Young v. Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Co.

23 N.W. 67, 56 Mich. 430, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 678
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 23 N.W. 67 (Young v. Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway 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
Young v. Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Co., 23 N.W. 67, 56 Mich. 430, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 678 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Champijn, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for injuries received by plaintiff while crossing defendant’s tracks at Drayton Plains, on the 9 th day of February, 1884. The defendant’s road crosses the highway a few rods east from the depot, and at an angle somewhat less than forty-five degrees. -At this point there are two tracks : the main line, and a side track which lies north of the main line and about ten feet therefrom. The highway crossing is planked, and is about twenty feet in width. At the time of the accident the side track was occupied by a west-bound freight train which was awaiting the arrival of the eastbound passenger express train, then nearly due. The freight train backed into the side track from the west, pushed some freight cars east of the crossing, and then cut the train at the crossing, leaving a freight car to the east and the caboose [433]*433car to the west of the center line of the highway. The distance between these cars was between sixteen and thirty feet. The witnesses do not agree as to the exact distance. The north-east corner of the caboose was, by testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses, over the westerly side of the plank crossing, a distance of about three feet, and the car on the east, which was an ordinary box car, stood close to the planking on that side.

On the morning of the 9th of February, 1884, the plaintiff, with her husband, was traveling east on the highway, with a horse and cutter! He was sitting upon the right-hand side and was driving the horse. Mr. Young, the plaintiff’s husband, describes the accident as follows:

“Those cars stood on the side track. In order to get between those two cars we had to turn and go square across, because the car on this side — well, on both sides— the corner of the first car stood out, and the corner of the other, the road being slanting. They stood out so that we were obliged to turn square across. After we had passed between. those cars the horse sheered off a little to the further car, and the buggy ran onto the rail,- — the cutter ran onto the rail and throwed the cutter over. It catchéd on the rail. It went onto the first rail and then went down onto the second one and catched the cutter. There was no plank between the rails there. In the’ traveled part of the highway it was planked between the rails. We couldn’t get onto the plank when we first went on, the road being slanting. We could get the cutter onto the plank, but at the further end we couldn’t get the cutter onto the plank — the whole of it; one runner run on the rail. I had the reins, one in each hand. I was driving with a tight rein. I was throwed out. As to guiding the horse with the reins, why I was holding the horse tight — holding the reins tight. I was trying to guide him across the track. I was not trying to drive him' onto the rails — I was trying to drive him over the crossing; but he sheered from the corner of the car. He sheered from the corner of the car to the right. I mean down this way, [indicating] ; that would carry us away from the plank portion of the main track. In trying to get onto the plank I was unable to do so, and was carried onto the rail. I was driving a very good horse. Yes, and a very quiet horse. He was a little nervous when he came to those cars. The cutter [434]*434was tipped over, and I and my wife was thrown out. * * * When I was there with my horse and cutter at that crossing, I looked at the bank on my left hand and thought I couldn’t turn there; and I thought I rather run the risk of going through instead of turning around; so I run the risk of going through.”

Several persons had crossed with the cars in the position they were in when plaintiff crossed, without difficulty and without accident. Mr. Earle drove a spirited and excitable horse and cutter across, immediately ahead of plaintiff.. Edgar Chamberlain drove- across with a horse and cutter, and he says that he saw teams ahead of -him. They were crossing. One team was a two-horse cutter, not very close ahead of him; might have been six or eight rods. George W. Chapman, another witness produced by the plaintiff, drove across immediately after the accident in the opposite direction from that which plaintiff crossed. He says that he drove through right across the planking where plaintiff and her husband came through, and kept on the plank all the way. The plaintiff was sworn, and testified as follows:

“ Question. Now, will you state how your husband drove the horse across there; whether he made any turn, and how the horse acted, and all about it ?
Answer. Well, of course he had to turn. The horse was a little nervous. I was watching the horse principally to see if we were going to get through all right. The cars seemed so near, so high up on each side of us, that the horse seemed a little nervous to go through, and went through a little faster, •of course, than we started, — than we were going before we went through. We couldn’t cross between the cars directly •on this angling road; he run off a little to get around the first ■ear. After he had run around he run out again a little to the further side — to the road — to get around onto the main traveled track. There was a car each side of the track. He reined in the first place to the left hand a little, first to get around the end of the car, and then turned in there. The horse sheered out — he was nervous — he sheered out to the right — that way; that would be away from the next crossing. My husband went to rein out that way, to get onto the plank at the next crossing; one runner struck the track and threw us out; struck the rail of the railway track.”

[435]*435The defendant, under its charter, had a right to construct and maintain its railroad across the public highway where this accident occurred. In doing so, it was its duty to so construct the railroad across the public highway as not to impede the passage or transportation of persons or property along such road (3 Terr. Laws, 1290;) and in the discharge of this duty defendant had constructed a plank crossing in the direction of the- highway of a width of about twenty feet. That this crossing was in good condition and was familiar to plaintiff and to her husband is conceded. It was also the duty of defendant in operating its road not to obstruct or impede the travel along the public highway by its cars or trains an unreasonable length of time. The statute has fixed what is a reasonable time in such case, and' has limited it to a period not exceeding five minutes at one time. How. Stat. § 3323, subd. 5. At common law, whenever a right is conferred, and a corresponding duty imposed upon a person, he is answerable to another person who sustains damage by the negligent discharge of such duty. Negligence is nothing more than a failure to discharge the duty resting upon one under the circumstances of the case. Mann v. Railroad Co. 55 Vt. 484.

It was the duty of the railroad company not to obstruct the traveled portion of the highway at the crossing by plac. ing cars thereon and permitting them to remain an unreasonable time. If it did not discharge this duty, resting upon it in this respect, the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for damages arising from any injury which was the direct consequence of such negligence, unless her own negligence contributed to produce such injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.W. 67, 56 Mich. 430, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-detroit-grand-haven-milwaukee-railway-co-mich-1885.