Tuttle v. Briscoe Manufacturing Co.

155 N.W. 724, 190 Mich. 22, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 841
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1916
DocketDocket No. 9
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 155 N.W. 724 (Tuttle v. Briscoe Manufacturing 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
Tuttle v. Briscoe Manufacturing Co., 155 N.W. 724, 190 Mich. 22, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 841 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Steere, J.

On November 11, 1912, plaintiffs intestate, William H. Eaton, was run over and fatally injured by a motor truck of defendant driven by one of its employees. This writ of error is brought to review a verdict and judgment for $10,000 rendered in the Wayne county circuit court in an action by plaintiff as administrator to recover damages for Eaton’s death.

The accident occurred on or near the sidewalk in front of the Abbott automobile factory on the west [25]*25side of Beaufait avenue in the city of Detroit, at a point where a driveway leads west from the pavement into and through the factory building which fronts on and along the street line 4% feet back of the sidewalk, which is 6 feet in width with its outer edge about 11 feet from the street curb. The driveway is 17% feet wide where it comes through and out of the building onto the street where were two hinged gates, which joined in the center of the passageway when closed. From there it approaches the pavement with a slight decline, its width expanding with curves each' way which are about 48 feet apart at the street curb line. Eaton was a middle-aged business man residing in Detroit, and owned an Abbott car upon which he was having some repairs made at a garage owned by a Mr. Dan-forth in the western part of the city, and on the morning of the accident they, with an employee of Danforth named Findlay, rode over in the car to the Abbott factory to get a new carburetor for it, stopping the car in front of the factory at the curb just north of the driveway, when Eaton, leaving Danforth, who had driven the car, sitting in the front seat with his engine running, and Findlay in the rear seat, went diagonally across the driveway to the office, which was located adjacent to it on the ground floor on the south side with an entrance from the sidewalk. He soon came out of the office and started northeast across the driveway\towards his car and made some call or motion to its occupants indicating they should come on, when the watchman or gatekeeper at the open entrance of the passageway spoke and said, “You can’t come in here,” attracting Eaton’s attention and apparently causing him to halt, or turn, or step back (exactly what he did is in dispute), and just then a heavy Sampson auto truck of defendant, weighing three tons, coming out of the entrance way, struck and threw him down, the left front wheel passing over his neck and [26]*26killing him instantly, stopping with his body lying under the truck between the front and rear wheels.

Three witnesses to the accident were produced by plaintiff — Danforth and Findlay, who sat in Eaton’s car at the curb, and Price, the driver of defendant’s truck; the latter called for examination under the statute relative to calling opposing parties or their agents as witnesses. Defendant swore no witnesses, but moved for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, on the ground that it failed to make a prima facie case, but disclosed that the accident was imputable to deceased’s own negligence, and on denial of said motion rested its case. A motion for a new trial was subsequently made on the grounds previously urged for a directed verdict, and for the further reason that the verdict was against the weight of evidence and excessive.

At the time of the accident Eaton was 42 years of age, a married man residing with his wife and family in Detroit, where he had lived about 19 years, and was earning $8,500 per year as manager of advertising for the J. L. Hudson Company. While defendant’s chief contention is that no actionable negligence was proven and a verdict should have been directed in its favor, error is also assigned on the ground that the verdict is excessive, and that question is submitted for the judgment of the court in defendant’s brief.

In view of the evidence as to deceased’s business ability and earning capacity, expectancy of life which, by the tables of mortality, would be 26.72 years, contributions to his family and manner of living, we are unable to say, as a matter of law, that the conclusions of the jury in that particular should be disturbed.

Defendant’s various assignments of error, which include rulings on its several objections, motions, and requests to charge, are argued under four headings, as follows:

[27]*271. Question of negligence on the part of the defendant company.

2. Contributory negligence of decedent, Mr. Eaton.

3. The question of the city traffic ordinance.

4. Refusal of the court to grant a new trial.

Touching the matter of pleading, it is urged for defendant that a general averment of lack of vigilance or want of care, without specifying and proving in what particular, amounts to nothing, and the only items of negligence “moré or less clearly alleged” in plaintiff’s declaration, with sufficient particularity to authorize sustaining proof are, that the truck was out of repair (especially its brakes), its driver was incompetent, did not sound his horn or give other signals, did not observe the Detroit traffic ordinance, and was guilty of wanton neglect. Reviewing the record as to these averments it is contended that every specific item of alleged negligence is eliminated, and there is nothing left under plaintiff’s pleadings upon which to base any general claim of negligence.

The pertinent portions of the traffic ordinance set out in plaintiff’s declaration require vehicles to be “driven in a careful manner with due regard for the safety and convenience of pedestrians and other vehicles,” that automobiles be provided with adequate brakes, horns, etc., and that some plainly visible or audible signal be given on approaching pedestrians, etc. Independent of the circumstances of the accident we find no testimony to support the charge that the driver was incompetent, and there is no evidence that the truck was out of repair.

In addition to the particularized items of negligence referred to, there also appears in plaintiff’s somewhat lengthy declaration, with sufficient allegations of absence of negligence on the part of deceased and duty of defendant, the charges made with varying repetitions that defendant did not—

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.W. 724, 190 Mich. 22, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-v-briscoe-manufacturing-co-mich-1916.