Appellant concedes that the negligence of the driver of an automobile is, under the law of Michigan, imputable to a guest passenger. Asserting, however, that this doctrine, which is at utter variance with that prevailing generally in American jurisprudence, is limited in its applicability to those whose election to ride with the operator of the automobile is free and voluntary, appellant insists that the district court erred in charging the jury that there would be imputable to appellant’s decedent any contributory negligence of the driver of the automobile in which the deceased was riding when fatally injured as the result of a collision with a trailer attached to appellee’s tractor.
Appellant’s decedent and Gamble, owner and driver of the automobile, were employees of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board for the Sixth District. The district supervisor had assigned them, on official business, from Hammond, Indiana, to Monroe, Michigan, and had ordered them to report from Monroe to Grand Rapids, Michigan, to examine the Federal savings and loan association located there. He testified that the manner of travel “was usually optional with the examiners,” that he knew the two men had traveled together in Gamble’s car on their last three assignments, and also that Gamble received five cents per mile travel allowance when using his own automobile; but that the examiners had not been instructed by him one way or the other concerning their method of transportation. Such direction did not fall within the scope of his authority. The supervisor testified further that, had he desired to do so, appellant’s decedent could have adopted some other mode of travel than in Gamble’s automobile.
The fatal collision occurred at night on a United States Highway between Monroe and Grand Rapids. The evidence as to re
The argument of appellant has been answered adversely in Caswell v. New York Central Railroad Company,
“Plaintiff’s contention in this respect is based upon the fact that the county drain commissioner paid Hine 10 cents per mile for the distance his car traveled in going to and from the meeting, and did not pay such mileage to the other special commissioners. However, in his testimony the county drain commissioner made it plain that he did not hire Hine to transport the other special commissioners; that the mileage was a customary allowance; that he would have paid each special commissioner the mileage had each gone in his own car; and that he did not control the transportation, and each could have used his own car had he desired.
“The mileage was not a hiring of Hine’s car nor paid as compensation for its use in transporting himself or, the others. Mileage is a well-established method, widely used in public and private business, of reimbursing an officer or employee for the expense necessarily sustained by him in traveling to perform his duties. It is merely a substitute for actual expenses, and, theoretically, covers only the cost of transportation of the individual officer or employee, and the rate is set upon that basis, unless otherwise indicated by circumstances. It involves no control of the car by the superior officer or employer, nor does it change the driver’s relation or liability to any one who might ride with him.”
Other Michigan authorities dó not sustain the contention of appellant that her decedent was a passenger for hire and, as such, exempt from the applicability of the Michigan doctrine of imputation of negligence. All the cases cited by her are differentiable from the case at bar. In Johnson v. Mack,
Examination of the facts reported in Monison v. McCoy,
Appellant urges that the imputed negligence rule operative in Michigan is “an unwanted doctrine which arose as the result of a judicial mistake,” and that the Supreme Court of Michigan has engrafted upon the rule “every conceivable exception” and has shown an increasing trend toward broadening the exceptions until the rule is altogether abrogated. Her counsel assert that “the Supreme Court has reluctantly recognized the fact that it is the unhappy creator of a problem child, of questionable legitimacy, and understandably enough has done its level best to keep the product out of sight, while not daring to disclaim it altogether.”
It is not the function of a Federal court either to legitimatize, or to bastardize, the brain-children of state courts in diversity of citizenship cases. Since Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Meeting a vigorous attack upon the Michigan doctrine of imputable negligence as inconsistent with the weight of authority, the Supreme Court of Michigan, in Holsaple v. Menominee Sup’ts of Poor,
Chief Justice McDonald, in Lachow v. Kimmich,
In Moore v. United States Truck Co.,
(2) Error is assigned to the action of the district court in permitting the defendant Wilkins, driver of the truck and trailer of the appellee corporation at the time of the accident, to testify, over objection, to facts asserted by appellant to have been equally within the knowledge of her decedent. See the Michigan statute: 3 Comp.Laws 1929, Sec. 14219. That the facts to which Wilkins testified were equally within the knowledge of the decedent was not showp in evidence and, at most, would rest entirely upon conjecture. There was no proof as.to what the deceased was in position to see, or even as to what he was doing immediately prior to or at the time of the accident. The fact that Wilkins’ testimony was contradicted in part by another witness does not strengthen appellant’s contention.
In re Boyer’s Estate,
Noonan v. Volek,
(3) Appellant asserts that the trial court committed reversible error in failing to instruct the jury, as requested, to disregard the testimony of the driver of the vehicle of appellee if it should be found that he had testified to matters equally within the
“It was a question of fact, in this case, for determination by the jury, whether the horn, if sounded, was heard by or known to the deceased. In such case, the testimony should be received and the jury instructed not to give the same consideration, if found to have been equally within the knowledge of the deceased.” Noonan v. Volek,
“That the fact sought to be shown was known to the deceased cannot be inferred. It must affirmatively appear from testimony or circumstances, or the evidence should be received and submitted to the jury, with instructions to disregard it if found to have been equally within the knowledge of the deceased.” In re Boyer’s Estate,
“After the introduction of the testimony, plaintiff still had the opportunity to save such question for review by requesting that the court instruct the jury that they should give consideration to such testimony, subject to the qualifications that they could disregard it entirely if they found that it related to matters equally within the knowledge of the deceased.” Case v. Klute,
In the instant case, the trial attorney for appellant searchingly cross-examined as a hostile witness the codefendant Wilkins, driver of the tractor and trailer owned by the appellee. It has been distinctly promulgated by the Supreme Court of Michigan that the representative of an estate who cross-examines an opposite party waives the benefit of the statute, 3 Comp.Laws, Sec. 14219, prohibiting testimony by such party to matters equally within the knowledge of the deceased; and, having cross-examined, cannot prevent the opposite party from giving a full explanation of the subject of inquiry. Hayes v. Skeman,
It must be borne in mind that no proof was offered that the matters to which Wilkins testified were equally within the knowledge of the decedent, Rehm; and that the burden of proving such knowledge rested upon appellant and could not be inferred or conjectured. There was no evidence from which the jury could justifiably have rejected the consideration of any part of Wilkins’ testimony as being within the equal knowledge of the deceased. Therefore, there was no occasion for the district judge to charge the jury as requested, and he properly declined to do so.
(4) No error is found in the rejection by the district court of the other special instructions submitted by the appellant; nor was the district court in error in holding that Juror Van Zanten answered truthfully questions asked him on voir dire examination and was not guilty of bad faith in failing to disclose an incidental occupation concerning which he was not interrogated.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
