148 Mich. 412 | Mich. | 1907
Plaintiff, the wife of John Merrinane, brought this action, in accordance with the provisions of the civil damage act, to recover damages of defendant, a saloon keeper, and his different bondsmen for three successive years, occasioned by sales of liquor to her husband. Plaintiff and her husband, then recently married, moved to Grass Lake, in Jackson county, where defendant was conducting his business, in November, 1902. They were married in June, 1901, and lived at Chelsea till their removal to Grass Lake. Plaintiff’s husband was a telegrapher in the employ of the Michigan Central Railroad Company, earning $50 per month, and at the time he went to Grass Lake was a sober, industrious man of excellent habits, and had $500 of his earnings in bank. In the spring, after going to Grass Lake, he began to drink moderately at defendant’s saloon, of which plaintiff’s brother was bartender, and prior to December, 1903, occasionally got intoxicated. On December 22d he was notified of his discharge, as follows:
“Dear Sir: I enclose you time ticket for $27.44 covering 17 days’ service in December, and beg to advise you that by direction of Mr. D. S. Sutherland, Div. Supt., your services are dispensed with, having proven unsatisfactory.
“Yours truly,
“E. H. Millinghok, Supt. Tel.”
After his discharge he drank heavily and soon became a common drunkard. They paid $7 per month house rent and from $25 to $30 per month for the support of the family out of the money in the bank until March, 1905, when the money was all gone, and plaintiff has since that time supported herself without assistance from her
“I knew he slept while he was on duty. He always had a student that knew the call, and they would call him when they needed him. He was a fellow that couldn’t sleep daytimes very much. He would try. I would often see him go to bed five or six times in one day, but he never could get used to sleeping daytimes, and he always had a student, and it didn’t make much difference because they could arouse him when they needed him. * * *
“ Did not ask Miller not to sell her husband. Witness never personally forbid Miller, from selling her husband liquor. Did once.through her brother, that was in March, 1905. Up to March, 1905, witness never forbid either the bartender of Miller either verbally or in writing not to sell her husband liquor; heard her husband call for a drink. She made no objection; said nothing to Miller at that time, although she had the opportunity.”
Defendant was the only witness in his behalf and testified, in substance, as follows :
“He patronized my business more or less during the spring of 1908. To my knowledge I never saw him intoxicated during that time. I never sold him when he was intoxicated; don’t know whether my bartender sold him or not. * * *
“When a man is intoxicated, in my judgment, he would be so he couldn’t help himself. To be intoxicated would be unable to help himself, would lay in a stupor, and would not be able to go home. A man who is able to go home, though he reels and takes up the whole sidewalk, I should not judge to be intoxicated.”
Plaintiff’s counsel. presented no requests to charge. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against all of the defendants for the sum of $600. Plaintiff made a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the law and the evidence, and the damages awarded grossly inadequate. The motion was denied, reasons therefor filed, exception taken, and error assigned thereon. Plaintiff brings the record to this court for review upon writ of error.
“I do not mean by unlawful sales, sales made after hours at night or before lawful hours begin in the morning. We are not undertaking to punish Mr. Miller because he kept open too late at night or opened up too early in the morning, or was open on Sunday or Christmas, or any other holiday. But you have a right to consider what sales he made and when he made them, if they were made to Mr. Merrinane, simply to enable you to understand in what way Mr. Miller was dealing with Mr. Merrinane; and, if he sold him liquors during the time 'he was a man in the habit of getting intoxicated or at times when he was intoxicated, he is liable, and it is sufficient whether he sold them out of hours or in hours. But, as I say, you may consider whether they were out of hours simply in connection with determining any wantoriness, or recklessness or carelessness in the way he was dealing with Mr. Merrinane, and for no other purpose.”
This question arose during the progress of the trial, and plaintiff’s counsel stated his position as follows:
“ If the sales the first year were legal at the time he was being made a drunkard, the bondsmen for that year are not liable. * * * If the sales are illegal and they tend to create the habit which makes him a drunkard, they are liable.”
It was held by this court in Peacock v. Oaks, 85 Mich. 578, that there could be no recovery under the statute for injuries caused by the sale or furnishing of liquor to another, unless such sale or furnishing is in violation of law. Whether this broad statement of the law may not require
The ninth assignment of error complains of an instruction that plaintiff was not seeking to recover any part of the money that her husband spent for liquor. There is no specific claim for such an item of damages in the declaration, nor was any evidence given from which the jury could determine the amount of money spent for liquor by Merrinane.
The tenth assignment of error is as follows:
“The court erred in charging the jury, as follows: ‘But, if the amount she would receive had only been diminished and she had not been entirely deprived of it, then you would consider the extent of the diminution, if any, of her support due to those causes.’ ”
It is contended that the testimony showed a complete and not a partial loss, and the instruction was therefore erroneous. The contention is not sustained by the record. There was only a partial loss during the first year at least.
The eleventh assignment of error is as follows:
“The court erred in charging the jury as follows: ‘ Now, the expectancy tables have been shown here in evidence. Her age is 29 and his age 33. Her expectancy is 36JV years and his expectancy 33TV-ff. These are simply given to you as aids, not as absolute proof that he would live 33 years, or that she would live 36 years.’”
The court correctly stated the general rule; and, if plaintiff’s counsel claimed that the facts of this case took it out of the general rule, he should have brought such contention to the attention of the court. Davis v. Railroad Co., 147 Mich. 479.
The serious question in the case is presented by the assignment of error upon the denial of the motion for a
“Miller sold him liquor while in that condition any time he wanted it if he could only stand up and drink. * * * Witness [the bartender] told Miller if he kept selling Merrinane liquor it would make him trouble. Miller said he would not sell it to him, but the next day he would get it just the same. Miller said it was a good thing for witness’ sister to get a divorce from Merrinane. Miller said that it was the way his sister’s husband went. He either died or else she got a divorce. Miller said he thought Merrinane was so far gone he would never stop drinking.”
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial granted.