(after stating the facts).
This сase focuses attention on that which is known to most writers upon the common law, and certainly to all law students, as the “jackass doctrine.” The nickname, “with whatever implications it may carry” (Prosser On Tоrts [2d ed], §52, p 291), finds its origin in the English case of
Davies
v.
Mann
(1842),
*
*234
10 M & W 546 (152 Eng Rep 588, 19 Eng Rnl Cas 190); 38 Am Jur, Negligence, § 216, p 902; 65 CJS, Negligence, § 136, pp 758, 759. The doctrine came to initial prominence in this country by means of another rail-crossing suit — the collision, as here, оccurred in Detroit — originating in our Wayne circuit
(Grand Trunk R. Co.
v.
Ives,
“Although the defendant’s negligence may have been the primary cause of the injury complained of, yet an action for such injury cannot be maintained if the proximate and immediate cause of the injury can be traced to the want of ordinary care and caution in the person injured; subject to this qualification, which has grown up in recent years (having been first enunciated in Davies v. Mann, 10 M & W 546), that the contributory negligence of the party injured will not defeat the action if it be shown that the defendant might, by thе exercise of reasonable care and prudence, have avoided the consequences of the injured party’s negligence” (citing authorities including Cooley on Torts [1st ed], 675).
Michigan recоgnizes and applies — in proper cases of course — this modification of the strict rule of contributory negligence
(Gibbard
v.
Cursan,
We are constrained to hold that the time and distance factors shоwn here are decisive of plaintiffs’ right to jury determination of presence or absence of actionable negligence on the part of the motorman. Accepting for present purрoses the motorman’s testimony that the streetcar was traveling at the rate of 15 to 20 miles per hour when it was 200 to 250 feet away from the Merton road cross-over, and that he thereafter slowed the car on approach to Merton, and accepting for same purposes plaintiff Dunn’s testimony that his automobile stood trapped on the tracks 7 to 9 seconds prior to impact, it was well within province of the jury to find that the motorman had ample time — considering his duty of constant lookout ahead and the extremely moderate speed of the streetcar — to perceive аnd act upon the *236 situation which, on favorable-to-plaintiff view, was unfolding before him. Given at least 5 seconds within which to perceive and safely act upon that which plaintiffs and their witnesses say was the motorist’s visible position of peril ahead, the motorman was allotted more time for such action than is granted by amber warning (prior to stop) of the conventional traffic control signals with which he was rеgularly confronted as the car proceeded south on Woodward.
The motorman knew or should have known — on favorable view of course — that southbound automotive traffic released by the sаme traffic signal as had just released his streetcar was approaching the rear of the plaintiff motorist’s standing automobile and that the latter could not for such reason be backed off the rаils. Pie knew or should have known — on same view of the proofs — that a northbound streetcar was imminently approaching on the rails immediately to the front of the same automobile. By the same token he knew or should have known that convenient means were at hand to slow or stop the streetcar until the plaintiff motorist found a way of extrication. In such circumstances the common law asks no morе of him than does the “slow” and “stop” command of a traffic control signal erected and operating by force of statute or ordinance.
Our recent decision in
Citizens’ Mutual Auto Ins. Co.
v.
City of Detroit,
So far as concerns defendant’s claim that the plaintiff motorist was guilty of contributory negligence on acсount of failure to get out of the automobile and thus remove himself from the path of danger, we are in accord with the trial judge’s quoted disposition thereof. The point was one for jury consideratiоn and forms no basis for an instructed verdict against plaintiff Dunn.
Turning now to defendant’s motion for new trial:
We discover no error in the charge of the court as claimed. In view of flat instruction by the trial judge that the plaintiff motorist “was negligent in driving into Woodward аvenue that morning,” with consequent limitation of jury function to the question of timely discovery by the motorman of such instructed negligence, the charge so far as present criticism is concerned appеars quite fair to defendant.
So far as concerns defendant’s insistence that the verdict is contrary to clear or overwhelming weight of the evidence, we agree with the trial judge that defendant has failed to support its assignment in such regard. To sustain such an assignment we have a right to expect, as did the trial judge, that counsel will present in fair detail an analysis of evidence tending, as claimed, to show thаt the jury strayed from the facts to and beyond the extreme limits we have defined
(McConnell
v.
Elliott,
Affirmed. Costs to plaintiffs.
(concurring in affirmance).
Under the testimony in the case the trial judge was fully justified in submitting to the jury the question аs to defendant’s liability on the ground of subsequent negligence. The legal principles considered and approved in
Golob
v.
Detroit United Railway,
The affirmance of the judgment entered on the verdict of the jury is hot inconsistent with the action of this Court in
Rosenfeld
v.
City of Detroit,
In the
Bruer Case
the testimony indicated that the plaintiff was on the track for a period of from 30 to 35 seconds, that in the exercise of ordinary care he might have observed the streetcar approaching for a distance of not less than 600 feet, and that he took no action for his own safety. The proofs failed to establish that he сould not have driven his car from the track in safety and thus avoided injury to himself. On the basis of the record, the case was distinguished from
Golob
v.
Detroit United Railway, supra.
Neither the
Rosenfeld
nor the
Bruer Case
may be regarded as at variance with the recent decision in
Citizens’ Mutual Automobile Insurance Company
v.
City of Detroit,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In Davies the plaintiff, having fettered the fore-feet of an ass belonging to him, turned it into a public highwаy; and at the time in question the ass was grazing on the off side of a road about 8 rods wide, when the defendant’s wagon, with a team of 3 horses, coming down a slight descent, ran against the ass and knocked it down, and the *234 wheels passing over it, it was killed. Lord Abinger said that even if this ass was a trespasser, and “the defendant might, by proper care, have avoided injuring the animal, and did not, he is liable for the consequences of his negligence, though the animal may have been improperly there.”
