DIAMOND v. HOLSTEIN
No. 50,320
Michigan Supreme Court
Decided May 4, 1964
373 Mich. 74
Calendar No. 58. Submitted February 7, 1964.
Evidence, presented in action arising out of collision at T-intersection of north-and-south road and road to the east between northbound car in which plaintiff was a passenger and defendants’ westbound left-turning car, which was such as to pеrmit jury to find that plaintiff‘s car was behind the hill 200’ south and not within defendant driver‘s vision when he stopped and then started into the intersection, that plaintiff‘s car covered the distance from the hill to the corner at an excessive speed for an icy road, that defendant should be accorded the right-of-way as he came into the intersection first from plaintiff‘s right, and that had defendant driver seen plaintiff‘s car it would have been too late for such driver to do anything else to avert the collision, hence, was not a proximate cause of the collision, justified trial court‘s refusal to direct verdict of liability for plaintiff, the evidence of entry of defendant driver‘s plea of guilty to a charge of unsafe driving being evidencе, but not conclusive proof, that he was guilty of negligence proximately causing the accident.
2. SAME—T-INTERSECTIONS—RIGHT-OF-WAY.
The rights and duties of drivers who approach on 2 roads forming a T-intersection of roads in which neither is otherwise legally favored over thе other, are not to be measured in the same way as if they were due to enter a typical right-angled intersection of highways where both ways continue through and beyond the intersection, especially where situation was complicated by high bank of plowed snow necessitating a “slanting out” movement (
Appeal from Wayne; Bowles (George E.), J. Submitted February 7, 1964. (Calendar No. 58, Docket No. 50,320.) Decided May 4, 1964.
Case by Phyllis Diamond against Louis H. Holstein, Jean Erlandson, and Leone Erlandson for per-
REFERENCES FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1] 7 Am Jur 2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic § 369 et seq.
[2] 8 Am Jur 2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic § 736.
Earl T. Prosser and James W. Cowell (Charles R. Cole, of counsel), for plaintiff.
Cary, BeGole & Martin, for defendants.
DETHMERS, J. Plaintiff, a passenger in a northbound automobile driven by her husband, was injured in a T-intersection collision with a westbound automobile driven by defendant Holstein, owned by defendants Erlandson and occupied by Mrs. Erlandson as a passenger. Plaintiff sued for resultant damages. Decision on plaintiff‘s motion, made at the conclusion of the proofs, for directed verdict as to liability was reserved. Judgment on jury verdict of no cause for action entered in favor of defendants after plaintiff‘s motions for directed verdict and judgment non obstante veredicto were denied. Plaintiff appеals.
Defendants drove west on a road which ended at the intersection and there undertook to turn south. Plaintiff‘s automobile came from the south over the crest of a hill 200 feet south of the intersection. In the area where the acсident happened both roads were gravel or dirt, there were no stop or other traffic signs or signals, and neither road was favored over the other. The roads were covered with ice and snow. The line of vision between them was оbstructed or restricted by snow banks 3 feet high and by brush and trees. Defendant driver admitted that he did not see the car in which plaintiff was passenger before the impact. He testified that as he came to the intersecting road he stopped 10 to 15 feet from it, looked to his right and left and there
Plaintiff claims she was entitled to a directed verdict of liability because of defendant driver‘s admission of not having seen her car until time of impact and also, apparently, because of his guilty plea to the traffic violation charge. There was conflict in the testimony as to the speed of plaintiff‘s car when and after it came over the crest of the hill. Some testimony, as already noted, indicated that defendant driver stopped, lookеd, entered the intersection when no car was in sight to the south, and was struck because the plaintiff‘s car came at excessive speed and failed to accord defendant‘s car, first in the intersection, the statutory right-of-way to which it wаs entitled because it had come from plaintiff‘s right. Testimony in the record discloses questions of fact for the jury as to how the accident happened. To paraphrase and amplify what this Court said in Todd v. Simonis, 370 Mich 342, the jury here would have been entitled to believe from the proofs in this case, (1) that plaintiff‘s car was behind the hill and not within defendant driver‘s range of vision when he stopped and then started into the intersection, (2) that plaintiff‘s car covered the distance from a point beyond the crest of the hill to the point of impact more quickly than defendant driver could reasonably be required to expect it would on the icy road because it was traveling at an excessive or unsafe speed, (3) that inasmuch as hе was coming from the right and reached the intersection when no
Did the court err, as plaintiff contends, in instructing the jury with respect to the assured-clear-distance-ahead statute,
Error is also claimed in that the court instructed the jury that defendants had the burden of proof as to the negligence of plaintiff‘s driver. The court already had told the jury that any negligence it might find as to him was not chargeable to plaintiff as a passenger. After the jurors had retired to consider the case the court recalled them and the following occurred:
“The Court: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen of the jury. The court on its own initiative wishes to correct the mistake it made yestеrday in its charge to you as to the law.
“The court charged you that the burden of proof as to the negligence of plaintiff‘s driver was on the defendants in this case. That is erroneous and must be disregarded by you, because in this case there is no issue of the contributory negligence of plaintiffs.”
Counsel for both sides expressed their approval at the time. The correct law had been stated before and was re-emphasized after the making of the statement of which cоmplaint is made. Considering the charge in its entirety, reversible error did not occur. Affirmed. Costs to defendants.
KELLY and O‘HARA, JJ., concurred with DETHMERS, J.
BLACK, J. (concurring in affirmance). I agree that the defendant driver‘s plea of guilt to the criminal charge did not authorize an instruction that
Legal reasons for this last appear over my signature and that of Chief Justice KAVANAGH in Nabozny v. Hamil, 361 Mich 544. Moreover, and quite aside from such legal reasons, the conflicting proof of the separate actions of both drivers, considered in the light of the unusual weather conditions and the effect thereof upon vision, acceleration and deceleration, gave rise to a typical jury question whether the defendant driver was negligent and, if so, whether such negligence was actionаble.
I am unable to agree that we should say, or even infer, that the favor accorded by statute (
The question of right-of-way in this case was complicated by the fact that the county snowplow had left a quantity of high banked snow (triangular in shape we gathеr) in the center of the east-west road where the latter intersected the north-south road.* On that account it was not possible for a
So far as due diligence disсloses, it has not as yet been held in our State that a driver proceeding straight ahead on a country road, intersected at right angles by another road ending in the intersection, neither way being otherwise legally favored over the othеr, must yield first passage to the “vehicle on the right.” The rights and duties of both drivers in such instance are not to be measured in the same way as if they were due to enter a typical right-angled intersection of highways where both ways continue through and beyоnd the intersection.
It is enough to say, decisionally of this case, that the conflicting testimony authorized the jury to find either that the defendant driver was causally negligent or that he was not. The jury found in negation. Accordingly, and looking at the record thrоugh foregoing precepts, I agree that no reversible error has been made to appear and that the circuit court‘s judgment should be affirmed.
KAVANAGH, C. J., and ADAMS, J., concurred with BLACK, J.
SMITH, J., concurred with SOURIS, J.
