Plaintiff, Gerald W. Reno, brought this action against defendants under the dramshop act (MCLA 436.22; MSA 18.993) to recover damages for injuries he suffered when the car in which he was riding was struck by an automobile driven by an allegedly intoxicated Gary Schumann. The jury, after listening to all the proofs in the case, rendered a verdict of no cause of action in favor of all the defendants. Judgment to this effect was entered by the trial judge on April 3, 1972, and plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied on June 5, 1972. Plaintiff now appeals raising five alleged errors for our consideration. Only three of these claims merit decisional discussion. The others have been considered and determined to be without merit.
Plaintiff first contends that the trial court erred reversibly in permitting defense counsel to submit, over objection, testimonial and documentary evidence showing plaintiff to have received a certain sum of money from Schumann’s insurance carrier in return for releasing Schumann from any and all claims arising out of the accident. We disagree. It is clear that Schumann and the present defendants were not joint tortfeasors and that the defendants had no right to contribution from the intoxicated driver, Gary Schumann.
Virgilio v Hartfield,
Plaintiffs second contention also relates to the admission of settlement agreements into evidence. This time, however, the settlement agreements were those entered into between Schumann’s insurance carrier and Mark Allen, father of Donald and Richard Allen who were passengers in the Schumann car at the time of the accident and who
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were also injured in the accident. Donald Allen testified at the trial on behalf of plaintiff and his testimony, if believed, was highly damaging to the defendants’ positions. During the cross-examination of Donald Allen, however, the credibility of his testimony was impeached by evidence of several prior inconsistent statements and also by eliciting testimony as to his bias or interest in this particular action. Donald testified that he was also suing each of the defendants herein under the dramshop act as a result of this accident. He stated that his attorney was the same attorney as the one representing plaintiff Reno and that his brother, Richard Allen, also had an action pending against these defendants. It was then brought out, over objection, that Donald and his brother had each made a claim against Schumann’s insurance carrier and that their claims had been settled with Schumann’s insurance carrier by their father, since they were minors at the time, in return for the payment of a certain sum of money. These settlement agreements were received into evidence by the trial judge and Jack Wyman, an employee of Schumann’s insurance carrier, was permitted, over objection, to testify as to the release agreements and the amounts of the settlements. Plaintiff claims, without citing any authority, that the admission of this testimony and evidence constituted reversible error because it was highly prejudicial and not relevant to any issue in the case or competent to establish Donald’s bias or interest in the outcome of the litigation. We disagree. It is our considered opinion that the evidence here complained of was properly admitted to impeach the credibility of Donald Allen by showing his bias or interest in the outcome of the litigation. MCLA 600.2158; MSA 27A.2158. The evidence here complained of established that the witness and his
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brother also had lawsuits pending against these same defendants and that the two brothers stood in exactly the same position as the plaintiff herein because they also, through their father, executed release and settlement agreements with Schumann’s insurance carrier thereby leaving only these defendants open to a suit for additional damages. The permissible scope of cross-examination on a collateral matter such as this is left to the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be disturbed by a reviewing court unless the trial court abused that discretion.
Mowinski v Bishop,
Plaintiff lastly claims that the trial judge erred in granting each of the defendants three peremptory challenges during jury selection. GCR 1963, 511.5, as amended, provides, in relevant part:
“Each party in a civil case may peremptorily challenge 3 jurors. In civil cases two or more parties on the same side are considered a single party for purposes of peremptory challenge, but where multiple parties having adverse interests are aligned on the same side, 3 peremptory challenges shall be allowed to each such party represented by a different attorney.”
The defendants in the case at bar were all represented by a different attorney so the decisive question becomes whether the defendants herein had "adverse interests”.
The term "adverse interests” is not defined by the court rule and we have been cited to no case which has heretofore defined this term for the purposes of GCR 1963, 511.5 nor has our search revealed any such case. Prior to the adoption of
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GCR 1963, 511.5 our Supreme Court employed a procedure similar to that announced in GCR 1963, 511.5 for determining whether multiple parties in a civil action are each entitled to their own peremptory challenges. See 2 Honigman & Hawkins, Michigan Court Rules Annotated (2d Ed), p 467. Despite language in
Stroh v Hinchman,
In the case at bar the three defendants were represented by different attorneys and filed separate answers to plaintiff’s complaint. In order for plaintiff to have prevailed against all three defendants he would have had to have shown that each defendant made an illegal sale to Schumann. Proof of such a sale with respect to one defendant would not be sufficient to hold all the defendants liable. The plaintiff was required to prove his case against each defendant individually relying on the particular factual circumstances of the sale or *516 sales in question. Under these circumstances we hold that the interests of the defendants herein were sufficiently adverse to bring them within the meaning of GCR 1963, 511.5. Defendants were not presenting a unified defense but, rather, were attempting to show that no illegal sale was made at their particular places of business. We find no error.
Affirmed.
