80 Mich. 260 | Mich. | 1890
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries to plaintiff alleged to have been received through the negligent driving of defendant’s servant. The circuit judge directed a verdict for the defend, ant. This was error. The case should have been sub
The plaintiff, a teamster, was hauling lumber on December 17, 1887, from the depot of the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company, at Detroit. Teams go in and out from the depot in a drive-way from Atwater street. The drive-way is about 25 feet wide from the platform of the freight sheds at the depot, to the car tracks. The north side of the drive-way, adjacent to the tracks, is devoted to the loading of freight directly from the cars. The plaintiff drove his wagon to the north side of the drive-wayj occupying a space of from five to eight feet of the same,' and was loading lumber from the cars upon his wagon, which was about five feet wide. He had put on a small load of lumber, and was engaged in binding his load at the time of the injury. His horses were facing to the west, and he stood between the hind and forward wheels, winding the chain around the wagon reach, or using the chain for the purpose of tightening and securing his load, at the time he-was hurt. He came around from the front of his horses to bind the load, and, as he so came around, saw the defendant’s team coming.
Bissell’s team was drawing a heavy freight truck, loaded with from 40 to 50 bags of clover seed, weighing about 180 pounds each. The driver sat upon the top of the load, and in front. This truck was loaded upon the other side of the drive-way, from 75 to' 150 feet away frofn plaintiff, and while loading the team was faced to the east. When the load was completed, the driver turned his horses around, and drove out past plaintiff. Defendant’s team was 10 or 12 feet east from plaintiff’s wagon when
The circuit judge, in his charge to the jury, stated that the defendant’s driver “might have left more space between himself and plaintiff’s team.” This is also evident from the testimony. The circuit judge further said the defendant’s driyer—
“Might have seen him [plaintiff], and he might not have seen him. There is no evidence here that he did see him, or that he drove faster than men usually drive in that drive-way, or that he drove in any other way, or in any other manner, than a careful and prudent person would drive. To my mind there is no evidence in this case upon which yon could find negligence on the part of the driver.”
From all the testimony, it appears that there was a
It is claimed by defendant’s counsel that the plaintiff must have thrown out his foot after the forward wheels of defendant’s truck had passed, and that such act was negligent. Whether he did so throw out his foot, or whether it was negligence to do so, is also for the jury. When there was plenty of room for defendant’s wagon to pass without touching the plaintiff, and it was at noonday, and when, as plaintiff says, if the driver had kept on in a straight course, as he was driving, he would not have struck plaintiff, it was for the jury to say whether or not it was negligence in the plaintiff to turn his back to the roadway, relying upon the course of the defendant’s wagon as headed, and upon the fact that there was
The reputation of defendant’s driver as a careful driver was not in issue, and was immaterial. Williams v. Edmunds, 75 Mich. 92.
It was competent to show that plaintiff was loading his wagon in the customary way in such drive-way, and that defendant’s driver knew what’ the customary way of loading was there, as affecting the question of his negligence in driving as close as he did to plaintiff’s wagon.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs.