Court Opinion

ID: 9720051
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 08:14:27.473217+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:24:12.664144
License: Public Domain

Black, J.
(dissenting). As in Martiniano v. Booth, 359 Mich 680, we divide again respecting the meaningful purpose of the last sentence of section 9 of Court Rule No 37 (1945). By oversight or tactical design, we know not which, this unsuccessful plaintiff in negligence omitted timely request that the trial judge charge the jury with respect to 1 of the points of law made by his declaration and disputed proof. Appealing, he would have us hold that the judge erred reversibly by omission of charge to such point.
I cannot agree with any like appellant who, for aught we know, has calculated and placed his bet for a winning verdict on a general charge, admittedly proper, rather than the same charge hopped up by a specific addition he could but did not ask for. The error, if any, was that of his counsel—not of the trial judge. The judge’s charge otherwise, viewed as a whole, presented generally and fairly “the substantial issues in the cause” (quotation from Barton v. Gray, 57 Mich 622, 631, 632; quoted more fully in Martiniano, pp 688, 689) and that is all counsel may ask in the absence of a request or requests framed in terms of greater detail. To make it plain, a trial judge is not obliged to guess what counsel may want included with general and otherwise proper jury instructions when counsel fail to advise him duly of their wishes.
There is one field of law, the adjective or procedural, in which appellate courts can and should write with pinpointed precision and ever-desirable certainty. In the context of today’s issue we have *101repeatedly done so, by dovetailing decisions and a 32-year-old court rule, and it is necessary only to record again that the relevant portion of section 9 of 1931 Court Rule No 37 means just what it says. The section (as it appears by the revision of 1945):
. “The court shall instruct the jury as to the law applicable to the case whenever a verdict is to be rendered, and in his charge may make such comment on the evidence, the testimony. and the character of the witnesses as in his opinion the interests of justice may require. The failure of the court to instruct on any point of law shall not be ground for setting aside the verdict of the jury unless such instruction is requested.”
Veterans of the bar will recall, when the so-called Sunderland rules of 1931 were publicly debated and considered prior to their adoption, that the emphasized final sentence of quoted section 9 was fully and advisedly understood as reflecting, in form of rule, the previously consistent rulings of this Court, that is to say, one who takes his chances with such requested instructions as he may choose to proffer cannot “lie in wait” and then, if the jury decide against him, assert as judicial error his own omission. One need but recall the bellwether of these cases (Kinney v. Folkerts, 84 Mich 616), quoted in Hartwig v. Kell, 199 Mich 603, 611, 612 as follows:
. “If more full or specific instructions upon any particular point was desired, it was the duty of the defendant to frame and present a special request covering the point. ‘Omitting or neglecting to do so, he will be deemed satisfied with the sufficiency of the instructions as given, and an exception based upon the want of- sufficiency cannot be assigned as error.’ Walters v. Detroit United Railway, 183 Mich 549 (Ann Cas 1916B, 382); Barton v. Gray, 57 Mich 622; Barnett v. Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Co., 115 Mich 247; Spray v. Ayotte, 161 Mich 593; Lewis *102v. Detroit Vitrified Brick Co., 164 Mich 489. ‘Parties cannot remain silent, and thereby lie in wait to ground error, after the trial is over, upon a neglect of the court to instruct the jury as to something which was not called to its attention on the trial, especially in civil cases.’ Kinney v. Folkerts, 84 Mich 616, 625; Hewitt v. East Jordan Lumber Co., 136 Mich 110.”
The rule of Kinney v. Folkerts was consistently followed up to the time of its echo by explicit court rule. See Grove v. Youell, 110 Mich 285, 291 (33 LRA 297); Hewitt v. East Jordan Lumber Co., 136 Mich 110, 112; Stuart v. Holt, 166 Mich 549; Hartwig v. Kell, supra; Tishhouse v. Schoenberg, 234 Mich 271, 272. That rule, fortified now by said section 9, controls and dictates ruling that omission of counsel to request and omission of Judge Gilmore to instruct, upon plaintiff’s claim that defendant was negligent per se, under CLS 1956, § 257.612 (Stat Ann 1960 Rev § 9.2312), does not constitute reversible error. As said in Record Publishing Co. v. Merwin, 115 Mich 10, 11:
“The other errors assigned upon the charge are directed to the failure to give certain instructions which it did not occur to counsel to suggest until after verdict. It is not too much to ask in civil cases that counsel shall ask for such instructions as shall protect their clients.”
When it is the'will of this Court that an errant appellant shall—in the total absence of valid specification of error—receive our benign grant of new trial, let us say what we mean and record what we do, that is to say, let us declare and then exercise our inherently independent power to “order a new trial whenever it [this Court] deems that the ends of justice so require.” See, with respect to such power and its exercise in favor of another appellant *103whose potential assignment of error had been waived, St. John v. Nichols, 331 Mich 148, 158 (followed in Weller v. Mancha, 353 Mich 189, 195, and Bahr v. Miller Brothers Creamery, 365 Mich 415, 428). And let us take pertinent note that our trial judges, especially those of the third circuit, have enough assembly-line trouble already without compelling them to pick the strategic brains of counsel for possible omission of instruction “on any point of law.”
Here there is no occasion for any such extraordinary judicial gratuity. The appellant plaintiff’s case was dangerously close (as the trial judge noted on several occasions) to the frontier of an instructed verdict, and it, was only on account of our enduring rule that “all reasonable men” must agree (see collection of cases in Normand v. Thomas Theatre Corp., 349 Mich 50, 56, 57) that he received due trial to a jury. The trial judge’s charge, considered as a whole, presented fairly and generally the law applicable to the case and no criticism thereof arose until the cards of the verdict turned up in favor of the defendant. ¥e should adhere, then, to the standard rule that law cases are rightfully affirmed when the record discloses an absence of reversible error.
Having considered appellant’s remaining specifications of error, and discovering nothing of reversible nature, I vote to affirm with costs to defendant.
Dethmers and Kelly, JJ., concurred with Black, J.
Adams, J., took no part in the decision of this case.