Sahr v. Bierd

92 N.W.2d 467, 354 Mich. 353, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 305
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1958
DocketDocket 8, Calendar 47,413
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 92 N.W.2d 467 (Sahr v. Bierd) 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
Sahr v. Bierd, 92 N.W.2d 467, 354 Mich. 353, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 305 (Mich. 1958).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Here we have an automobile accident at the intersection of 2 country roads. It happened in broad daylight. The roads were clear and dry. A jury verdict was returned for defendant. Plaintiff asserts error, pointing to the court’s refusal to submit 2 special questions to the jury, to the court’s refusal of the charge that if upon the facts shown the defendant drove out into the intersection he was guilty of negligence as a matter of law, and to the court’s inclusions of instructions upon intervening negligence when nothing had intervened. The case will he reversed. If defendant in truth drove out into the intersection under the conditions presented he was guilty, of negligence as a matter of law and the jury should have been so instructed.

The inclusion of the special questions, and the controversy over their use, compels us, as well, to examine in detail this cumbersome procedural device which came into the law to lessen the peril of the jury’s attaint. It was made statutory at an early time in this jurisdiction1 and has since been embodied in our court rules.2 It is prolific of disagree-[355]*355meat, dissent (see our recent division in Richards v. Birmingham School District, 348 Mich 490), and distinctions so dubious that Mr. Justice Hart of the supreme court of Ohio (McNees v. Cincinnati Street R. Co., 152 Ohio St 269, 284 [dissent] [89 NE2d 138, 146]) referred to them as metaphysical. Viewing the procedure in operation we are not impressed with its utility.

The plaintiff was a 10-year-old boy. He was riding-in a Chrysler automobile being driven by his father in a westerly direction on Hess road, a 2-lane, hard-surfaced, . east and west, through highway. There is testimony that the father had had some beer prior to the accident. He had a restrictive driver’s license only, since he had but one arm, and was required to have a lcnob on his steering wheel.

Defendant Jack Bierd was driving- his Ford south on Towerline road. This also was a hard-surfaced, 2-lane road, running generally north and south. A stop sign at the Hess-Towerline intersection required traffic on Towerline to stop before entering Hess.

It is undisputed that the 2 cars collided. As to how and why they collided the parties differ. Plaintiff asserts that the defendant turned left through the intersection in the path of plaintiff’s oncoming car and that the collision actually occurred in the northeast corner of the intersection “where defendant had no right to be.” Defendant, however, testified that he came to a full stop “about even with the culvert, which was 2 or 3 feet off Hess,” and that he was standing still when hit and had not entered the intersection.

Appellant first asserts error in the refusal of the trial court to submit to the jury 2 special questions:

1. “Did the collision occur on the northeast corner of the intersection of Hess and Towerline road as claimed by the plaintiff?

[356]*3562. “Did the collision occur on Towerline road north of Hess road as claimed by the defendant?”

In support of his claimed right to the submission of such questions, appellant cites to us OL 1948, § 618.39 (Stat Ann § 27.1019), providing as follows:

“In all cases where an issue of facts is tried before any court of record, the court shall at the request in writing, of the counsel of either party, instruct the jury if they return a general verdict, also to find upon particular questions of facts, respecting which the issue is joined, to be stated in writing, and shall direct a written finding thereon: Provided, Such special questions shall not exceed 5 in number, and shall be each in single, short sentences, readily answered by yes or no. The special verdict, or finding, shall be filed with the clerk, and entered upon the minutes, and when any special finding of facts shall be inconsistent with a general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court give judgment accordingly.”

Thus appellant relies upon the “special questions” statute, also a part of Court Rule No 37, § 6 (1945), rather than the “special verdict” section of the court rules, section 7 of Rule 37. As Justice Black has pointed out in Richards v. Birmingham School District, 348 Mich 490, 512, 514, these sections are not to be confused. Section 6 (special questions, or special interrogatories) is an outgrowth of an ancient practice. Section 7 (the rule-authorized special verdict) is a modern device, urged by the leading students of our generation,1 espoused by distinguished judges,2 made a part not only of our State practice [357]*357but of tbe Federal practice as well,* i*3 commended by those who have employed it,4 yet permitted by us of the profession to gather dust in the back room. Meanwhile the jury function, guaranteed us by the Constitution, is permitted slowly to break down under the weight of burdens far beyond its capabilities, as the numbers of the jury-waived cases now so eloquently attest. We have too much faith in the jury function to acquiesce tacitly in its gradual elimination.

The problems confronting us in this case cannot be answered upon authority and principle without an examination of the origins and purposes of the special practice which it is here sought to employ. Behind the rule under examination we have one of the darkest of the common-law doctrines, that of the attaint of the jury. This, as Thayer tells us,5 was for centuries the great check upon the jury. If, upon appeal to a grand jury, the verdict of the first jury was found to be erroneous (even if “based upon a misconception of a nice point of law,” Morgan, supra, p 576) the first judgment was reversed and (3 Blackstone, Commentaries, *404) “the judgment by the common law was, that the jurors should lose their liberam legem (free law) and become forever infamous ; should forfeit their goods and the profits of their lands; should themselves be imprisoned, and their wives and children thrown out of doors; should have their houses razed, their trees extirpated, and their meadows ploughed; and that the plaintiff should be restored to all that he lost by reason of the unjust verdict.” 6

[358]*358The obvious unfairness to the jury of such procedures resulted in their being permitted to bring in a special verdict at a very early period in the common law. (Scott, Fundamentals of Procedure, 95.) They merely found the facts in issue, the court deciding on the legal effect of such facts. A primary difficulty with the common-law special verdict, however, was the rigid rule that if the judge failed to require the jury to find on every material issue of ultimate fact the verdict could not stand. As Dean Leon Green described it (A New Development in Jury Trial, 13 ABAJ 715, 716):

“When employed, it must be complete; the jury must find all the material facts, disputed and undisputed, and not merely the evidence from which the facts can be inferred, nor mere conclusions. Nothing must be left for the judge to do except pronounce judgment upon the facts found. The changes which have been rung on these requisites are numberless, likewise unintelligent and futile. At bottom the special verdict represents a valuable idea, but as put into operation it has no vitality.

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Sahr v. Bierd
92 N.W.2d 467 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W.2d 467, 354 Mich. 353, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sahr-v-bierd-mich-1958.