Wells v. Ann Arbor Railroad

150 N.W. 340, 184 Mich. 1, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 841
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1915
DocketDocket No. 70
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 150 N.W. 340 (Wells v. Ann Arbor 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
Wells v. Ann Arbor Railroad, 150 N.W. 340, 184 Mich. 1, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 841 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

Upon the line of the defendant road, and a few miles north of Howell, on the east side of the track, is a platform made of cinders, confined on each of the four sides by timbers. It is 6 feet wide, east and west, and 15 feet long. There is no building, and stops there are made by gasoline cars only, and.' only upon signal or to discharge passengers. It is. called Preston. The line runs north and south here, crossing an east and west highway some 240 feet, north of the platform on a bridge elevated some IS feet above the highway, and the land south of the-highway adjoining the defendant’s right of way is called the Layton farm. The highway referred to is. fenced, and the right of way is fenced on both sides. The buildings on the Layton farm are west of the-right of way and about a quarter mile south of the platform at Preston. Members of the Layton household and some neighbors, for convenience, reached the platform by a journey through the fields of the farm to an opening in the right of way fence, coming; [3]*3onto the right of way 810 feet south of the platform, traveling thence up the right of way.- The only other route from the Layton house is north on a highway to the east and west highway above mentioned, along the east and west highway east to the right ©f way, and down the right of way south to the platform. No means of access to the right of way from the highway had been provided. It was gained only by climbing from the highway to the elevation of the right of way or by climbing a fence or fences.. Having gained the right of way from either direction, no course to the platform was prepared or indicated by defendant, intending passengers using such portion of the right of way as suited convenience.

Plaintiff, a woman 71 years old, lived in Howell; her daughter lived on the Layton farm. Upon two occasions in 1913 prior to the one in question here, plaintiff had used the defendant’s gasoline motor car to visit her daughter, alighting at the Preston platform, and on her return taking passage at the platform. To and from the platform she used the defendant’s right of way and the route across the fields. In this manner she reached her daughter’s house on the morning of July 31, 1913, and in the evening left the house alone to return to Howell by the car due at Preston at.7:04 p. m. Later she was joined at the platform by her daughter, who had noticed that the car had not gone south. It was concluded that the plaintiff should return to the house and remain the night, and some 300 feet on the trip down the track to-the house had been accomplished when they heard the whistle of the approaching car. Turning, they observed the headlight of the car then crossing the bridge over the Shiawassee river 2,200 feet north of the platform. Retracing their steps, plaintiff and her daughter again approached the platform, walking rapidly, the car, or its light, being all of the time in [4]*4full view, and plaintiff, as it neared her, making signals by waving her handkerchief as she walked. The daughter reached the platform and from there signaled the car, using her kitchen apron,' which was light brown in color. The car did not stop. Plaintiff claims to have been struck by it 80 feet south of the platform, after about half the car had passed her. The car stopped 352 feet south of the platform, to which place plaintiff and her daughter walked. The train crew offered to take her on board, carry her to the platform, the Layton farm gate, or to Howell. She declined to ride, and the car went on. This occurred about 8:30 p. m., and it was dark. Plaintiff’s description of what took place is, in part, as follows:

“Q. During the time it was coming straight on this stretch of track you could see the headlight all the while?

“A. All the while.

“Q. And did you watch it all the while?

“A. Yes.

“Q. At the same time you were walking rapidly, trying to get up to the platform?

“A. Yes. My daughter was a little spryer than myself, and she got to the platform some time before the car got there.

“Q. And all the time, as you were going on, you were watching and could see the car coming with the headlight?

A. Yes. When the car got near enough so I could signal I took my handkerchief in my hand and raised it as high as I could. I was still walking toward the platform. The car was coming on down very rapidly. I think the car was running faster than its usual rate of speed between stops. I kept on signaling for the car.

“Q. They didn’t stop for you?

“A. No.

“Q. Didn’t act as though they saw your signal at all?

“A. They didn’t — no, they didn’t act so.

[5]*5“Q. And the car kept coming so far as you saw it at the same rate of speed, did it?

“Q. Didn’t it slacken up before it got to you?

“Q. Didn’t stop at all?

“A. No. I supposed it would, but it didn’t.

“Q. So you don’t think it slackened up a particle in answer to your signals before it got to you?

“A. No; it didn’t.

“Q. You are quite sure about that?

“A. I am. I am sure of that.

“Q. So it was running, when it got up to where you were, it was running as fast, you think, as it had been anywhere?

“A. I do.

“Q. After you saw it?

“Q. And it was running faster than the usual rate of speed was?

“Q. Where were you on the track when you signaled?

“A. I was on the outermost part of the embankment.

“Q. Which side of the rails?

“A. On the east side of the rails.

CSQ. With which hand were you signaling?

“A. With my right hand. As I was going towards the platform I was on the east side of the east rail, and I was signaling with my right hand, and I was going as rapidly as I could.

“Q. The headlight was burning, was it?

“Q. So you could see it plainly? It came along at a speed faster than usual and didn’t stop at all?

“Q. As it came to you? Are you quite sure they didn’t slacken up?

“A. I am.

“Q. There can be no doubt in your mind?

“A. No, not a particle.

“Q. Then as they came along there to you, you still had your right hand up signaling, didn’t you?

[6]*6“A. Yes.

“Q. Did you keep your hand up signaling until after the car struck you?

“A. Until it struck me. I guess I was about three rods south of the platform when the car struck me. I don’t know how the car struck me. I was as far from the east rail as I could get, without going down the embankment — should think I was 8 feet from the east rail, but I am not sure. That was my position while I was signaling.

“Q. And then what part of the car hit you?

“A. I can’t tell you. I know — I knew nearly half of the car passed me while I stood there.

“Q. Before it struck you?

“A. Yes'.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 N.W. 340, 184 Mich. 1, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-ann-arbor-railroad-mich-1915.