184 Mich. 593 | Mich. | 1915
This is the third time this case has been before this court. It was first brought here by defendant in 1910, when it was reversed and a new trial ordered. Marshall v. Railroad Co., 163 Mich. 88 (127 N. W. 788). It was again before this court in 1912, with a like result. Marshall v. Railroad Co., 171 Mich. 180 (137 N. W. 89). The third trial has also resulted in a verdict for plaintiff. Defendant brings the case to this court by writ of error, asking for reversal of the judgment upon errors assigned, which will be considered later.
The accident occurred February 2, 1908, upon the railroad of defendant company about 10 miles out of. the city of Adrian on the line to Detroit. Plaintiff had taken the train for Detroit that evening, and was riding in a chair car. At the place where the accident occurred the train left the track, the coach in which he was a passenger was overturned, and he was thrown to the opposite side of the car, striking into the transom in the roof of the coach and across the parcel rack,
In considering the case the court will follow’ the order which defendant has adopted in its brief, as follows:
“The errors discussed and relied upon to reverse the judgment may be grouped under the following heads:
“(1) The error of the court in receiving certain evidence introduced by plaintiff.
“(2) The error of the court in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant.
“ (3) The refusal of the court to give certain of defendant’s requests to charge.
“(4) Errors in the charge of the court as given.
“(5) Error in the refusal of the court to grant defendant a new trial and the findings thereon.”
The first group includes only assignments of error relating to the admission of evidence. The first of these exceptions was taken while plaintiff was testifying.
It had appeared from the testimony of the man who was riding with plaintiff at the time of the accident that immediately after it occurred he found himself down with a man on top of him, who was unconscious, and at once discovered that this man was the plaintiff. He discovered that plaintiff was bleeding badly, ex
Plaintiff was called next to testify and after he had related the circumstances of the accident, had stated that he became unconscious, and proceeded to relate how he was taken to Detroit to Harper Hospital and the length of his confinement and described the extent of his injuries, his counsel asked the following question :
“Q. What was the cause of this loss of use of your limbs, Doctor?
“A. It was due to a concussion of the spine.
“Counsel for Defendant: We object to that. He says he can’t tell what he struck or how he struck, and that he was unconscious, and we move to strike it out.”
This motion was denied, and an exception was taken.
Plaintiff was a practicing physician of 14 years’ standing, and had testified in detail as to his condition and injuries arising from this accident. The objection is based entirely upon the fact that the witness could not tell what he struck or how he struck, and was unconscious. We have stated enough of the testimony to show that this period of unconsciousness was very short, and that his answer to the question did not depend upon “how he struck or what he struck,” but upon conditions resulting from the injuries received in that train wreck concerning which the record shows he was well qualified to testify. Under the
The next exception is taken to the admission of testimony of a certain witness who had worked for defendant in December and January preceding the wreck upon the section which covered the place where it occurred. He was not there at the time of the wreck, but was over the track and knew by the looks of the ties where it occurred. He testified:
“I don’t know just where the wreck commenced and where it left off. I know the entire space there and some of the ties were pretty badly rotted. Some rail lengths there — I should think a third of them and some of them half of them — were badly rotten.”
On cross-examination he testified that he was not able to tell from the ties the exact location of the wreck, where it occurred. He was not there at the wreck and only knew where it occurred from the condition of the ties, and refused to swear positively as to the exact location of the wreck. A motion was made on the part of defendant to strike out all of his testimony on direct examination with reference to rotten ties where the wreck took place. To the denial of this motion an exception was taken. Witness had worked on this section before and after the wreck, and had observed the condition of the ties and testified specifically in relation thereto. From the condition of the roadbed he testified he knew where the train had been off from the track. Because he said on cross-examination that he was not able to swear at the time of the last trial that there was a single decayed tie in the place where the wreck occurred it is alleged that the court should have stricken out his entire testimony relative to the condition of the ties. From our reading of the testimony we are satisfied that it related to the place of the accident and to the time when it occurred, and that the court properly refused to strike
The four assignments of error which follow are upon the question of the testimony of lay witnesses as to expressions, acts, and manifestations of plaintiff after the accident which did not occur in the presence of these witnesses, in anticipation that they would be called as witnesses in the case. There can be no doubt entertained, after reading the testimony of these witnesses, that it comes within the rule which has been stated so often by this court that the testimony of lay witnesses under such circumstances is admissible. At the close of the introduction of evidence in the case a motion was made by defendant for a directed verdict for the following reason:
“Because plaintiff’s evidence does not prima facie prove the allegations of the declaration with respect to defendant’s negligence.”
As already stated, these allegations of negligence are that defendant “negligently and carelessly failed and neglected to construct and maintain said track with sound ties thereunder,” and negligently “permitted the ties and track to be and remain in an unsafe and dangerous condition for the passage of trains,” by reason of which this wreck occurred, and also that defendant ran said train “over said tracks so out of repair at an unreasonable and reckless rate of speed.” From an examination of the evidence introduced on the part of plaintiff bearing upon the question of defendant’s negligence, we are satisfied that there was evidence in the case, from the plaintiff’s witnesses, of the condition of the track at the place of the wreck and as to the decayed and rotten ties and the looseness of the rails by reason of the spikes not holding, and also as to the unsafe rate of speed at which the train was running at the time, which re
The next group of errors assigned relate to the refusal of the court to give certain of defendant’s requests to charge.
The first of these was in effect a repetition of the motion to direct a verdict, and asked the court to charge that under the testimony in the case the defendant road, at the time of the accident, was in a proper, safe, and suitable condition for the operation of this train. Our disposition of the motion to direct a verdict contrary to the contention of defendant makes it unnecessary to discuss this proposition.
Errors assigned upon the charge of the court as .given:
Error is assigned upon the following portion of the charge of the court:
“In this case you are instructed that it was the duty of the defendant to exercise that high degree of care and caution consistent with the practical operation of its _ road to provide for the safety and security of plaintiff while transporting him from Adrian to Detroit, which the most prudent, careful, and cautious person engaged in the same business exercises under the same or similar circumstances, in using and maintaining its roadbed with ties that were suitable and proper as to soundness, so that they would be reasonably safe and fit for passenger trains to pass over them in reasonable safety. The failure to perform that duty would constitute negligence on the part of defendant.”
The contention of defendant is that this charge “would be holding the company to the highest degree of care known to the law, and would practically make it an insurer.” The relations of the parties to this litigation were those of carrier and passenger, and not those of employer and employee. The rule of duty as to the degree of care to be exercised in both cases is not the same.
In Ruling Case Law, a late publication, we find the general rule upon this subject stated as follows:
“What degree of care a carrier must observe for the safety of a passenger, to exonerate it from liability for injury, is a question of law, and the generally accepted rule on this point is to the effect that carriers of passengers are bound to exercise the highest degree of care, vigilance and precaution.” 4 R. C. L. p. 1144, and authorities cited.
These authorities cover almost four pages in double column, which include cases cited from the Federal Supreme Court and the courts of last resort of a large number of the States, including many courts which are considered of the highest authority.
The text of the authority cited further declares:
“The rule as to the degree of care required of carriers of passengers has been variously stated, some courts employing the word ‘utmost,’ others ‘greatest,’ and still others ‘extraordinary.’ The difference in the statements, however, is merely a choice of words, and does not denote conflicting views. The reason for imposing such a high degree of care on carriers of passengers is that the safety and lives of their passengers rest entirely in their hands, the passengers having no control over the dangerous instrumentalities employed in their transportation, and public policy requires that a high degree of care be exacted.” 4 R. C. L. pp. 1146, 1148.
This court has frequently laid down the rule that the charge of a trial court to the jury in a given case should be considered as a whole, and that the portion objected to should be read and considered in connection with all other portions of the charge given bearing upon the same subject.
Before proceeding to determine whether the appli
“ * * * It was the duty of the defendant to exercise that high degree of care and caution * * * which the most prudent, careful, and cautious person engaged in the same business exercises under the same or similar circumstances”
—is the offending element. This must be so because later in the charge we find a like statement, in substance, with the word “most” omitted, accepted by defendant without question.
Further examining that portion of the charge objected to, we find that the whole paragraph, before reaching the objectionable clause, was modified by specifying the character of the high degree of care and caution referred to, by inserting the words “consistent with the proper operation of its road to provide for the safety and security of plaintiff while transporting him,” and a later modification was made by specifying in what direction and for what purpose this care and caution of a most prudent, etc., person was to be exercised, by inserting the clause, “in using and maintaining its roadbed with ties that were suitable and proper as to soundness so that they would be reasonably safe and fit for passenger trains to pass over them in reasonable safety.” It will be observed that the rule here laid down by the court was that the road and all instrumentalities for transporting passengers should be kept reasonably safe and fit for that purpose. In no portion of the charge relating to the degree of care required of the defendant railroad in this respect do we find that any other or different rule is given.
It seems very clear that there was no intention on
“You are further instructed that this defendant was not an insurer of the absolute safety of plaintiff as a passenger upon its train, but that it was only the duty of defendant company, when carrying plaintiff as one of its passengers on the train in question, to use and exercise through its officers * * * that degree and measure of care, prudence, and caution in constructing, repairing, and maintaining its road, ties, * * * and the running of its trains thereon, which a prudent, careful, and cautious person engaged in the same kind of business would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances and conditions.”
The foregoing paragraph is the same above referred to as containing the substance of the one objected to, with the exception of the word “most.” This court has criticised and held erroneous a charge that railroad companies were—
“legally bound to exert the utmost care and skill in conveying their passengers and are responsible for the slightest negligence or want of skillfulness either in themselves or their servants; that the law is that common carriers of passengers are bound to the utmost care and skill in the performance of their duty.” Michigan, etc., R. Co. v. Coleman, 28 Mich., at pp. 448-449.
The language in the instant case is very different-from the extreme language above quoted from the Coleman Case, supra, and in all the other cases cited and relied upon by defendant, and will not bear the construction contended for, and in our opinion could not have had the effect of misleading the jury. Of the charge above quoted the learned court said in that case:
“The language used would fairly permit the jury
Yet, later, in speaking of the degree of care required to be exercised by carriers for the safety of passengers, the court said:
“As compared with the care needed in business involving no possible- human risk, the care to be used may be properly enough called extraordinary.”
This designation of the degree of care required is within the terms used by the authority before cited, where it is stated that some courts in stating this rule employ the word “utmost,” others, “greatest,” and still others, “extraordinary” care.
“The difference in the statements, however, is merely a choice of words, and does not denote conflicting views.” 4 R. C. L. p. 1147, supra,.
The case of Michigan, etc., R. Co. v. Coleman, supra, was written more than 40 years ago, when railroads in Michigan and the United States were in their infancy and when the present complexity of speed, appliances, and instrumentalities used in railroading were undreamed of, and yet this court as then composed laid down the law that the degree of care which the carrier must observe for the safety of a passenger, to exonerate it from liability for injury, was “extraordinary.” Courts of today of equally high character are now declaring that carriers of passengers are bound to exercise the highest degree of care. There is no good reason why this court should not also so declare. Such holding does not relieve a plaintiff from proving negligence, nor does it make the carrier of passengers an insurer, but, considering the nature of the business, the agencies and instrumentalities used, and the high rate of speed attained, the law requires of the carrier the exercise of the highest degree of care and skill. This is an interpretation of the word “extraordinary,” adapted to modern exigencies.
The following portion of the charge as given by the • court is also objected to:
“And it would make no difference whether the derailment resulted from the spreading of the rails because the ties were so rotten that they would not hold the spikes, or the breaking of a T rail, if you find such spreading of the rails or breaking of the T rail was caused by the decayed and unsound condition of the ties, which rendered the track and roadbed not reasonably safe.”
The contention is that this charge was erroneous because it was not supported by the declaration in the case, and that under the charge the jury was given the right to find that if the defendant was negligent under any circumstances, a verdict could be found against it, and that the jury was left to guess what caused the accident. The allegation in the declaration, after stating the unsafe and dangerous condition of the railroad ties permitted by the defendant, states:
“And while said train Number Four was passing
The record upon this trial, as well as upon the first and second trials, shows that as far as the defective condition of the road was concerned plaintiff relied solely upon the decayed and unsound condition of the railroad ties, and the charge of the court to the jury was that in any event they must find that the decayed and unsound condition of the ties caused this wreck. It is clear that there was but one proximate cause which it was claimed brought about this disaster, and that was the decayed and unsound condition of the ties, and the jury was not left to guess or conjecture such cause. This charge of the court is not subject to the criticism of the defendant, and was not erroneous.
The next error is upon the refusal of the court to grant a new trial. So much of the contention of defendant under this subdivision as was passed upon in what we have said relative to the refusal to direct a verdict in favor of defendant does not require further discussion. We have already said that there was evidence in the case which required that it be submitted to the jury.
It is next claimed that the verdict was not based upon the evidence and was against the weight of the evidence. From an examination of all of the evidence in the case our conclusion is that there was evidence in the case to support the verdict of the jury, and that it was not excessive.
No error appearing in this case, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.