Reimers v. Saginaw-Bay City Railway Co.

140 N.W. 581, 174 Mich. 457, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 487
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1913
DocketDocket No. 54
StatusPublished

This text of 140 N.W. 581 (Reimers v. Saginaw-Bay City 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
Reimers v. Saginaw-Bay City Railway Co., 140 N.W. 581, 174 Mich. 457, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 487 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Steere, C. J.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the circuit court of Saginaw county against the defendant for the sum of #1,500 in an action for personal injuries which she claimed to have received on February 17, 1911, by reason of the gross negligence of one of defendant’s employés.

Plaintiff was a Russian woman about 50 years of age, who at the time of the accident complained of had resided in the city of Saginaw for some eight or nine years. She was a widow with four children; she and they earning a [458]*458livelihood by caring for sugar beet crops in the adjacent country, taking contracts therefor by the acre before the time of planting. On the day in question she hired a fellow countryman by the name of Fahnenstiel to take her into the country with his horse and buggy for the purpose of interviewing a farmer for whom she had previously worked, and with whom she contemplated making a contract relative to his anticipated beet crop for the ensuing season. The fellow countryman called at her house in the morning with his horse and buggy, and they drove out to the farmer’s place as arranged, returning some time before noon. On the way going and coming they crossed the Pere Marquette Railroad tracks, on which were numerous engines moving back and forth, ringing bells, emitting steam, etc., and also met and were overtaken and passed by several street cars and automobiles, which in no way frightened or disturbed the horse. On their return, while driving southerly into the city along North Washington avenue, on the west side of the street car track which traverses that thoroughfare, a car came up from behind and the motorman rang his gong as he approached, when the horse became frightened, started to gallop, and ran down the street in the same direction the car was going, for about 400 feet, to a point where a farmer’s Ooncord buggy stood at a hitching post on the west side of the street. The driver did not succeed in stopping the horse, but guided him in his course successfully, until, as he claimed, in attempting to pass the Concord buggy, he turned to the west, towards the curb, and his buggy struck a hitching post, tipped over, and threw them both out. Neither then appeared to have sustained much injury. Plaintiff arose, and in a short time took the next street car downtown. Her fellow countryman went after his horse, which had broken loose from the buggy and gone on. She testifies, “When he pulled him into the side, that is, where the buggy tipped over,” that she felt herself to have been hurt, and took the street car down town to see her doctor; that she suffered severe pains, [459]*459went home and was laid, up for eight weeks, it developing that sh9 was suffering from a floating kidney. She knew it was a floating kidney because she felt it, and her doctor told her so.

It is the testimony of Fahnenstiel, the owner of the horse, that it was 13 years old, of steady and reluctant habits, very tame and gentle, being “ one of the gentlest horses in the county of Saginaw,” not afraid of steam cars, street cars, automobiles, puffing of steam or ringing of bells; that it had never become frightened or ran away before, though he had driven it much around Saginaw “when the street cars were ringing frequently;” that it was a ‘' fair running horse,” compared with a fast runner, and on this exceptional occasion when it was running away it ran with all its might and nearly as fast as the street car, which, the testimony of others showed, was running not to exceed 8 or 10 miles an hour; that he was unable to account for its unusual fright on this occasion, except by the sudden ringing of the gong of the street car. Other witnesses, de circumstantibus, who were near by, ascribe this manifestation of fear and activity on the part of the horse to “a testing machine” which flitted by on the other side just at that time going 30 miles an hour, the tester being one of those recent developments of our complicated civilization appurtenant to automobile factories, who, in the work of trying out a new machine, at times suddenly and unexpectedly appears and disappears on’the highways in a skeleton automobile in a cloud of dust or mud as the case may be. At the conclusion of the testimony, defendant’s counsel moved the court for a directed verdict in its favor, for the reason that the testimony disclosed no actionable negligence on its part, which motion was denied.

The negligence charged against defendant in plaintiff’s declaration is that it failed to employ careful, competent, experienced, and prudent servants, drove its car at an unreasonable and improper speed of 20 miles an hour, failed to keep its car under proper control so as to stop [460]*460within a reasonable .distance; that it wilfully sounded its gong on its car in such a wanton and improper manner that it would and did frighten the horse hitched to the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding—

“And did, through a wanton, negligent, and wilful disregard of the apparent danger to the said plaintiff, continue to drive its said car along and upon the said highway and especially along and upon its said west tracks on said North Washington street, at a high rate of speed, after it became and was apparent to the said servants, agents, and employés of the said defendant that the said horse hitched to the said vehicle in which the plaintiff was riding, as aforesaid, had become and was greatly frightened and unmanageable, and after its servants, agents and employés saw or should have seen that by reason of the blocking and obstructing of said street by the other vehicle, as aforesaid, that unless it did so stop its said cars it would result in’injury to the plaintiff so riding behind the said animal hitched to said vehicle, as aforesaid, and wantonly, negligently, and wilfully drove its said car so close to the rear of said vehicle in which the said plaintiff was riding, as aforesaid, that the defendant forced the said horse and vehicle in which the plaintiff was riding into a pocket.”

The trial court submitted the case to the jury on the last proposition only, saying:

“Gentlemen of the jury, the only question, then, that I submit to you in this case with regard to the negligence of the defendant in this case is as to whether this motorman, after he discovered or should have discovered, by the exercise of reasonable care and caution, that this horse was beyond control, failed to take such precautions as a prudent man would have done under the circumstances to prevent this accident. That is as to whether he used such care and caution as was his duty to use to stop his car, if he saw it was necessary to do so, in order to prevent an accident occurring.”

This issue was raised by the allegations in the fourth count of plaintiff’s declaration, added by amendment, charging gross negligence in operating the car. In behalf of defendant, it is contended that, under the undis[461]*461puted evidence, considered in its most favorable aspect for plaintiff, the capsizing of the buggy in which she was riding must either be attributed to the mismanagement and negligence of her driver, which, as between her and defendant, must be imputed to her, or, in the nature of things, it is to be regarded as an unavoidable accident, based on the great truth, promulgated centuries before street cars and Automobiles came to bless, or vex, mankind, that “an horse is a vain thing for safety,” even though he may be “one of the gentlest horses in Saginaw county,” and the modern doctrine of discovered negligence, last clear chance, or gross negligence, has no application.

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Bluebook (online)
140 N.W. 581, 174 Mich. 457, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reimers-v-saginaw-bay-city-railway-co-mich-1913.