Thayer v. Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad

53 N.W. 216, 93 Mich. 150, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 957
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 N.W. 216 (Thayer v. Flint & Pere Marquette 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
Thayer v. Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad, 53 N.W. 216, 93 Mich. 150, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 957 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

McGrath, J.

Plaintiff’s horse was frightened by three sharp whistles from a locomotive when within from 30 to 50 feet of defendant’s tracks, on a narrow approach on a highway known as the “ O’Hara Highway,” and she was thrown out of her buggy down an embankment. The highway runs east and west, and crosses the tracks over a fill between two cuts, one about 20 rods south of the highway, and the other from 40 to 80 rods north. Both cuts are deep enough to hide an approaching train. The grade from the crossing north to the cut rises about 18 feet, and between the cuts the grade is raised from 3 to 6 feet above the adjoining lands. At the crossing, the railroad track is about 6 feet above the former grade of the highway. Plaintiff appears to have stopped twice, and looked and listened, and did not observe the train until within about 30 feet of the railroad tracks, whereupon she backed away from the tracks about the length of the. buggy, and stopped. The train came from the north, and, when from 24 to 26 rods north of the highway, the engineer gave the three whistles, causing the horse to> rear and plunge over the embankment. The railroad was originálly constructed in 1880 by the Port Huron & Northwestern Railway Company. Defendant subsequently purchased the road, and was operating it at the time of plaintiff’s injury, June 5, 1889.

The declaration consists of a single count, which contains the following allegations of negligence:

“And the plaintiff alleges that the defendant was negligent and careless in the following particulars, to wit:
First. That the defendant did not, nor did its predecessor, restore the highway aforesaid, as near as it might be, to its former state or condition, but, on the contrary, [152]*152raised the same twenty feet, and, on the top or crest thereof, left only a narrow driveway, about five feet wide, not sufficient to enable a horse and buggy to turn without danger, and on both sides thereof constructed and maintained deep ditches, without guards of any kind, but sharp slopes from the top to the bottom, thereby making an attempt to drive over or turn upon said road extremely perilous and dangerous. * * *
“And the plaintiff further alleges that, at the highway crossing about one mile north of said O’Hara highway, it became and was the duty of the defendant, in operating the special train aforesaid, to blow a whistle, but the defendant neglected so to do; and by reason of such neglect this plaintiff, who was driving on said O’Hara highway, and who would have heard such whistle, did not hear the same, and therefore had no warning that such special train was approaching until it came too near for her to avoid the injury aforesaid, she being unable to see the approaching of said train by reason of the care required, and the management of her horse, and a turn in said road that ■prevented such train being in sight, and because of the neglect of the defendant or its agents or servants to blow the whistle aforesaid, or to blow any whistle when approaching said crossing at the distance required by law.
“And the plaintiff alleges that the defendant was also negligent in the following particulars, to wit:
“1. In its failure to restore said O’Hara highway to its former condition, and to keep the same in repair.
“2. In constructing the approaches upon said O’Hara highway, the track was so high and so narrow that travel thereon was extremely dangerous.
“ 3. In the failure of the defendant to blow a whistle or ring a bell at the crossing north of the O’Hara highway.
“4. In the failure of the defendant to blow a whistle at least 40 rods before said O’Hara crossing was reached, or to ring the bell continuously until such crossing was passed.
“5. In the careless and negligent acts of the engineer or manager of the engine drawing said train, in blowing a shrill whistle 50 feet from said crossing, thereby frightening the plaintiff’s horse, and causing the accident and injury aforesaid.
“ 6. In the fact that said train was being run at a speed of 40 miles an hour, in such a negligent and careless manner. * * *
“7. In the neglect of the defendant or its predecessor to [153]*153put up or maintain guards on said road to save vehicles and am'miáis from being overturned or thrown into the ditches.
“ 8. In the construction of a deep ditch on each side of said highway. * * *
“9. In constructing the approaches by excavating deep ditches on each side of the road. * * *
“10. That the engineer, or person who managed the engine, operating the special train aforesaid on the day and. at the time aforesaid, was incompetent and unskillful, and was careless and negligent in the conduct of his business and in the running of said train, by reason of want of experience and of general unfitness, by reason of which, in the conduct of such train, he neglected to properly run the same, and to give proper signals.”

It is alleged as error that there were several distinct acts of negligence alleged, and that the court refused to instruct the jury that each and every allegation must be proven. Plaintiff relied upon the failure to properly construct the approach, the neglect of the engineer to blow the statutory whistle, and the negligent blowing of the whistle near the crossing, claiming that this combination of circumstances produced the injury, and the case went to the jury upon that theory. Plaintiff’s proofs tended to establish all the allegations of negligence, except the last, and no testimony was offered in support of that charge. Proof of the unskillfulness of the engineer was -not necessary to establish defendant’s liability. Conceding that the engineer was skillful and competent, a case of negligence was made out, if the other allegations were established.

In Wormsdorf v. Railway Co., 75 Mich. 472, relied upon by defendant’s counsel, a collision occurred between two streetcars. The negligence alleged was a defective connecting rod, the absence of a conductor to apply the rear brake, and a fractious horse on one car, and the neglect of the driver ■of the other car to stop and permit plaintiff to alight. The trial court instructed the jury that there were four grounds of recovery, and that they might stand or fall sep[154]*154arately. This Court did uot think that the pleadings would support the instruction; holding that if the breaking of the rod was accidental, and the car rushed upon the horses, causing the horses to run away, the declaration was not so drawn as to place the company in fault for the sole neglect of the driver of the other car to stop and invite his passengers to alight; that it would have te contain allegations of fact directly contrary to what was charged. In other words, the allegations had been made dependent. But here no such difficulty presents itself. It Avas immaterial whether the conduct of the engineer was the result of inexperience or' carelessness. The allegation not proven must be regarded as immaterial. Thompson v. Railway Co., 91 Mich. 255.

The averment as to the rate of speed of the train is not that the train was running at an unusual rate of speed, but that it was being run at a speed of 40 miles an hour, in a negligent and careless manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.W. 216, 93 Mich. 150, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thayer-v-flint-pere-marquette-railroad-mich-1892.