51 Mich. 488 | Mich. | 1883
Lead Opinion
The defendant has a main and side track which cross a common highway near the station building at the village of Grand Blanc. The traveled portion of the way at the place of crossing is planked to the width of about thirty-two feet. In the course of its business.the company left an ordinary box freight car standing on the side track, and within the legal limits of the highway. It occupied about one-half of the traveled part, leaving ample room for the easy passage of teams. The plaintiff, in going to Mr. Stone’s to dinner, rode in a buggy with Mr. Lyman past this car without any inconvenience. .But when he returned in a buggy with Mr. Stone, the horse, on coming to the track, suddenly started to one side, and as a consequence the plaintiff lost his balance, and either fell or was thrown in contact with the wheel, and was injured. He brought this action for the injury, and was allowed to recover.
The record raises two or three questions, but only one need be noticed. It is important to fix attention upon the
The defendant’s counsel contended at the trial that the question was one for the court, but the learned judge overruled the point, and decided that it was a subject for the jury. We are unable to concur in this ruling. There are a vast variety of things which must be regarded as matters of common knowledge; things which every adult person of ordinary experience or intelligence must be presumed to know; • things which do not require to be'pleaded or to be made the subjects of specific proof; audit is not within the province of a court to leave it to a jury to find contrary to this knowledge. The question before us is subject to this principle. It is according to daily experience to see cars going or standing on the common highways while teams are variously employed near by, and pass and repass without taking fright. We have street-cars and steam fire-engines and steam threshing-machines, but horses readily become familiar with them, and serious frights are exceedingly rare and entirely excep
If a standing freight car should be deemed as dangerous-as here represented, it would be impossible to consider these-machines and vehicles as fit to appear on the highway. Moreover, the reason would apply to a thousand customary and convenient modes of use of our ordinary highways,, which have always been exempt from such doctrine, and which must remain exempt unless we are prepared to surrender a large and valuable portion of our rights connected with the public thoroughfares..
I think the principle is settled in Macomber v. Nichols 34 Mich. 212, and that the defendant was entitled to the ruling which was refused.
The judgment must be reversed with costs and a new trial granted.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) In this case, under the facts and circumstances stated in the record, I think the defendant was guilty of actionable negligence in allowing its freight car to remain standing upon the public highway in the manner it is shown to have done at the time the injury occurred to the plaintiff; and I further think that an empty box car, or any other kind of railroad car, allowed to stand in the highway as this was permitted to, is naturally calculated to frighten horses of ordinary gentleness, not accustomed to go or be used about such cars.
The defendant did not demur to the plaintiff’s declaration. It was sufficient to support the judgment given in this case after a trial upon the merits, and should not be reversed upon the grounds taken in this Court on this hearing. Stoflet v. Marker 34 Mich. 313; Brown v. McHugh 35 Mich. 50; Aldrich v. Ghubb 35 Mich. 350; Jackson v. Collins 39 Mich. 559; Briggs v. Milburn 40 Mich. 513; Rowland v. Kalamazoo Sup’ts of Poor 49 Mich. 553.
I think the case was properly submitted to the jury, and should be affirmed with costs.