This is an action for damages brought under the Michigan wrongful death act, *402 CLS 1961, § 600.2922 (Stat Ann 1962 Eev § 27 A-.2922). Plaintiff’s decedent, Edward M. Taylor, driving from Chicago to his home in Jackson, Michigan, stopped at the American Legion Post at Hudson, Michigan at about midnight. He appeared to be sober, but did not look well and said he was not feeling well. He had been afflicted with periods of faintness over a period of several months and had recently submitted to a surgical operation. He had one drink and part of a second drink and then left.
Defendant Murphy had entered the bar at about 10 p.m. the same evening, drank several bottles of beer and left about 1 a.m., approximately 15 minutes after plaintiff’s decedent. Defendant’s car was parked in front of the door to the bar. Decedent’s car was parked next to defendant’s on the right side (passenger side) of defendant’s car. As he left the bar defendant approached the two cars from the front. He testified that he did not look through the opening to the parking area behind them, but that he did look down the left side of his car before entering it, and saw nothing. He further testified that upon entering his car he looked through the rear Mew mirror but saw nothing because it ivas a misty night. It had been raining and his rear window was obscured with rain and mist. Defendant did not attempt to clean off the rear window.
Defendant started his car and in backing up, he rolled over decedent’s body which had been lying on the ground behind the car, thereby causing Ms death.
The cause was tried to a jury which returned a verdict of no cause of action. Plaintiff has appealed to this court alleging that the trial judge erred in giMng his instruction to the jury and in refusing to grant plaintiff’s request for instructions, and further alleging that the trial judge committed error *403 in refusing to allow defendant to make a test of his view to the rear of his ear.
Appellant assigns error to the refusal of the trial judge to give requested instructions relating to subsequent negligence, or last clear chance, and relating to defendant’s duty of care.
"With one exception having no significance here, appellant made no objection before the trial court to the court’s refusal to give requested instructions, to its charges as given, or to any ruling of the court. Nor does she claim that she was denied opportunity to object. The Michigan court rules are explicit that on appeal a party cannot assign error to any action of the trial court unless he has made a timely objection, so that the court has had a chance to correct any alleged error before the jury retires to deliberate. GCR 1963, 516.2. See
Snyder
v.
New York Central Transport Co.
(1966),
It appears that the trial court did not indicate to appellant what action it would take with regard to the written requests, in accordance with GCR 1963, 516.1. However, the failure of the trial court to observe that rule does not excuse the parties from their duty of timely objection. The only exception to this general rule is where the trial court refused to grant the opportunity to object.
Herndon
v.
Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society
(1965),
Even had timely objection been made we find no prejudicial error. “The jury was entitled to have before it during its consideration of the case both plaintiff’s and defendant’s theories (where, as here, there was evidence to support them) and the law applicable thereto.”
Gapske
v.
Hatch
(1957),
The use of hypothetical illustration in charging the jury may be questionable but it is objectionable only if it tends to mislead the jury. It is rendered innocuous by a proper warning to the jury.
Beecher
v.
Venn
(1877),
Appellant complains of the following language in the court’s charge:
“Now, a reasonable man coming out of the Legion at 1 a.m. doesn’t have to expect or assume someone would be lying on the ground in the parking lot to the rear of the car or that someone will fall behind his car before or as he backs out.”
This, she says, constitutes an invasion by the judge of the province of the jury. However, the court continued :
“The question here basically is whether a reasonable man using ordinary care would have observed Mr. Taylor’s position under all the circumstances of this particular case at that time of the night and this particular place in time to have avoided running over him.”
It is elementary that the judge may not instruct the jury what inferences of fact to draw. But in reviewing instructions we consider the charge as a whole, and if a possible ambiguity is clarified by other portions of the charge there is no error. See
Elliott
v.
A. J. Smith Contracting Company, Inc.
*405
(1960),
We find no error .in the refusal of the trial judge to allow a test of defendant’s view through the rear window of his automobile. Admission of results of experiments is within the discretion of the trial court, and that discretion is not abused when the court rejects evidence of tests taken under conditions which were not similar to those obtaining with respect to the litigated happening. See
People
v.
Auerbach
(1913),
Appellant complains that in charging the jury, the court gave undue prominence to defendant’s theory of the case. We recognize that the trial judge must not emphasize the theory of one or the other of the parties.
Snyder
v.
United Benefit-Insurance Co.
(1963),
We find no reversible error and accordingly the judgment is affirmed, with costs to appellee.
