Weatherbee v. Byam

125 N.W. 686, 160 Mich. 600, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 816
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1910
DocketDocket No. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 686 (Weatherbee v. Byam) 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
Weatherbee v. Byam, 125 N.W. 686, 160 Mich. 600, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 816 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Moore, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit to recover damages against three saloon men, Byam, Bloss and McCarthy, and their bondsmen, under the civil-damage law. The declaration consists of four counts. The first, second, and third counts seek to recover upon the theory that plaintiff’s husband, George C. Weatherbee, was a man in the habit of becoming intoxicated and was in fact intoxicated on the afternoon and evening of June 19,1906, and that said defendant saloon keepers in person or by [602]*602their clerks then and there sold and furnished him intoxicating liquors, and that as a result thereof, while intoxicated, he was drowned in Maple river on that night. The fourth count seeks to recover upon the theory that from May 1, 1906, down to and including June 19, 1906, the defendant saloon keepers sold and furnished liquors to said George C. Weatherbee, alleging that he was then and there a person in the habit of becoming intoxicated and was at such times intoxicated, and that—

“ The said George C. Weatherbee on, to wit, the said days and dates above mentioned, became drunk and dazed, bewildered in mind, and wandered and staggered in, upon and about the public streets of the said village of Ovid in the said county of Clinton, and that he would often remain away from their said home until midnight and later before returning, and would thus deprive this plaintiff of rest and strength in watching, waiting, and taking care of him, her said husband, the said George C. Weatherbee, and that he would become and was during, to wit, all of said time, unable to attend to his business, which was neglected and injured because of the said intoxication caused by each of said defendants,” etc.

This count does not allege the death of George C. Weatherbee, and does not make any claim for damages on account of his death.

Upon the trial of the case plaintiff produced and gave testimony tending to show the truth of the averments of the declaration. Upon the trial defendants produced and gave testimony tending to show that Weatherbee was not a man in the habit of becoming intoxicated on and prior to the date in question, and also that he was not intoxicated during that afternoon and evening; that prior to June 19, 1906, Weatherbee, at a time when he was perfectly sober, made an agreement with his brother-in-law to go fishing with a net in violation of law in Maple river on the night in question; that they fished in violation of law in pursuance of that agreement; that during all of the time they were so fishing and for several hours said Weatherbee conducted himself as he would ordinarily [603]*603when no question was raised' that he was under the influence of liquor; that by accident he went into a deep hole while fishing and was drowned; and that any liquors he drank prior thereto did not in any way cause or contribute to his death.

The trial court submitted the case to the jury upon all of the counts, and the jury returned a general verdict of $2,800 in favor of plaintiff. Defendants bring the case to this court on writ of error, and assign 142 assignments of error. It is manifest that no such number of errors could have been committed going to the merits of the case. It is also manifest that it is not practicable to discuss each of these assignments of error. Some of them relate to the admission of testimony, others to the conduct of counsel, others to the cross-examination of witnesses, others to the exclusion of testimony offered on the part of defendants, others to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in favor of defendants on the fourth count, and in permitting the jury to render a general verdict upon all of the counts in the declaration, others to the charge of the court as given, others in the refusal of the court to charge as requested, others in relation to the misconduct of counsel in instructing the jury how to answer one of the special questions submitted to the jury, and in not respecting the ruling of the court, and in using prejudicial language in discussing such special questions. All of these groups of assignments have been examined with care, but we shall confine our discussion to those which seem important. A quotation from the charge of the court at this point will be helpful. Among other things stated by the court is the following:

“ It is the claim of the plaintiff that she was married to George C. Weatherbee in 1900, and that she was living with him as his wife from that time up to the time of his death, which occurred on June 20, 1906, and that during their married life she had received her support from her husband and was receiving support from him when his death occurred.
“She further claims that on June 19, 1906, her husband [604]*604was a person in the habit of getting intoxicated, and that during the evening of said day he was intoxicated at the village of Ovid. She further claims that from on or about May 1,1906, to June 20, 1906, the defendant Byam was engaged in the business of selling spirituous, malt, brewed, fermented, and vinous liquors at retail in the village of Ovid, and was the proprietor of a saloon there where intoxicating liquors were sold, and that he was carrying on said business under a statute of this State, and that in compliance with this statute he had given the bond provided for by law, with the defendants Voorheis and Gristock as his bondsmen; and that defendant Bioss wa3 during said time engaged in the same business in Ovid in the same way, with defendants Hicks and Duncan as his bondsmen; and that defendant McCarthy was during said time engaged in the same business in Ovid in the same way, with defendants Hicks and Duncan as his bondsmen, and that each of these three principal defendants, Byam, Bioss, and McCarthy, was operating and conducting a saloon of his own in Ovid, and that she makes the other defendants, the bondsmen, parties, because they are sureties upon the bond; and she further claims that on June 19, 1906, while defendants Byam, Bioss, and McCarthy were so operating their respective saloons and while her husband was a psrson in the habit of getting intoxicated, and while he was intoxicated, each of these principal defendants, Byam, Bioss, and McCarthy, either by themselves or by their several clerks, agents, and servants, sold, furnished, and delivered to her husband at their respective saloons intoxicating liquors, which liquors her husband then and there drank, and that he became and was intoxicated on that evening, and that this intoxication was either caused or contributed to by the liquors furnished by each of these saloonkeepers, and that the plaintiff saw her husband in an intoxicated condition during the evening of the 19th, and that after-wards and early on the morning of the 20th, while her husband was fishing in Maple river near the bridge just south of the village of Ovid, he lost his life by drowning, and that he was a good swimmer and would not have been drowned but for the fact that he was then and there in an intoxicated, dazed, and helpless condition caused by his intoxication, and that because of such intoxication he was helpless to a certain extent while in the water, and [605]*605unable to swim or otherwise save himself as he would have been providing he had been in the possession of his full faculties and not in any manner enfeebled or rendered to any degree helpless by said intoxication, and that it was his intoxication, caused or contributed to by said liquors furnished by these three’ principal defendants, which caused his death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 686, 160 Mich. 600, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weatherbee-v-byam-mich-1910.