Paula Day v. Smart

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 2022
Docket356848
StatusUnpublished

This text of Paula Day v. Smart (Paula Day v. Smart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paula Day v. Smart, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PAULA DAY, UNPUBLISHED October 13, 2022 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 356848 Macomb Circuit Court SUBURBAN MOBILITY AUTHORITY FOR LC No. 2019-000199-NI REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION,

Defendant-Appellant,

and

GRADY RECHARDO PAGE and NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE MICHIGAN INC,

Defendants-Appellees,

TIMOTHY MICHAEL MARTIN and THE ASU GROUP,

Defendants.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and JANSEN and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation (SMART) appeals by right the trial court’s order denying SMART’s motion for partial summary disposition regarding governmental immunity. Plaintiff, Paula Day, was injured while riding on a bus being driven by SMART’s employee, defendant Timothy Michael Martin, when Martin drove the bus through a cloud of dust and into the rear end of a street sweeper being operated by defendant Grady Rechardo Page as an employee of defendant National Industrial Maintenance-Michigan, Inc (NIMM). The evidence in this matter most saliently consists of a video recording of the collision

-1- captured by the bus’s forward-facing camera. SMART generally contends that reasonable minds could not differ that Martin acted in a non-negligent manner, thereby precluding the only available exception to governmental immunity under the circumstances. Plaintiff argues that this Court lacks jurisdiction over this appeal. We reject both arguments, and we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On June 7, 2018, at approximately 5:45 a.m., Day was riding as a passenger on a bus owned by SMART and being driven by SMART’s employee, Martin, down 23 Mile Road in Chesterfield Township. Also on the road was a street sweeper owned by NIMM and being driven by NIMM’s employee, Page, and at least two other street sweepers. The bus rear-ended the street sweeper, causing injuries to Martin, Day, and the one other passenger; Page was uninjured. As will be discussed further below, the bus was equipped with a surveillance camera and a GPS system that recorded the accident from the bus’s vantage point. Martin died during the pendency of this action, apparently for reasons unrelated to the accident, but before his death, he filled out an internal report for SMART1 in which he provided the following narrative:

While traveling east on 23 Mile enroute to New Baltimore I suddenly encountered a cloud of dust of [sic, or?] fog that completely eliminated my ability to see the road ahead. I immediately hit my brakes but was not able to stop the coach in enough time to avoid collision with a street sweeper that I [illegible] couldn’t see in the cloud of fog. Imediately [sic] after the accident I checked on the passengers on board and the [sic] called Central dispatch to request medical attention for myself and the remaining passengers.

The police officer who filled out the traffic crash report indicated that Martin and Page had both engaged in “hazardous action.” The officer opined that Martin had failed to ensure that he had a safe distance to stop; he opined that Page had “creat[ed] a large cloud of dust with no visible warning signals on the vehicle due to the large amount of dust.” Day testified that she had no recollection of the accident itself. However, she testified that she had been taking the same bus to work six days a week for four years, and she recognized Martin as a regular driver of that route.

SMART conducted an internal investigation and determined that the accident was “non- preventable.” SMART’s position, stated generally, was that Page operated the street sweeper improperly, causing it to generate a large cloud of dust. SMART concluded that, because there was little ambient light that early in the morning, the dust cloud not only obscured the street sweeper from Martin’s view, but the dust cloud itself was also invisible until it was too late to avoid the collision. SMART drew its conclusions based primarily on reviewing the video taken by the bus’s camera. SMART recognized that the bus was traveling at 49 mph at the time of the collision, which was above the posted speed limit of 45 mph, but emphasized that the bus had just passed through an intersection at which the speed limit dropped from 50 mph. SMART

1 The parties dispute the admissibility of this report. We have chosen to consider it for purposes of resolving this appeal, but we expressly do not decide whether it would be admissible at trial.

-2- emphasizes that the bus’s camera artificially enhances illumination, so everything depicted in the video was, in reality, much dimmer than the video would suggest.2

NIMM explained that operation of its street sweepers required the use of water to control dust. NIMM took the position that the cloud of dust should not have been generated, but emphasized that the amount of dirt at any particular location on a road was unpredictable, and NIMM had never cleaned that particular road before. NIMM conceded that another of its employees had improperly failed to equip the sweeper with an “attenuator,” which is a separate truck that would follow about 200 feet behind the sweeper and would absorb some impact energy in the event of a rear-end collision. Nevertheless, the attenuator would not have prevented the accident, and the bus driver should not have driven through the cloud of dust. NIMM pointed out that its street sweepers were equipped with more amber flashing lights than were required.

We have carefully reviewed the video recordings provided to us. Although some aspects of the video are ambiguous, others are not. It is plainly apparent that the illumination has been artificially increased, as SMART argues. Nevertheless, it is also plainly apparent that a human eye would have dramatically better acuity. For example, no license plates can be read in the video and almost no signage alongside the road can be read; no human with eyesight as poor as the video camera should be on the road. Humans also have stereoscopic vision allowing for depth perception, the low resolution of the video artificially restricts how far ahead of the bus any objects can be discerned, and human eyes are highly sensitive to movement. Therefore, although the video footage is brighter than what a human eye would have seen, it simultaneously offers significantly less detail than what a human eye would have seen. We think that whether the video provides, on balance, a fair approximation of what would or would not have been visible to Martin is clearly a question of fact by itself.

From what can be seen in the video, we agree with the trial court and the parties that flashing lights from Page’s street sweeper are apparent long before the sweeper disappeared into the cloud of dust. Indeed, the dimmed video provided by SMART to be more representative of what a human eye would have seen actually makes it more apparent that the bus is following a vehicle with flashing lights long before the bus reaches the cloud. The video does not allow us to say with confidence exactly how long the flashing lights were visible. Furthermore, the dust cloud is apparent well before the collision, and it appears that some other vehicles traveling parallel to the bus braked or swerved to avoid the cloud. According to telemetry data recorded by the bus, Martin accelerated toward the intersection where the speed limit dropped from 50 mph to 45 mph, and the collision occurred just beyond that intersection. The telemetry data indicates that the bus’s brakes were applied two seconds before impact.

Day commenced this action against, in relevant part, Martin, Page, SMART, and NIMM.

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Paula Day v. Smart, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paula-day-v-smart-michctapp-2022.