Defendant appeals from a $22,000 judgment in favor of plaintiff for the wrongful death of her decedent.
For a sewer construction project, defendant caused excavations to be made in its streets. The accident involved occurred at the intersection of Putnam boulevard and Fourth avenue. Putnam is a divided street with 2 lanes, 22 feet in width, for south- ¡ bound traffic, separated, by an island 10 feet wide, ¡from 2 similar lanes for northbound traffic. Fourth *89 .avenue crosses it, running east and west. An excavation had been made across the 2 southbound lanes of Putnam along the south line of Fourth .avenue. This was refilled with dirt to a level of about 1 foot higher than the street. At the end of the work day a bulldozer was left in the center of the southbound lanes, just south of the intersection, at the point of the filled-in excavation. Sawhorse barricades were placed north of the bulldozer, barring entrance into the southbound lanes beyond that intersection. A white detour sign with black letters, fastened to the barricade, directed southbound traffic, .at that point, to cross over to the east side of the island and to continue south in 1 of the 2 lanes otherwise devoted to northbound traffic. Three bomb-type fares were placed there, one 6 feet north of the barricade, 1 east, and 1 south of the bulldozer. At 7 p. m. a city policeman lighted the flares.
A city policeman, who went on duty at about 11 p. m., drove a squad car past that intersection about every half hour between then and 2 a. m. An extremely heavy wind and rainstorm arose. The street lights were on at all times, but at about 12:30 a. m. the policeman noticed that the bomb lights had gone out. He relighted them and proceeded on patrol in his car. Five minutes later he returned and saw that the bomb lights were still lit. Shortly after that the rain and storm became severe. At about 1:15 a. m. he again drove past the intersection and saw that the bomb lights were out. It was raining so hard that he concluded that it would be impossible to relight the flares and so he drove on. The accident occurred at about 1:30 a. m. Some 15 minutes later the policeman again passed that way, saw that the flares were still out and thought that it was raining too hard to do anything about it. He did not see the evidence of the accident which had just *90 occurred. He could see ahead only 25 to 30 feet because of the storm and rain.
At about 1:30 a. m. plaintiff’s decedent left a bar 2-1/2 blocks north of the intersection. He got on his motorcycle and headed south at 30 to 35 miles per hour. His motorcycle struck and broke the east sawhorse barricade and grazed the east end of the bulldozer. About 2 hours later his broken motorcycle and lifeless body were found a short distance east and south of the east end of the bulldozer.
Defendant’s motions for directed verdict and for new trial were denied.
On appeal defendant says that decedent was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in driving his motorcycle at a speed greater than would permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead, citing
Elrich
v.
Schwaderer,
As for defendant’s right to a directed verdict for lack of proof of its negligence, we think the proofs presented jury questions in that regard, particularly with respect to the kind of warning lights placed by defendant and the defendant’s police officer’s failure, 15 minutes before the accident, when he knew the flares were out, to brave the rain and do something to warn or safeguard oncoming traffic of the existing danger, and also, as relates to defendant’s leaving dirt in the intersection, if it did, which might later become soupy and slippery in the rain. There was testimony of defendant’s street superintendent that from previous experience they knew that bomb flares would go out in cases of wind or rainstorms. Its chief of police testified that its police cars were equipped with railroad fusees which might have been placed at the intersection when the policeman found the flares to be out. Defendant stresses the presence of street lights 'nearby the intersection, but its police officer testified that at the time and place of the
*92
accident he could see ahead only 25 or 30 feet in the storm. At all events, decedent was entitled to assume the existence of a reasonably safe condition in the street ahead and that there would be ample warning of an unsafe condition, of the city’s making, such as here existed.
Bonneville
v.
City of Alpena,
Defendant claims error in the court’s instructions entitling it to a new trial. The first is the court’s language as follows:
“With respect to the violation of the provisions of a statute, such violation must have been the sole proximate cause of the accident before you can hold the defendant negligent or the plaintiff’s decedent guilty of contributory negligence.”
It being defendant’s theory that decedent violated the assured clear distance ahead statute (CLS 1956, § 257.627 [Stat Ann 1952 Bev §9.2327]), it complains that the quoted portion of the charge informed the jury that, if decedent violated that statute, that fact would not bar plaintiff’s right to recover unless that violation was the sole proximate cause of the accident. The wording is unfortunate, but not prejudicial in view of the language 2 sentences later stating essentially the same proposition but that decedent’s contributory negligence in violating the statute, to bar plaintiff’s recovery, “must have been the sole or proximate cause of the accident”. It is evident that the word “or” was inadvertently omitted by the judge, or possibly the court reporter, in the first sentence, but properly inserted 2 sentences later. The paragraph on that matter was concluded, in the *93 sentence following the last above mentioned, by this language:
“In other words, if the violation of the statute enacted for the public safety had no relationship to the accident at all, you can disregard it in such case or in this ease.”
This, together with other language in the set of instructions, convinces us that the jury was not misled into error in this connection.
Defendant next complains of the instruction with respect to a presumption of decedent’s due care, in that, after instructing that that presumption disappears when there is evidence from which reasonable inferences may be drawn on the subject, the court went on to say that if the jury found such evidence to be “not credible, then the presumption is restored”. Defendant then quotes from
Dalton
v.
Grand Trunk W. R. Co.,
Defendant complains of the court’s reading to the jury sections of the statute * requiring vehicles parked upon a highway after dark to have certain lights displayed thereon. Defendant says the statutory provisions were not applicable because the bull *94 dozer in question was on a part of the street closed off to public travel. The court told the jury just exactly that. It might have been as well to make no reference to that statutory requirement, but at all events, defendant cannot complain inasmuch as the court told the jury that it did not apply here.
Next, defendant points to the court’s instruction that “it was the duty of a municipality to see that that part of the highway [part not closed to traffic] was in a safe and fit condition to be traveled upon.” The statute (CLS 1956, § 242.1 [Stat Ann 1958 Rev § 9.591]) requires that the street be kept “reasonably safe and fit for travel”. Inclusion of the word “reasonably” in the judge’s instruction would have caused it to conform strictly to the statute. Its omission was error. Under all of the facts in this case and proofs concerning defendant’s negligence we do not believe that it was prejudicial, that the jury was misled or influenced thereby in reaching its decision, or that inclusion of the word would have caused a different verdict.
Citing
Baker
v. Slack,
Was the verdict excessive? Plaintiff testified that money decedent had been giving her was her support, that he had given her as support money $725 from January 1, 1956, to his death on May 12th of that year, $1,500 in 1955 and $1,800 in 1954; that her husband had died in 1933, leaving her only insurance in the amount of $500; that decedent had been contributing to her support since 1944. Decedent had a life expectancy of 35 years and his mother about 10 years, according to the statutory mortality tables. She testified that her mother had lived to age 83 and her grandmother to age 90. Stipulated special damages for funeral expenses, et cetera, were somewhat under $2,000, leaving just over $20,000 for the mother’s pecuniary loss. Under such record we cannot say that the verdict was excessive.
Affirmed. Costs to plaintiff.
Notes
CLS 1956, §§ 257.694, 257.695 (Stat Ann 1952 Bey § 9.2394, Stat Ann 1960 Bev § 9.2395).
