Court Opinion

ID: 9685211
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 14:26:14.710428+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:18:03.336689
License: Public Domain

M. J. Kelly, P. J.,
(concurring). I am unable to resist the temptation to comment that this case is an embarrassment to the administration of civil justice in this state. A verdict was entered in June of 1971 in the trial court and has not as yet been finally disposed of yet thrice viewed by this Court and once by the Supreme Court by its denial of leave. The issue presented should have been disposed of peremptorily on simple motion for rehearing, either timely or delayed, and a scandalous four-year hiatus obviated.
General Motors says Cohen is a party to the appeal because he was served with the claim of appeal designating him an appellee, has been served with all subsequent pleadings and is a necessary party on retrial not only because he is the real culprit but because his attorney manufactured the error for which reversal was mandated.
Cohen says General Motors had to serve him with the claim of appeal because the court rule requires it. He says in order for him to be a party he would have had to file an appearance and participate in the appeal which he of course declined to do because he won below. There are really two questions presented by this appeal. The first has been answered by the majority opinion, that is, that it is the law of this case that the original verdict and judgment was reversed and remanded for new trial only as to General Motors. The second question is: May a judgment in favor of one defendant be reversed upon a successful appeal by a codefendant who had received an unfa*244vorable verdict at trial? We are not helped by the briefs on this issue but I submit that in Michigan the answer is no.
In Copeman v Takken, 262 Mich 674; 247 NW 778 (1933), a contract action, judgment was rendered in common pleas court against the husband but in favor of the wife. The husband appealed; the wife of course did not. Plaintiff did not appeal as to the wife. The Supreme Court held that the wife was not an appellant and that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to order reversal as to her. Therefore the common pleas court verdict of no cause of action was reinstated as to the successful codefendant wife.
In Ray v Knowles, 267 Mich 456; 255 NW 295 (1934), an action was brought for assault and battery committed by two defendants. The defendants were not exactly acting in concert; the one had assaulted the plaintiff and beaten him about the head and was sitting on him for some period of time before the second assailant came up and administered a blow upon the head. The first assailant received a no cause at trial; the second was held liable for money damages. There was no question about the first assailant having inflicted injuries; he admitted it. There was physical evidence corroborated by a doctor’s testimony and the plaintiffs testimony. The case is at least as strong as the case at bar for retrial as to both defendants. It would appear that some injuries would go uncompensated otherwise. But the plaintiff did not appeal as to the first tortfeasor and the Court held:
"We find no occasion to determine whether the verdict was defective in not making any return as to [the first tortfeasor]. [He] is not complaining, and [the second tortfeasor] may not make it his grievance.” 267 Mich at 458.
*245The case is obviously squarely in point. The only weakness is that it has never been cited.
In Meier v Holt, 347 Mich 430, 446; 80 NW2d 207 (1956), there was a judgment against two successive tortfeasors. Although the case is cluttered with three opinions, the two prevailing opinions reversed as to the second tortfeasor Holt, but since the judgment against Caswell had not been appealed the Court held:
"The present judgments as against defendant Caswell should not of course be disturbed.”
American Jurisprudence states the rule to be:
"The reversal on appeal as to one codefendant against whom a judgment was rendered does not affect a judgment or verdict rendered in favor of the other codefendant as to whom no appeal was taken.” 5 Am Jur 2d, Appeal & Error, § 951, p 379.
It appears that the reference to no appeal being taken refers to the adverse party which in this case would be the plaintiff. For a case to the contrary see Galligan v City of Waterbury, 99 Conn 256; 122 A 119 (1923). There the plaintiff sued a city and a fuel seller for injuries resulting from a defect caused by a coal hole in a sidewalk. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff and against the municipality only, the coal seller obtaining a no cause of action. On appeal by the city a new trial was granted as to both defendants, not as to the city alone. This leads me to the case relied upon in the majority opinion, Whinnen v 231 Corporation, 49 Mich App 371, 379; 212 NW2d 297 (1973). I am at a loss to explain Justice O’Hara’s reference in that case to a "specific appeal” in his closing paragraph. The opinion states:
*246"Absent a cross-appeal by plaintiff as to the judgment of no cause as to the other two named defendants, or a specific appeal by this appellant of the no cause judgments as to its co-defendants in the trial court * * *
I would, presume for purposes of this appeal that General Motors’ attorneys have done all in their power to specifically appeal the no cause judgment as to its codefendant. I would further say that it is all for naught if my view of the law as briefly reviewed above is correct. There is no hint of subterfuge here, no claim of hidden settlement, collusion, or unworthy connection between Cohen and Kujawski. If there were and it were specifically addressed, I would not hesitate to find authority in GCR 1963, 820.1(7) for reversal and remand as to Cohen also on the theory that the court had been misled or fraud tainted the proceedings requiring extraordinary relief.
Having addressed these questions on my own the parties are in an advantageous position to petition for rehearing if I have blundered because we will be all too eager to set these matters straight before publication. If I could prevail upon one of my colleagues to,, sign this concurrence the publication of this opinion would then stand for the proposition that Justice O’Hara’s dictum about specific appeals as to the codefendants is just that, dictum, and the black letter law in this state is that the reversal on appeal obtained by one codefendant against whom a judgment was rendered does not affect a judgment rendered in favor of another codefendant as to whom no appeal was taken by the plaintiff and no cross-claim had been brought below.