Phillips v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad

134 N.W.2d 201, 375 Mich. 244, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 256
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1965
DocketCalendar 62, 63; Docket 49,928, 49,929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 N.W.2d 201 (Phillips v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad) 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
Phillips v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad, 134 N.W.2d 201, 375 Mich. 244, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 256 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Dethmers, J.

These are actions of a mother and son, consolidated for trial and appeal, for the son’s personal injuries and resulting damages to both. Prom jury verdict of no cause for action and judgment thereon for defendant, the plaintiffs appeal.

*246 Plaintiff son, a 13-year-old boy, hereinafter called the plaintiff, with other boys, went onto the property of defendant railroad company. They climbed up the side of a standing freight train. When plaintiff reached the top of a boxcar, it jerked. He looked ahead and saw an engine connected to the train. He testified, on trial, that a man in the window of the engine was looking back his way and waving his arms. Plaintiff became frightened and began to go down the ladder on the car. As he did so, the train started to move forward. While he descended the ladder the train’s speed increased. When he reached the bottom rung of the ladder he pushed himself backward from the car and fell to the ground. The wheels of the train severed both of his legs. For resulting injuries and damages these suits were brought.

Counsel for plaintiff, in his opening statement, conceded that plaintiff was a trespasser on defendant’s property, but with respect to that and defendant’s expressly pleaded defense that plaintiff was guilty of negligence which was a proximate cause of his injuries, he stated that plaintiff’s theory in the case was that defendant was guilty of subsequent, discovered negligence. This was based on plaintiff’s contention that defendant’s employees saw plaintiff and the other boys on its property and on the train but did nothing to prevent injury by stopping the train or causing them to get off, but, instead, speeded up and waved to them to jump off.

Defendant’s employees denied having seen plaintiff or any of the boys or having had knowledge of their presence on the train. Plaintiff’s counsel contended that they were falsifying under oath as witnesses. Pie deemed essential to his proof in that regard the time when a detective employed by defendant received a telephone call from a sergeant reporting the accident. The detective testified that *247 wlien he received that call in one of defendant’s buildings a clock therein showed the time to he about 7 o’clock or a little later. Plaintiff’s counsel considered that time element to constitute proof that defendant’s employees knew about the accident earlier than the time they testified they had first learned of it when one of them saw a police car and people and a commotion back on the tracks at the scene of the accident. At trial the detective’s testimony that the clock had never been known to be accurate and that it was not accurate was permitted to stand over plaintiff’s objection that it was a conclusion. Also, he was permitted to testify that the clock had been removed a couple of months after the accident because “it was broke”. This was objected to as being incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial.

Plaintiff urges that prejudicial error resulted from allowing the indicated testimony about the clock. He condemns it as having been hearsay evidence upon which the conclusion of the witness was based. It is to be observed that the witnesses not only testified that the clock had never been known to be accurate, but, also, that one of them testified that he knew, from frequent checking with his own watch, that it was inaccurate. This amounts to more than either hearsay or conclusion. The inaccuracy of the clock was corroborated by another witness in testimony brought out by plaintiff on cross-examination. Furthermore, the testimony, stressed by plaintiff, of the employee of defendant to the effect that he received the telephone call around 7 o’clock or a little later, according to that clock, was qualified by his immediately succeeding testimony that he could not say for sure what time it was, but that it was 7 or 7:15 or 7:25, around 7. We see no prejudicial error in permitting the testimony as to the accuracy of the clock.

During the trial, witnesses who had not as yet testified were excluded from the courtroom by the *248 court. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s proofs, his counsel announced, in the presence of the jury, that he had 3 of the boys who had been at or near the scene of the accident hut whom he had not called to the stand as witnesses, in the hall just outside the courtroom and that they were available as witnesses if the defense desired to call them. At defendant’s request, the court instructed the jury to disregard that announcement. Among plaintiff’s subsequent requests to charge there was included one to the effect that there was no duty on plaintiff’s part to call witnesses other than those he did call to the stand and that the jury should indulge no presumption that his failure to call them meant that they would have testified adversely to him because either side could have subpoenaed and called them. The request was not given word for word as plaintiff requested, but the court did instruct the jury as follows:

“During the course of the case there has been something said by counsel with respect to witnesses who did not appear. As we said at the outset in this case, you decide the ease on the basis of the testimony that you hear in the case keeping in mind all the other rules that apply. You should not decide the case on what you think witnesses might have testified to had they been here, or you should not speculate on why witnesses were not here, but you should decide the case based on the testimony that you did hear from the witnesses who were here, and not upon any speculation or surmise.”

Plaintiff cites and quotes from Barringer v. Arnold, 358 Mich 594, to the effect that no inference may he drawn against one of the parties from his failure to call a witness if the witness was equally available to the opposite party or if the evidence involved would be merely cumulative. It was held reversible error for the trial court to charge, as it did, that the *249 inference might be drawn. Here the situation is the reverse. The court did not so charge. The claim of error is that the court did not instruct against the drawing of such inference. Barringer is no authority for the right to such charge. Furthermore, if plaintiff was entitled to it, we think the quoted charge of the court, as given, was the equivalent of the request, and plaintiff received all .to which he was entitled in this connection.

Plaintiff assigns error in the court’s refusal, on voir dire examination of members of the jury panel, to put a question to them in the precise language requested by plaintiff’s counsel, namely, “whether or not they have any prejudice against this boy because of his color”. The court did, however, put this question to them:

“Do any of you feel, or do any of you entertain any feeling which, in your judgment, might or should disqualify you from consideration of this case because of any feeling of bias, prejudice or sympathy, and by that I mean, any feeling of bias or prejudice based upon your antipathy of any person because of race, color, creed, religious belief, or any antipathy or bias against the defendant because it is a railroad, or because it is a corporation?

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134 N.W.2d 201, 375 Mich. 244, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-grand-trunk-western-railroad-mich-1965.