200 Mich. 510 | Mich. | 1918
On March 2, 1915, one Frank H. Green was driving a covered laundry wagon, drawn by one horse, in an easterly direction along Main street west, in the city of Lansing, and when about 200 feet west of the corner of Main street and Washington avenue, his wagon was struck by an automobile, driven by the defendant, J. Martin Voorhees, who had come up behind the laundry wagon and was attempting to pass it, going in the same direction on Main street. The collision dished a wheel of the wagon, broke the thills, otherwise damaged it, and moreover frightened the
The testimony showed that the horse, after turning onto Washington avenue, kept to the westerly side of the street until he reached a point five or six rods north of South street, where he swerved and crossed the street at quite a sharp angle, and then proceeded south on the easterly side a short distance before the collision, which occurred about ten feet north of the crosswalk of South street. The accident happened a few minutes after 11:30 a. m., while the employees of the Reo factory were coming north on Washington avenue on their way home for the noon hour, many of them on bicycles. Mr. Dier was near the head of the crowd, however, and the testimony was to the effect that there was nothing to shut the horse from his view from the time it was six rods north of South street on the other side till it ran into him. It was a windy day. Mr. Dier had his head down, appeared to be looking down; but two of the witnesses thought he saw the horse a few seconds before it struck him and tried to turn his bicycle toward the curb. While there was some noise on the street, one witness testified that, when he was crossing South street on the east side of Washington avenue, his attention was attracted to the horse, then about seven or eight rods north of South street, on the other side of Washington, by the clatter of its hoofs.
The sole contention made by the appellant’s counsel is that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict in favor, of the defendant for the reason that, as a matter of law, the plaintiff’s decedent, under the facts, was guilty of contributory negligence. In the consideration of this question it should be borne in mind that plaintiff’s decedent had crossed South street and that Washington avenue, at the point of the accident, is a paved street with double tracks in the center. As is customary, where streets are divided by tracks in this way, traffic divides into two streams, each occupying the right hand side of the street in the direction it is going. Under these circumstances, there was clearly no reason for the plaintiff to look out for vehicles going south on the east side of the street, for, under such circumstances, a vehicle going in that direction would be going counter to the stream of the traffic. Should plaintiff’s decedent, as a reasonably prudent man, under these circumstances, be held to have had in his mind the danger of runaway horses or vehicles not under control? The question of negligence in this case, as in • all cases, is to be decided upon the facts of the particular case. We are not of the opinion that it can be said that the decedent was guilty of negligence as a matter
The learned trial judge did not err in deciding that this question was not one of law and acted properly in submitting it to the jury. The judgment should be, and therefore is, hereby affirmed.