Young v. Groenendal

169 N.W.2d 920, 382 Mich. 456, 1969 Mich. LEXIS 118
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1969
DocketCalendar 5, Docket 52,149
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 169 N.W.2d 920 (Young v. Groenendal) 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. Groenendal, 169 N.W.2d 920, 382 Mich. 456, 1969 Mich. LEXIS 118 (Mich. 1969).

Opinion

Dethmers, J.

(for affirmance). On October 12, 1962, plaintiff’s decedent, a 13-year-old boy, was riding a bicycle in a westerly direction on the sidewalk on the south side of a paved highway. The highway right-of-way extended to the south edge of that walk. Between the walk and the south edge of the pavement was a grassy area on which defendants, owners of an adjacent gasoline station, had placed 3 large sandwich-type signs, over 6 feet high, which extended south, perpendicular to the highway, for about 14 feet, from a point beginning about 5 feet south of the pavement. East .of the signs a driveway ran from the gasoline station north to the paved highway. When the bicyclist reached' that driveway he turned north and rode, without stopping,'onto the pavement of the highway. A motorist, traveling east on that highway, collided with the *461 bicycle and its rider was killed. For that the boy’s father brought this action under the wrongful death act (CLS 1961, § 600.2922 [Stat Ann 1962 Eev § 27A.2922]).

■Plaintiff’s original complaint charged defendant gasoline station owners with negligence which was a proximate cause of the accident in maintaining the signs on the highway right-of-way in violation of statute. Defendants filed an answer including in their defense that of the bicyclist’s contributory negligence in having violated the statute requiring him to stop the bicycle on the driveway before entering the paved portion of the highway. Plaintiff then amended his complaint to change the charge against defendants from negligence to public nuisance.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s proofs, on trial, the circuit judge directed a verdict in favor of said defendants of no cause for action on the ground of the bicyclist’s contributory negligence as a matter óf law. Plaintiff’s appeal therefrom to the Court of Appeals resulted in affirmance there on that same ground. Plaintiff is now here on leave granted to appeal. 381 Mich 784.

Plaintiff’s chief contention is that contributory negligence is no defense to an action for damages resulting from defendants’ maintaining a public nuisance, and that defendants’ placing and keeping the signs on the highway right-of-way was in violation of statute (CLS 1961, §§ 247.275, 247.276 [Stat Ann 1969 Cum Supp §§ 9.1405, 9.1406]) and, hence, a public nuisance which was a proximate cause of the accident because the signs obstructed the vision and prevented the motorist and the bicyclist from seeing each other soon enough to avoid the accident.

A problem of labels is involved. Can denominating defendants’ action or inaction a nuisance, rather than negligence, change the law as to availability of *462 the defense of contributory negligence, or will the court peer through the label to the nature of the causes of the damage to determine the question? We think the latter is and should be the prevailing rule. An interesting pertinent discussion of the subject is to be found at 73 ALR2d 1378, and particularly at page 1380, where the following appears:

“The rule that contributory negligence is not a defense to a charge of nuisance apparently developed primarily in connection with actions involving charges of the maintenance of a condition interfering with the proper use of the plaintiff’s realty. In such cases, the early courts, always tender of rights in land, rejected the argument that a man’s use of his property should be conditioned or limited by the necessity of avoiding harm from his neighbor’s wrongful acts, and it is apparently still the rule in most jurisdictions that contributory negligence is not a defense in an action for damages arising from such a nuisance.

“With the extension of the nuisance label to a wide variety of other types of harm, astute plaintiffs soon advanced the argument that if the cause of action could be brought under the nuisance umbrella, the rule that contributory negligence is not a defense must also be applied, even though the action might be for personal injury or chattel damage having only the most remote, if any, connection with the use of realty, and might involve circumstances more usually presented in an ordinary negligence action.

“To meet this argument and to avoid permitting or denying recovery to the negligent plaintiff only on the basis of the label attached to the cause of action, many courts began to draw a distinction between what may be called ‘negligent’ nuisance, where recovery would be authorized only if it could be shown that defendant had acted negligently, and ‘absolute’ nuisances, holding that contributory negligence was a defense in the former but not in the latter cases.

*463 “However, attempts to clearly define this distinction have not been too successful and in several cases the courts have apparently taken the view that it should be abandoned, holding that in all nuisance cases, at least where interference with the use of realty is not involved, the plaintiff is under a duty of exercising reasonable care, although of course the question as to what constitutes reasonable care under the circumstances will vary according to the nature of the defendant’s wrongful act and the type of condition created thereby.”

This is not an action for damage to plaintiff’s land caused by the condition or use of defendants’ land or of the right-of-way which the cases have termed “absolute” nuisance. It seems to us that this falls, rather, into the class described in Denny v. Garavaglia (1952), 333 Mich 317, as a nuisance that has its origin in negligence. In that case this Court said, inter alia:

“It is the general rule that contributory negligence is a defense to a nuisance that has its origin in negligence. See McFarlane v. City of Niagara Falls (1928), 247 NY 340 (160 NE 391, 57 ALR 1). In the above case, it was said (pp 344, 348):

“ ‘Not a little confusion runs through the reports as to the effect of contributory negligence upon liability for nuisance. Statements appropriate enough in their application to nuisances of one class have been thoughtlessly transferred to nuisances of another. There has been forgetfulness at times that forms of action have been abolished and that liability is dependent upon the facts and not upon the name. Confining ourselves now to the necessities of the case before us, we hold that whenever a nuisance has its origin in negligence, one may not avert the consequences of his own contributory negligence by affixing to the negligence of the wrongdoer the label of a nuisance.’ ”

*464 In the instant case defendants were not wilfully inflicting a wrong. While unlawful placing of the signs constituted negligence because in violation of statute, it was not necessarily calculated to cause injury or damages to others nor does the record indicate that this was reasonably foreseeable. Pictures in evidence would appear to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.W.2d 920, 382 Mich. 456, 1969 Mich. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-groenendal-mich-1969.