56 Mich. 172 | Mich. | 1885
Plaintiff impleaded the defendant before a justice of the peace for unlawfully obstructing a public highway in the township of Oneida, in the county of Eaton, by its freight cars, by which the plaintiff was hindered and delayed from passing along said highway to a grist-mill; an d by reason of such obstruction he was hindered and prevented from taking a certain train, and from transacting certain business at Ionia, and other damages particularly alleged, but unnecessary to mention. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and the trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for thirteen dollars damages. Defendant appealed to the circuit court, where the plaintiff recovered a judgment of two dollars and fifty cents damages. The defendant brings the case into this Court by writ of error, and assigns error upon the refusal of the judge to charge as requested by defendant’s counsel, and in instructing the jury “that upon the proofs plaintiff was entitled to recover two and one-half dollars damages.”
It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff was traveling along the public highway leading into the village of Grand Ledge from the farm of plaintiff, with his hired servant and
Under the first assignment of error the counsel for defendant claims that the statute, having prohibited a railroad company from obstructing a street for more than five minutes at any one time (How. Stat. § 3323, subd. 5), it is the duty of the defendant to avoid such obstruction if possible; but that such duty is a public duty, and not one for breach of which an individual may claim personal damages. The premises stated in the above proposition may be gránted, but the conclusion drawn therefrom by the defendant’s counsel does not at all follow. The duty to avoid obstructing a public highway, contrary to the statute, is one which defendant owes to the public, without doubt. But it has always been held that if, in the non-observance of public duties, a party causes an in
The variation complained of in the second assignment of error consists in the averment in the declaration that the defendant obstructed a certain highway in the township of Oneida, when the proof was that the obstruction, if any, was of a street in the village of Grand Ledge. Counsel for the defendant, however, conceded on the trial that the village of Grand Ledge was in the township of Oneida. There was therefore no material variance between the allegation and the proof.
There was no error in refusing the third request of defendant. The expenses incurred by plaintiff by being detained until too late to take the morning train was a direct result of the obstruction, and rendered necessary thereby. We discover no error in the record, and
The judgment is affirmed with costs.