Plaintiff Miran Awedian brought suit for injuries incurred when he slipped and fell while taking a shower in a room at the Boyne Mountain Lodge where he was staying as a paying guest. Plaintiff claimed that, while falling, *355 he thrust his right arm through the glass of a bathtub enclosure door and suffered permanent functional disability of his right arm.
Plaintiffs’ original action was filed on January 19, 1968 against Boyne Mountain Lodge, Inc. Subsequently, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint which added Theodore Efron Manufacturing Company (Efron), the manufacturer of the glass door, as a party defendant. The amended complaint sounded in both negligence and breach of implied warranty. Plaintiffs later asked and received permission to file a second amended complaint which added several other party defendants. A jury trial was commenced in Charlevoix County Circuit Court on October 23, 1973. However, before the case went to the jury, plaintiffs settled with all defendants but Efron for $65,000. The jury returned a verdict against Efron in favor of plaintiff Miran Awedian for $65,000 and also awarded his wife Agawni $20,000 for loss of consortium. A judgment was entered in this amount with interest assessed from January 19, 1968, the date the original suit was initiated. Both plaintiffs and defendant Efron appeal as of right.
Defendant’s first claim on appeal is that because the jury, by means of special verdicts, held that Efron was guilty of ordinary negligence but was not guilty of breach of implied warranty, its verdict should be declared invalid inasmuch as the two verdicts are irreconcilably inconsistent and contradictory.
We disagree. A review of Michigan case law, most notably the seminal case of
Spence v Three Rivers Builders and Masonry Supply, Inc,
In
Cova,
this Court emphasized the differing proof required. Through now Justice Levin, we stated that, in warranty theory, either the contractual warranty or tort warranty of fitness, a plaintiff need not prove negligence to recover.
Defendant further claims that it should be assessed interest not from January 19, 1968, the date on which plaintiffs filed suit, but rather from April 29, 1969, the date on which defendant was added as a party defendant. We find that the case of
Michigan Mutual Liability Co v Staal Buick, Inc,
Defendant also contends that the trial court erred by refusing to grant defense motions for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs’ case and for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Our review of the record convinces us that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, reasonable men could differ and that, therefore, the case was properly before the jury.
Mackey v Island of Bob-Lo Co,
Plaintiffs cross-appeal on the theory that the trial court erred by computing statutory interest on $85,000, the amount of damages to be paid by Efron rather than on $150,000, the total amount of damages without regard to the monies obtained from a settlement with the other defendants. The jury was instructed that plaintiffs had previously obtained a $65,000 settlement from the other defendants. It was then told that it should determine damages without reference to the settlement and then deduct the settlement sum from that figure. See
King v Greyhound Corp,
*358 We find this argument novel and interesting but without merit. As defendant notes, MCLA 600.6013; MSA 27A.6013, provides for interest on "any money judgment recovered". (Emphasis supplied.) Plaintiffs did not recover $150,000 from Efron. By accepting $65,000 in settlement, plaintiffs waived the right to statutory interest on that amount because no final judgment was rendered against the other defendants. Plaintiffs traded off the loss of this interest for the value of a settlement.
Affirmed. No costs, neither party having prevailed in full.
