Rathbone v. Detroit United Railway

154 N.W. 143, 187 Mich. 586, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 625
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1915
DocketDocket No. 31
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 154 N.W. 143 (Rathbone v. Detroit United Railway) 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
Rathbone v. Detroit United Railway, 154 N.W. 143, 187 Mich. 586, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 625 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Bird, J.

(dissenting). While plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s interurban cars operating [588]*588between Detroit and Port- Huron, it collided with a good roads construction train, at a highway crossing near Marysville, and in consequence thereof he was seriously injured. When the collision occurred, the car was behind its schedule time, and was going at a high rate of speed. After discovering the good roads construction train at the crossing, little or no effort was made by the motorman to stop the car or to slacken its speed. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. Defendant railway, which alone has appealed, insists that several reversible errors occurred in the trial court.

1. The verdict as rendered by the jury was:

“Verdict for plaintiff, $10,000 — against the Detroit United Railway, $6,000; against Good Roads Construction Company, $4,000.”

Later a judgment was rendered thereon. After the formal parts of the judgment, it recited that:

“They assess the plaintiff’s damages on occasion of the premises, over and above his costs and charges by him about his suit in this behalf expended, at the sum of $10,000, and they apportion said amount of $10,000 as follows: $6,000 against the Detroit United Railway, and $4,000 against the defendant the Good Roads Construction Company.”

The point is made against the verdict that it is “indefinite, uncertain, and incomplete,” and it is insisted that no valid judgment could be rendered thereon.

By this verdict the jury have determined that plaintiff was entitled to damages, and have assessed them at $10,000. They have also found both defendants guilty. This is as far as they had a right to go. But they did go farther, and apportion the judgment between the defendants. In this they exceeded their authority. After they found the amount of the damages and both defendants guilty, the law steps in and applies the rule of liability, and consequently their ap[589]*589portionment was without force. If we accept their conclusions while acting within their province, and reject them while acting outside of their authority, we have left a good verdict. There is no sound reason in declaring invalid what they have lawfully done, simply because they attempted to do something which the law would not permit, and especially is this so since what they properly did in no wise depends on what they improperly attempted to do. We must assume that both defendants were found guilty, and plaintiff’s damages fixed without regard to the relative guilt of the defendants. The rule generally applied in such cases is stated as follows:

“Verdicts are to have reasonable intendment, and surplusage or immaterial findings may be rejected in construing them. Thus, if the verdict finds the issue and something more, the latter part of the finding will be rejected as surplusage, and judgment rendered in-, dependently of the unnecessary matter; there being nothing to show that the jury reasoned falsely.” 38 Cyc. p. 1890.

This rule is recognized and followed in Burble v. Circuit Judge, 42 Mich. 513 (4 N. W. 192), and in Rawson v. McElvaine, 49 Mich. 194 (13 N. W. 513). Both of these cases are applicable, since the jury in eaqh found not only a proper verdict, but something in addition. The additions were disregarded as surplusage, and the judgments were approved.

Much reliance is placed upon the following cases as being opposed to the validity of the judgment under consideration: Everroad v. Gabbert, 83 Ind. 489; Crawford v. Morris, 5 Grat. (Va.) 90; Foy v. Barry, 159 App. Div. 749 (144 N. Y. Supp. 971). These cases are not in point. An examination of them will disclose that in each of them a several verdict only was returned on a joint count. That fact furnished the reason for declaring the verdicts invalid. In the case at bar a joint verdict was first found, and this was fol[590]*590lowed by a several verdict. The declaration counted upon a joint tort. The joint verdict for $10,000 was responsive to this count, and the balance of the verdict was immaterial, and should be adjudged surplusage under the Michigan cases.

2. An issue which received much attention in the trial court was whether the defendant railway was operating the interurban line. To prove that it was, plaintiff called the president, general manager, and treasurer of the Detroit United Railway for cross-examination under the statute (Act No. 307, Pub. Acts 1909). At the conclusion of the charge the attention of the court was called to the following matter:

“Mr. Fitzpatrick: Only one matter that you did not say anything about, and that is under the statute which permits parties to call adverse parties as witnesses. They go bound by the testimony of such witnesses unless the testimony is controverted by the other testimony. They make them their witnesses under the statute for every purpose that their testimony is uncontradicted in evidence.
“The Court: I do not understand it that way.
“Mr. Pound: That is not the law at all.
“The Court: I will not give that. I do not 'think that is the purpose of the statute.”

The testimony elicited from these witnesses by plaintiff’s cross-examination stood in no different position in the case than it would had defendant itself put the witnesses on the stand. What they testified to in either event would be testimony which might have been controverted by plaintiff, and in either event would be testimony for the consideration of the jury. The obvious purpose of this statute is to give to the parties the same benefit of each other’s testimony as though they had become witnesses in their own behalf. For a construction of this act see Jones v. Railroad Co., 168 Mich. 1 (133 N. W. 993). While we think the trial court was in error upon this question, we are not per[591]*591suaded that under the statement of counsel for defendant railway the case should be reversed for this reason. The testimony of these witnesses was directed solely to the issue whether defendant the Detroit United Railway was operating the interurban railway. Defendant’s counsel says in his brief:

“One of the important questions in the court below, though not raised here, was whether the Detroit United Railway was a proper party defendant.”

We must assume from this statement that the defendant is content with the finding of the jury upon that question, and if such is the case, any errors that might have been made in reaching that conclusion are not now very important. We think the same thing can be said concerning the complaint which is made of the improper argument of plaintiffs counsel to the jury. This argument was all directed to the question as to whether the Detroit United Railway was operating the interurban line at the time of the accident.

3. Defendant complains because its tenth request was refused. It follows:

“The business of the country demands of these railways rapid transit, both for persons and property.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.W. 143, 187 Mich. 586, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rathbone-v-detroit-united-railway-mich-1915.