Preuschoff v. B. Stroh Brewing Co.

92 N.W. 945, 132 Mich. 107, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 771
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1903
DocketDocket No. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 945 (Preuschoff v. B. Stroh Brewing 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
Preuschoff v. B. Stroh Brewing Co., 92 N.W. 945, 132 Mich. 107, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 771 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

Grant, J.

(after stating the factsj dissenting). 1. The court instructed the jury:

“I charge you as a matter of law that you may believe the testimony of any witness or disregard the testimony of any witness.”

This instruction was .given without any qualification or explanation. It is not the law. Jurors are not at liberty to arbitrarily set aside the testimony of a fair and unimpeached witness. The books are full of cases where courts have directed verdicts where the testimony is uncontradicted, and the witnesses, though in the employ of the parties, are unimpeached. There must be something ápparent upon the record to cast discredit upon the testimony of an uncontradicted witness before the jury are justified in disregarding his testimony. Underhill v. Railway Co., 81 Mich. 43 (45 N. W. 508); Fruit Dispatch Co. v. Russo, 125 Mich. 306 (84 N. W. 308), and authorities there cited; Michigan Pipe Co. v. Michigan Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 92 Mich. 482 (52 N. W. 1070, [111]*11120 L. R. A. 277). The decisions of other courts are to the same effect. Evans v. George, 80 Ill. 53; Harding v. Brooks, 5 Pick. 244; Berzevizy v. Railroad, Co:, 19 App. Div. 309 (46 N. Y. Supp. 27).

The facts set forth in the above statement are undenied by a single witness, or by any circumstances in the case. The only ground a jury could have for setting aside the uncontradicted testimony of Stempel is that on cross-examination he testified that he had not talked with the defendant’s attorneys about the facts he testified to. When his attention was called upon redirect examination to conversations with defendant’s attorneys, he promptly admitted them. On recross-examination he explained that he supposed counsel for the plaintiff was referring to conversations before he was subpoenaed. Plaintiff’s counsel on cross-examination also elicited from witness the fact that he at the time of the accident told others that he had so told Huber. The inquiry by Mr. Huber was natural, and Mr. Stempel’s reply was equally natural. Whether, under the circumstances, this denial of the witness that he had talked with the defendant’s counsel was sufficient to authorize the jury to wholly disregard his testimony, corroborated as it was in other particulars, is not specifically argued by counsel, and I express no opinion upon it. It was at least important for the court to instruct the jury that, before they could utterly disregard his testimony, they must be able to find that this denial was sufficient to destroy confidence in the truthfulness of the witness.

2. I think the plaintiff failed to make out a case of negligence. In addition to the facts already stated, the opening for taking out beer at the right of the door was eight feet long and six to seven feet high. It was partly raised. The only testimony upon this point is that “it was about half to a quarter open; about half, or a little lower.” Two gaslights were burning in the cellar,-one near the foot of the stairs, the other farther in. A light was also burning in the small shipping room. There was a small window in the transom over the door. Three men [112]*112were employed in and around the doorway to put the casks into the cellar. One.of these stood in the doorway in the act of removing the door; another w;as inside on the stairs over the door, arranging the tackle; and the third was just inside the doorway upon the shipping room floor. About two years before, other casks had been lowered into this cellar at the same place and in the same way, the door, stairs, and platform being removed. Mr. Huber was then in the employ of the company.

The defendant’s employés acted with'commendable care in nailing up the door while removing the stairs. It was then necessary to remove the door. The door could not be obstructed; -the space must be left open. A rail outside of the casks would have been no warning or protection, unless built high enough to keep persons odt. Ordinarily, no one could enter this door in the usual and proper manner without being seen by some one of the defendant’s employés. Was it the legal duty of the defendant to suppose that one of its employés would rudely push another employé, who stood in the doorway, aside, and rush to his death? Burmeister was there for two purposes, — to keep defendant’s* employés out, and to assist in the work. If he had been placed there for the sole purpose of notifying those who had occasion to go there of the danger, and he stood with his back to the alley, obstructing the doorway so that no one could enter without pushing him aside, would not defendant have performed its duty towards its employés ? Would not Mr. Burmeister have been justified in believing that no one would attempt to push him aside and rush into the building? Burmeister’s speedy action in grasping hold of the casing alone saved him from going into the cellar with the deceased.

Why Mr. Huber entered does not appear. He was not going after a load. It does not appear that he had occasion to go there for any other purpose. It evidently was not the usual place for employés to stay when not at work. His proper place, when not engaged in hauling beer, was at the barn. His team was at the time in the [113]*113shed near the barn. He had no work to perform in the shipping room at this time. Had Mr. Huber entered this doorway in a proper manner, he would not have been injured. He could not enter until Mr. Burmeister was out of his way. Instead of asking him to step aside, he rudely pushed him aside. He had no right to do this. There is no dispute as to the fact upon this point. Both Burmeister and Lewis testified that Huber, without saying a word, deliberately and forcibly pushed Burmeister aside, and their testimony is uncontradicted. I think that the defendant was under no obligation to anticipate such action on the part of its employes, that it had done all that the law requires to protect them, that the surroundings were sufficient to put Mr. Huber upon his guard, that he entered this door in an unjustifiable manner, and that the accident was the result of his own rash conduct. I think the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant.

Judgment should be reversed, and new trial ordered.

Moore, J.

I cannot agree with the conclusion reached by Justice Grant. In relation to the two important questions discussed by him, the circuit judge charged the jury as follows:

“ I need hardly say to you that the defendant in this case had an undoubted right to have, them [ the vats ] put in the building, and, if, it was necessary at that time to remove the stairway and the platform and the door, they had a right to do this also. They had clearly a right, in the manufacture of beer, to make such improvements as were necessary or essential to the proper conduct of their business. Under these circumstances, the law unquestionably cast upon them a duty, and I charge you that the fact of taking up the platform and the stairs just inside of the door by the defendant, forming a pit or an opening in the floor, and the fact that the entrance in question over the platform that had been taken out was the usual and ordinary method of entering that portion of the building known as the shipping room, made it the duty of the defendant to properly guard the opening; and, if it was not practicable to guard it with a railing, to use some [114]*114other and more efficient method.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 945, 132 Mich. 107, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preuschoff-v-b-stroh-brewing-co-mich-1903.