269 N.W. 570 | Mich. | 1936
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *487 These two cases were consolidated and tried as one. The first is by plaintiff individually for damages sustained by reason of expenses connected with his wife's injuries and death and for the loss of her companionship and services. The second is by plaintiff in his capacity as administrator of his wife's estate for her pain and suffering under the survival act, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14040. Defendant appeals from the judgments which were rendered by the trial court sitting without a jury; in the first case for $732.78, made up of $474.64 for expenses *488 and $258.14 for loss of services, and in the second of $1,200 for her pain and suffering.
The questions involved pertain to the court's holdings on negligence and contributory negligence as well as the computation of damages for the loss of services.
Shortly after 6 p. m. on April 10, 1934, while it was still daylight, John Bugbee was driving his mother and brother in an easterly direction on Atherton road, a paved highway in Genesee county. Defendant Fowle was also traveling in the same direction, but some distance in the rear. About one mile east of the city limits of Flint, the front bumper of the Fowle car struck the left rear fender and wheel of the Bugbee car throwing it about 36 feet to the northeast in a semi-circle with its front end facing west. Mrs. Bugbee was seriously injured and died the second morning following the accident.
The highway at this point is straight and level with a clear view of about a half mile each way. The day was bright and dry. The pavement is 20 feet wide with solid shoulders on either side, that to the south being at least 20 feet in width and that to the north 35 feet. The owner of a grocery store located on the north side of the road observed the entire accident from an upstairs window. He testified that Bugbee turned off the road, making a sensible turn" as if to come onto the open space in front of the store, and just as the right rear wheel of the Bugbee car was "about at the black line in the center of the road," the Fowle car struck it from the left, it being on the north side of the road.
John Bugbee testified that he had slowed down to about 5 or 6 miles per hour in order to make the turn, observed Fowle in a rear vision mirror 500 or 600 feet away, pulled over towards the center and Signalled *489 with his hand and stoplight and in turning left plenty of room so that the car from the rear might pass. George D. Bugbee, who was sitting on the right of the driver, testified in like manner and added that Fowle made no attempt to slow down or go around; that he was "straddling the line as he came down the road and he didn't vary his course or his speed." George heard neither horn or brakes, nor did he see any skid marks afterwards.
Fowle admitted that "the pavement along there was dry and hard, plenty of light and a straightaway." He said he first observed Bugbee 800 feet ahead and that no other cars were coming in either direction. He might have been talking to his companion but did not remember; that he blew his horn and Bugbee pulled over to the south; when two car lengths away he turned and that at the moment of impact, the front wheels of the turning car were partly off the cement. He said:
"I pulled to the north half of the road to pass. My car was entirely on the north half. * * * I applied my brakes again and turned a very little to the south. When I hit him, he was right in front of my bumper. * * * I didn't see his red tail light. I didn't see his hand up. * * * I took my foot off the accelerator, applied my brakes and there was a mark on the pavement where I skidded probably three feet. * * * I was on the north side when I observed his wheels turn out from under the fenders. The only warning that I had that the Buick car was going to turn left was when I saw the left front wheel turn out from the fender."
There is conflict of testimony on the controlling issues of defendant's negligence and plaintiff's contributory negligence. In reviewing law cases tried without a jury, we are not bound by the findings of *490
fact made by the trial court but consider the record as a whole. Burchard v. Otis Elevator Co.,
No hard and fast rule exists that speed or statutory right of way is determinative of negligence as a matter of law.Pline v. Parsons,
As was said in Jacoby v. Schafsnitz,
"The record on this appeal is such that if the case had been tried by a jury we would necessarily find testimony sustaining a verdict in favor of plaintiff on both the questions of negligence and contributory negligence. Our review of the testimony satisfies us that it sustains the holding of the trial judge on both these questions."
And —
"We do not substitute our judgment on questions of fact unless they clearly preponderate in the opposite direction.Leonard v. Hey,
Appellant questions that portion of the award of damages pertaining to plaintiff's claim for loss of services. The trial judge found Mrs. Bugbee's expectancy of life to be 11.68 years and that she might *491
be of service to her husband for six years. He fixed the value of this at $50 per year with a present worth of $258.14. Both sides agree that, according to Hyatt v. Adams,
"We concede that in this case, if entitled to the damages claimed for the loss of the service, that the basis for the allowance of the same must be found outside of the provisions of the death and survival acts themselves.
"It has been many years since the question here raised has definitely been before this court for consideration; perhaps this principle has become so settled in the profession that it should be generally accepted without question, but we very respectfully differ with that conclusion, for although on many occasions the court has reaffirmed the principle that for the loss of the service of his wife, the husband was entitled to recover therefor (See Collins v. Hull,
" 'Progress, or perhaps mere change, in the law will appear upon comparison of the cases above cited with Hyatt v. Adams,
Appellant contends that the reasoning of Hyatt v. Adams,supra, is supported by the weight of authority and that if the wife's death was not immediate, although only a brief period intervened between the injury and her death the estimate of damages stops *492 at the moment of death, citing 30 C. J. p. 971, and cases there annotated. See, also, 8 R. C. L. p. 720 and 21 R. C. L. p. 398.
Neither the death act nor the survival act contains language expressly providing for recovery by a sur-viving spouse and we must therefore look to the common law for such authority. As pointed out by Justice CHRISTIANCY in Hyatt v. Adams, supra, the early common-law cases denied recovery for "damages accruing prior to the death and to those which accrued subsequently and in consequence of it; as it forbade any action for the act or negligence which produced death."
The common law prevails in the State except as abrogated by Constitution or statute. Stout v. Keyes, 2 Doug. (Mich.) 184 (43 Am. Dec. 465), and Peck v. Molhoek,
"The common law is but the accumulated expressions of the various judicial tribunals in their efforts to ascertain what is right and just between individuals in respect to private disputes," Kansas v. Colorado,
and but recently Mr. Justice Sutherland said:
"The common law is not immutable, but flexible, and upon its own principles adapts itself to varying conditions."Dimick v. Schiedt,
Mr. Justice Stone writing for the minority in this case said, p. 496:
" 'This flexibility and capacity for growth and adaptation is,' as the court declared in Hurtado v. People of California,
See, also, authorities therein cited.
Since the passage of the married women's act, Act No. 196, Pub. Acts 1911 (3 Comp. Laws 1929, *493
§ 13061), neither husband nor wife may recover for loss of consortium. Blair v. Seitner Dry Goods Co.,
Despite the abundance of negligence cases, our search has been productive of but one that seems to be squarely on the point involved, viz., the method of computing the damages suffered by a husband through the loss of his wife's services where her unlawful death was not instantaneous. Mr. Justice CHRISTIANCY said in Hyatt v. Adams, supra, 195 (1867):
"Upon principles of justice and common sense, I think the plaintiff, in a case like the present, should be allowed to recover his actual damages caused by the injury and accruing prior to and not in consequence of the death; and I can discover no substantial objection to such recovery in any recognized principle of the common law applicable here."
Mr. Justice BLAIR stated in an action for loss of services of a minor:
"The plaintiff could not combine in one count a claim for loss of his son's services with his claim as administrator under the survival act and recover for both in the same action.Walker v. Lansing Suburban Traction Co.,
Not only are the decisions of Mr. Justice CHRISTIANCY entitled to great respect but the rule he enunciated inHyatt v. Adams, supra, has been followed in this State for the past 70 years and its principles have been adaptable to the varying conditions of life over that period. Consideration of the argument in support of a re-examination of the question does not demonstrate need for a change. The determination of the trial court in this particular is contrary to the established rule and must be set aside. Having heretofore indicated that in all other respects the several judgments should be affirmed, we adopt the suggestion in appellant's brief and order a remittitur of $258.14 in case No. 38,872, entitled George M. Bugbee v. Harold E. Fowle. If such remittitur is filed in the trial court within 20 days the reduced judgments will be affirmed, otherwise new trials are ordered.
Appellee suggests that if his position is sustained in all respects except as to the allowance of loss of services "it would appear proper that no costs should be allowed either party." And it is so ordered.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, SHARPE and TOY, JJ., concurred. POTTER, J., took no part in this decision. *495