Court Opinion

ID: 9686720
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 16:03:33.618001+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:18:21.743815
License: Public Domain

*32Voelker, J.
This appeal grows out of a driver-pedestrian. accident on a public street not at an intersection during which the plaintiff pedestrian was grievously injured. At the close of the plaintiff’s proofs the defendant moved for a directed verdict, which was granted and this appeal has resulted.
At the trial the plaintiff was unable to testify to the circumstances surrounding the accident, claiming that as a result of her injuries she had suffered from amnesia, or loss of memory, a lapse which she alleged and testified covered an interval immediately preceding the accident and lasting until she woke up in the hospital the next day, Christmas. She testified that she was 51 years of age; that she had worked around her home'that day; that she and her husband had expected company that night and she had made spaghetti sauce and 3 kinds of candy; that her husband got home from work about 4:30 that afternoon; that they went shopping for groceries and snacks for their expected company that night and returned home shortly after 5; that they relaxed and read the newspapers till about 20 minutes to 6 when they left to walk to the Moose Lodge (a block and a half away), arriving shortly before 6, where, as planned, they met their son and some friends; that during her stay at the lodge hall she drank 2 whiskey highballs in soda; that when she and her husband left at about 6:50 her son presented her with a pint of whiskey, which she carried with her; that she and her husband parted at a drugstore and she went on ahead on her way. home to prepare their supper.
She further testified that she remembered nothing after passing the Odd Fellows Hall (near the scene of the accident and somewhat north of a point kitty corner from her apartment across the street). “My memory is cut off at the point where I remember walking past the Odd Fellows hall,” she testified. “I have no further recollection.”
*33An expert witness, Dr. Clarence W. Muelilberger, chemist and toxicologist for the Michigan department of health, testified that he had analyzed a blood sample taken from the defendant and found that it contained .17% alcohol by weight. He further testified that in his opinion one whose blood sample showed .15% alcohol or more was “definitely under the influence.” He further testified that these tests and figures were recognized among toxicologists and medical science in general, being accepted among others by the American Medical Association, the National Safety Council and the American Association of Chiefs of Police.
The same police officer who took the blood sample from defendant testified at the trial that he had first refreshed his recollection from a police report he had made the night of the accident and that he had discussed the accident with the defendant at the scene; that “He stated he hadn’t seen her until the' accident, until the collision;” that he, the officer, had observed that there had been snow and the streets were slushy; that the visibility was very poor; that it was á hazy and misty night with some fog combined with mist. On the question of defendant’s drinking he testified as follows:
“I determined that he had been drinking’ and I asked and he told me he had had 4 cocktails of some nature or some combination. I also concluded he had been drinking as his eyes were bloodshot and watery. He talked not real clear and his words were slightly slurred. He was, of course, very excited. The odor of alcoholic beverage was very strong on his breath. I don’t recall if there were any lights on Mr. Bashore’s car. I asked him if he would permit a blood alcohol test taken and he requested that ,we do so.”
*34. The defendant was called for cross-examination under the statute.  He testified, among other things, that he had had a few drinks earlier that afternoon, possibly 4; that the weather was cold and there was snow and slush on the streets; that about 7 p.m. as he proceeded northerly up the street where the accident occurred his lights were on dim; that he did not feel the drinks he had taken except that he felt warmer; that he didn’t recall whether his windshield wipers were on; that his lights showed up “good” and that he could see about 50 feet ahead; that he did not see the plaintiff as he crossed the street intersection some 50 feet below the accident; that he did not recall looking at his speedometer.
He further testified as follows:
“I saw Mrs. Shaw almost the same time as the impact but I did see Mrs. Shaw to the right of my car and there was no chance to stop. The accident followed almost immediately after my seeing Mrs. Shaw. I had a horn on my ear and it was in working order but had no opportunity to blow my horn. I made an effort to put on my brakes but it wasn’t in time. I knew I hit somebody and it was then I started to apply my brakes. My car rolled about 40 or 50 feet after I applied my brakes.”
He further testified that at the impact he saw the plaintiff “flying through the air” over the right side of his car, over the right hood by the sun visor; that his windshield was not fogged over; that his vision was normal; that after he stopped and went back he found the body of the plaintiff “possibly 8 or 9 feet from the curb;” and, categorically, that he was driving 20 miles per hour—this despite his previous testimony that he did not recall watching his speedometer.
*35Upon examination by bis own counsel he testified that when he first noticed the pedestrian she was moving from the east (direction of curbing) approximately 4 to 6 feet ahead of the car, and that he thought 1 step would carry her right directly to the right of his car, in front of it. “She was moving and she was approximately 1 step to the right of the extreme right side of my car.” On redirect examination he denied that he was drunk.
Plaintiff’s doctor described her condition and state when he first saw her in the hospital as follows:
“She had numerous contusions, very large laceration of the left leg and a compound fracture of the left tibia and fibula. The bone in her left leg stuck out through the skin. She was in considerable shock. I don’t know how many fractures there were but there were several pieces. She had fractures to both sides of her pelvis which was discerned by a later N-ray study. I administered plasma and cleaned out the wound, put the fractures together and closed up the wound.”
For a time amputation was seriously considered. She did not leave the hospital until the middle of the following February, during which time she had various operations, skin grafts and was in a pelvic cast. She had to return to the hospital for additional therapy under anesthesia. Her cast was not removed until April. The record discloses that apparently the only conversation she ever had with the police officer took place in the hospital the night of the accident. This last assumes some importance in view of later developments in this case, presently discussed.
As noted, at the close of plaintiff’s proofs, defendant moved for and the court granted a motion for a directed verdict. Among other things the court then said: “The burden was on plaintiff to prove not only that the defendant driver was negligent but that she *36herself was free from contributory negligence. The physical facts show that she stepped directly into the path of this car.” In reaching this conclusion the court appears to depend largely upon the testimony of officer Bell that plaintiff told him the same night after the accident while in the hospital that “Mrs. Shaw told me in her hospital room that she did not see the car.” (The court’s opinion neglects to mention that this same officer also testified that the defendant told him he did not see the plaintiff until the impact.)
To ground the decision thus is to accept the testimony proffered by and on behalf of plaintiff in its worst not its best light. It is to utterly ignore the plaintiff’s own testimony that she could not remember the circumstances of the accident. Manifestly if she was unable to remember the accident she was correct when and if she told the police officer that she didn’t see the car. This record also shows that she was in a state of pain and “considerable shock” upon her arrival at the hospital and when such conversation took place.
The court’s view of the defendant’s testimony is considerably more charitable:
“The testimony * * * of Mr. Bashore * * * was that * * * she stepped directly into the path of his automobile. * * *
“The testimony of the only other witness, who is the driver, and he is a competent witness to testify, was that she stepped directly into the path of his car.
“The physical facts are such as would make this court find her guilty of contributory negligence; in other words she was not keeping a proper lookout for traffic when she attempted to cross that street, so I am going to order you to remain in your seats and give a verdict for the defendant of no cause for action.”
*37While it is perhaps not strictly necessary to our decision, we think it is not without some pertinence to quote what the court had to say in his ruling on the motion about the drinking of the defendant, of whose testimony it seemed disposed to take such a favorable view:
“The officer also testified that the man admitted having some drinks but after they took the blood test* and examined and questioned him at the police station he was allowed to go home.”
Presumably this charitable action by the officer late on Christmas Eve to a married man with a family magically dissipated and held for naught the entire testimony of the police officer and also the lengthy testimony of Dr. Muehlberger to the effect that a man whose blood sample showed .17% alcohol by weight was “definitely intoxicated.”
This is “favorable view” with a vengeance, but solely from the defendant’s side. If the plaintiff had been killed, as she so nearly was, apparently the defendant could well have been successfully prosecuted for manslaughter (despite the added burden of proof) under our holding and the plain language we employed in People v. Townsend, 214 Mich 267, 272 (16 ALR 902) — assuming, perhaps hopefully, that in the meantime we have not swept that case into the dustbin.
Though the case was not cited by the court, its decision based on these grounds is really our hardy old friend Schillinger (Schillinger v. Wyman, 331 Mich 160), .this time travelling incognito and with an added new twist. Once again what someone allegedly told someone is seized upon and invoked and given the worst possible construction — from the plaintiff’s side, that is — but this time it is the testi*38mony of an intoxicated defendant that is seized upon as the final clincher that slays the presumption of due care and would banish this broken plaintiff forever from having her jury day in court. It would perhaps be enough to reverse this case simply on the correct application of favorable view, and stop there, but 8 chilling er has enjoyed its long reign of triumph and has waited a long time for its comeuppance, and we shall have our say.
The dubious and elusive doctrine of S dulling er has already been eloquently appraised, criticized and put in its proper perspective by Justices Black and Smith in their opinions in Hett v. Duffy, 346 Mich 456, 462, 472. This writer adopts those opinions in that case so far as they apply to our situation. As pointed out by Mr. Justice Smith at page 473, the doctrine that “When there is an eyewitness to an accident the issue of due care rests upon proof and not upon presumption” was a dictum, however sound, not necessary to the decision of the case in Foote v. Huelster, 272 Mich 194 at 198. From that passing dictum, correct as it may be in cases where it may properly apply, there has sprung up in this State the weird legal progeny now confronting us, a sleight-of-hand development which perhaps (up to this case) reached its finest flower in S chilling er. It now appears that a trial court would further extend recent legal perversions of that doctrine and now accept the conflicting testimony of an intoxicated defendant who, to put the best version on his inconsistent accounts, caught but a fleeting glimpse of the doomed plaintiff split seconds before his car struck her and she “flew through the air.”
We will have none of Schillinger much less any such bold extensions of its bleak doctrine. As Mr. Justice Black so well said at page 466 in Hett:
*39“This Court in recent years has gone a long way toward final destruction of the presumption of due care. In Schillinger we went so far as to manufacture sua sponte an ‘eyewitness’ out of pure rumor made into hearsay. Upon that tragic novelty, Schillinger until it is retired has eliminated the presumption of due care from all pedestrian death cases where the Court chooses to presume, or infer from hearsay, that the surviving driver ‘saw decedent at all before the accident.’ The driver may have seen nothing of evidentiary value tending to prove or disprove contributory negligence of him whose mouth is closed in death. The Court knows naught of that without the testimony of such driver. It simply presumes that the driver may have seen something and, on that homemade ipse dixit, the time-tried presumption of due care is ousted from the case as. a matter of law. A new presumption has thus crept without honors into Michigan pedestrian law—a presumption of existence of credible eyewitness testimony to negligent acts or omissions of the decedent—a presumption that annihilates another presumption, that of due care, as a matter of law.”
Justice Black gathers up the various counts of his indictment at page 469 and has these ringing words to say:
“Until we modify Schillinger to Gillett  and Petersen* the representatives of deceased pedestrians in cases where there are no real eyewitnesses to the decedent’s conduct will be denied right to jury verdict if they do not call the surviving driver to the stand and correspondingly will be denied that right if they do call him. The driver thus and regardless of his impeachment or the inconclusive nature of his testimony will continue to enjoy shameful advantage over the dependents of his victim—an advantage of even greater magnitude than he obtained over that *40victim when the unequal battle of steel against flesh was resolved against the latter.”
This curious judicial passion so evident in some quarters to resolve all possible doubts against the plaintiff in these types of cases, upon motion for peremptory verdict, again comes under searching scrutiny by Mr. Justice Black in his recent opinion in Weller v. Mancha, 351 Mich 50, which we need not repeat. This modern tendency to take negligence cases away from juries at every opportunity is all the more curious in view of our often-announced rule that, upon such motions, all facts and circumstances and reasonable inferences must be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. See Weisenberg v. Village of Beulah, 352 Mich 172, citing cases.
What we seek, then, is not to make new law in this realm, but to return to the application of time-honored rules and authorities. We seek to serve notice that we ourselves take an unfavorable view of this developing new doctrine of “unfavorable view.” We also seek to smite this growing tendency to take cases away from juries on capricious and arbitrary grounds,’ of which the trial court’s action in this case perhaps stands as a classic example. ,
Other questions discussed in the briefs are not apt to arise on retrial in view of our determination that the question of contributory negligence is for a jury. Further, and in view of such determination, it is probable that plaintiff’s theory of recovery will be voluntarily limited to the usual questions of negligence and freedom from contributory negligence. In these circumstances we decline to review and decide such additional questions.
The case is reversed and remanded for trial, with costs to plaintiff.
Smith, Black, and Edwards, JJ., concurred with VoELKER, J.

 Reference is to taking a sample for the blood test. At that time the test itself was not completed nor the results known.