendant that the evidence did not present a question of fact to be submitted to the jury. No claim is made that there was error in the charge of the court submitting the case to the jury, or in his rulings upon the admissibility of evidence at the trial. The case is brought here for review upon the questions raised by defendant’s motion for a new trial, dealing with matters concerning the conduct of counsel for plaintiff during the trial.”

There have been three jury trials of this issue. The first terminated by plaintiff submitting to a voluntary nonsuit; in the second the jury disagreed; and the [106]*106trial here for review resulted in a verdict and judg-' ment for $5,000.

The east branch of defendant’s railway in the section where the accident occurred is exclusively a logging road, unfenced and running mostly through timber, with but one train a day, except Sundays. It starts from the main line at Stillman, in Alger county, and extends easterly a distance of 20 miles, with stations or camps at intervals known as Doty, Van Mere, and Haggins, terminating at Cusino. Plaintiff was injured between Van Mere and Haggins, which are about 31/2 miles apart. Defendant had a section gang, under a foreman named John Edgar, who lived at Van Mere, caring for that portion of the east branch extending from Doty to Cusino, including two spurs, or short branches, extending northerly, on one of which Frank Double jack’s camp, where plaintiff worked, was located. He had been working but a few days, having gone there with his “partner” but a short time before without their tools, which they had left at a place called Shingleton, about six miles south of Van Mere, where they had previously worked. On the day of the accident, which was Sunday, they went to Shingleton to get their tools, and plaintiff was injured while returning in the afternoon, how and at what time being matters in dispute.

There were several camps, with quite extensive logging operations, on and tributary to the east line, and a number of gasoline and hand cars were used upon it by various parties. There was a worn footpath along the track, running inside or outside the rails according to convenience of footing, which men employed in that section, and others were accustomed to use, and plaintiff was following it that afternoon. This custom was well known to defendant and its employees. Edgar, the section foreman, had and used both a hand and gasoline car. He passed north with [107]*107his gasoline car that evening between 7 and 8 o’clock, accompanied by others, and came up to plaintiff at the place from which he soon thereafter was carried, suffering from several injuries, the most serious of which, as stated by the physician who was called to attend him, being a multiplied fracture of the thigh, a broken clavicle, and a large wound in the head. The diametrically opposed testimony of the respective parties as to what then occurred furnishes the issue of this litigation.

In outline it is claimed for plaintiff that in returning home he had, because of a physical necessity, fallen behind his partner, who had gone on, and was again walking along the track alone, carrying his tools, exercising proper precautions by listening and looking back from time to time, when suddenly Edgar’s car came upon him from behind, quietly coasting down a grade without light, noise, or other warning, and struck him as he turned, before he could get out of the way, inflicting the serious and permanent injuries from which he suffered; while it is claimed in behalf of defendant that the car was not running fast, that it made considerable noise, that plaintiff was not walking along the track, but lying close beside it, that in the gathering twilight, when first seen, those on the car thought the dark object they saw ahead was a pile of cinders thrown beside the track from an engine, and when on near approach it was discovered to be a man, the car, which only pushed his head from the rail, was quickly stopped, and it was found on investigation that he ha'd evidently been injured in some previous accident, was unconscious, had apparently laid there for some time, as he was covered with dried blood, and steps were taken to have him properly cared for, with medical attendance.

Defendant’s charge of prejudicial conduct of counsel, on which reversal is asked, is directed to alleged [108]*108unwarranted attacks on the credibility of witnesses, with unfounded impeaching questions, not followed up by affirmative proof; wilful persistence in asking and repeating on cross-examination improper questions, after the court had ruled against them, and including in questions on cross-examination derogatory insinuations, not founded on evidence, relating to the conduct, sincerity, veracity, and motives of defendant’s witnesses. These matters were presented to the circuit court in a motion for a new trial, which was denied, without discussing them.

It was undisputed plaintiff was alone when Edgar’s car came up to him, and defendant’s testimony showed there were two men, two women, and a boy riding on the car with Edgar. If their story was true, plaintiff’s was not, and vice versa. For its bearing upon this evidence was introduced as to what was said and done by the parties before and after the event, and what others saw and heard. The ample record discloses that the trial spread over a wide range of inquiry, and counsel made protracted u^e in cross-examination of testimony taken on former trials of the case. Defendant charged, with claimed supporting evidence, that plaintiff was intoxicated on that afternoon, which he denied, and plaintiff’s counsel sought to show, by cross-examination and statements claimed to have been made at other times, that the same was true of defendant’s chief witnesses. In a case of this character, where the all-important question was the veracity of witnesses, who could not honestly be mistaken as to vital facts upon which they were at variance, a thorough cross-examination was permissible and proper. Frequently the trial court may not be able to foresee, and in fairness ought not to compel counsel to disclose, the purpose of questions asked, and may to a degree assume that apparently imma[109]*109terial or incompetent questions are asked in good faith and will be justified later.

That plaintiffs counsel at times sought to improperly avail themselves of such situation, and to an extent did so by irritating and reiterated questions embodying their views, or asserting facts not proven, is too plain on this record for successful denial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.W. 970, 196 Mich. 104, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nosa-v-munising-marquette-southeastern-railway-co-mich-1917.