Court Opinion

ID: 2118324
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 08:22:07.46405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:58:44.683618
License: Public Domain

365 Mich. 481 (1962)
113 N.W.2d 769
McGEVER
v.
SCHAAR.
Docket No. 67, Calendar No. 49,091.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided March 15, 1962.
*482 Joseph Marvaso, for plaintiff.
Robbins, Behm & McDonald (Oswald M. Robbins, of counsel), for defendant.
PER CURIAM:
This is an appeal from a jury's verdict for damages resulting from a collision between 2 automobiles. The trial judge denied defendant's motion for new trial based upon her claim that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and, by this appeal, the same claim is made to us.
The law applicable is too familiar for elaboration. It is succinctly stated in McConnell v. Elliott, 242 Mich 145, 147:
"We, of course, do not on the law side of the court try cases de novo. The fact that we would reach a different conclusion than did the jury is not controlling. We should set aside a verdict, and only set one aside, when it is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence."
See, also, Schneider v. Pomerville, 348 Mich 49, pp 53-55.
We are not persuaded that error occurred. There was ample evidence, although contradicted by defendant's witnesses, to support the jury's verdict for plaintiff. Plaintiff and her passenger testified the collision occurred on their side of the road, the principal factual issue being on whose side of the road the collision occurred. A police officer who arrived at the scene after the collision described in *483 his testimony physical facts which tended to corroborate plaintiff's and her passenger's version. More than that we do not require of a jury verdict challenged, as is this one, for being against the weight of the evidence.
Defendant also claims the trial judge erred in refusing a request to charge the jury, which request defendant claims set forth her version of the case. The request related to the defense of contributory negligence. It was apparently defendant's theory that plaintiff should have stopped her southbound car along the western curb until defendant's northbound car had passed. The requested charge assumed that defendant had precedence over the disputed passage and also assumed there was inadequate room for both cars in that passage. On this record, the trial court would have erred had he given the requested charge. In other portions of his charge to the jury he instructed adequately on defendant's theory of the case.
Affirmed. Costs to plaintiff.
DETHMERS, C.J., and CARR, KELLY, BLACK, KAVANAGH, SOURIS, and OTIS M. SMITH, JJ., concurred.
ADAMS, J., took no part in the decision of this case.