206 Mich. 545 | Mich. | 1919
On October 7, 1915, plaintiff while walking to a restaurant in the city of Detroit reached the corner of Gratiot and Farmer. He desired to cross Farmer but a car on the line of defendant was on that street and he waited for it to get by and then started across the street, passing to the rear of the car. The car track here curved both east and west. While passing the rear of the car, plaintiff was struck by the trolley pole which had become loosened in its socket and fell upon him causing injuries, claimed by him to be of a serious and permanent character. For the recovery of the damages thus occasioned he brought this action. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, entertaining the view that the circumstances surrounding the accident were such that a jury might legitimately infer negligence on the part of the defendant and that therefore a prima facie case was made, but at the conclusion of the case directed a verdict for the defendant upon the theory that although plaintiff had made a prima facie case of negligence such case had been successfully rebutted by defendant’s testimony. To review the judgment entered upon the verdict so directed this writ of error was allowed.
To sustain this judgment defendant insists that there was no evidence in the case of negligence on its part; that the happening of the accident alone is not sufficient evidence of negligence to make a case for the jury; that to hold there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury would be to adopt the rule res ipsa loquitor; that the trial court was right in directing a. verdict for the defendant and should have done so at the close of plaintiff’s case.
This court has not adopted the rule res ipsa loquitor; we have uniformly held that the happening of the accident alone is not evidence of negligence; and we have as uniformly held that negligence may be estab
In Barnowski v. Helson, supra, it was said:
“In this case the falling of the roof was in and of itself some evidence that the work of raising it was not being done with the ordinary care and skill. It is true that the mere fact of any injury does not impute negligence on the part of any one, but where a thing happens which would not ordinarily have occurred if due care had been used, the fact of such happening raises a presumption of negligence in some one. * * *
“This roof not properly supported would fall as a. natural result of the laws of gravitation, but if properly braced there would be no reason for its falling, from that cause, and it would not fall from any other cause without the interposition of the elements or some human agency. Therefore, without any other showing than that it suddenly gave way, slipped or' tipped to one side, and fell, the presumption is almost conclusive that it fell because it was not sufficiently braced or stayed.”
In Sewell v. Railway, supra, Mr. Justice Montgomery, speaking for the court, said:
“It is the settled rule of this State that negligence of the defendant must be proved, and that an inference of negligence is not to be drawn from the mere fact of an accident. But it has also been held in numerous cases that the circumstances attending an in*548 jury may be such as to justify an inference of negligence. As in the present case, if all that appeared had been that the plaintiff was riding in a car of the defendant under the control' of its servants, and the car in which plaintiff was riding continued its course until it collided with another car ahead of it standing still, with sufficient force to push the still car ahead 75 feet, the inference that some one had blundered prima facie would be the most natural one to be drawn, and that inference is so clear that it would not require further proof of negligence on the part of the defendant.”
We are impressed that under the authorities cited, the accident in the instant case with the circumstances surrounding it, unexplained, made a prima facie case for the jury. The trolley pole was a steel tube, 14 feet long, and rested in a socket. It was secured by being clamped into the socket with four bolts, two on either side. The clamps were about eight inches long and were bolted with half inch bolts. There was a nut on each bolt. It was patent that if the pole was properly secured it would not have fallen from the socket. It is equally patent that a proper inspection would readily disclose whether or not it was securely fastened. The defect, if one existed, was not a latent one.
Upon a motion to direct a verdict, the evidence and legitimate inferences from the established facts most favorable to the other party must be accepted. Under the circumstances disclosed by this record, a prima facie case was made for the jury to determine, from the unexplained falling of the trolley pole, which admittedly would not have fallen had it been properly secured, and where an inspection would readily have disclosed any defects in it, from the circumstances of the pole falling when the car was moving at a slow rate of speed, from all the surrounding circumstances, the question of negligence on the part of the defendant
But defendant insists that it has established an inspection and that there being direct proof on the subject, the prima facie case, if one was made by the plaintiff, must fail. This was the view entertained by the learned trial judge. Our difficulty in agreeing with this conclusion lies in the fact that there is no competent evidence of an actual inspection of the car in question. The most that can be said of defendant’s proof is that it established a system of inspection, inferentially in consonance with good railroading. But the proof does not establish that an inspection was in fact made. Where the duty to inspect exists it is not discharged alone by the adoption of a system of inspection, or the promulgation of a set of rules. The system must be used; the rules must be enforced; the inspection must be made. It was competent for the defendant to show that it had adopted a system of inspection, what that system was, that it comported with the requirements of good railroading, and plaintiff’s objections to the introduction of such proof were properly overruled; but to overcome plaintiff’s prima facie case it was necessary that defendant prove an inspection in fact. This it failed to do. The court therefore was in error in directing a verdict.
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to plaintiff.