From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Genesee Merchants Bank v. Bourrie

Supreme Court of Michigan
May 10, 1965
375 Mich. 383 (Mich. 1965)

Summary

In Bourrie, the plaintiff's decedent was allegedly intoxicated when he was served alcoholic beverages by the defendant bar owners.

Summary of this case from Herron v. Biggies Wolf Den, Inc.

Opinion

Calendar No. 77, Docket No. 50,256.

Decided May 10, 1965.

Appeal from Genesee; McGregor (Louis D.), J. Submitted May 8, 1964. (Calendar No. 77, Docket No. 50,256.) Decided May 10, 1965.

Declaration by the Genesee Merchants Bank Trust Company, special administrator of the estate of Duane B. Owings, deceased, against Alta E. Bourrie, doing business as Yellow Jacket Bar, Michigan Surety Company, Homer E. Bush, doing business as 1220 Bar, Ohio Casualty Insurance Company, and Arthur P. Makuch, doing business as Red Rooster, under the civil damage provision of the liquor control act for damages sustained in an automobile accident while decedent was intoxicated. Action dismissed. Plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.

Beagle, Benton Hicks ( C. Robert Beltz, of counsel) for plaintiff.

Patterson Patterson and Barrett ( Gerald G. White, of counsel) for defendant Bourrie.



Plaintiff's declaration of February 14, 1962, alleged defendant liquor licensees' liability under the Michigan dram shop act, so-called, for the death of plaintiff's decedent. Plaintiff appeals as of right from grant of defendants' motions to dismiss filed after defendants had, by answer, denied liability.

CL 1948, § 436.22, as amended by PA 1958, No 152 (Stat Ann 1959 Cum Supp § 18.993).

On January 9, 1960, decedent allegedly was intoxicated when served alcoholic beverages by defendant bar owners. He was killed that evening when his car overturned as he was driving, admittedly negligently (speeding), in Genesee county. The aggravated intoxication was allegedly a proximate cause of the death.

The action was started on January 9, 1962, by praecipe and summons issued in the name of plaintiff as special administrator of the estate of decedent. The declaration, filed on February 14, 1962, was in plaintiff's name as special administrator of the estate of decedent and as guardian of the estates of decedent's two minor children.

Two of the defendant bar owners separately moved to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action because decedent was not innocent of wrongdoing. The third joined verbally in these motions to dismiss. Defendants also filed motions to strike, one aimed at plaintiff's standing as guardian on grounds that praecipe and summons did not assert a claim by plaintiff in that capacity, and one aimed at the naming of the minor children on the multiple grounds of misjoinder of separate causes of action and invalidity because of failure to amend the summons. The first of this series of motions was filed April 3, 1962.

On April 5, 1962, plaintiff filed motion to amend the summons and praecipe to conform to the declaration.

All motions were argued April 9, 1962, and the matter was taken under advisement. The court did not issue and sign the order granting defendants' motions to dismiss until December 27, 1962, and it was not filed until January 10, 1963. On January 18, 1963, plaintiff filed claim of appeal.

On February 21, 1963, plaintiff filed a motion for delayed rehearing based on the fact that the suit was alive during the advent of the new General Court Rules, which dictated a different result.

On June 17, 1963, the trial court filed its opinion denying the motion for a rehearing, the denial being predicated on the court's lack of jurisdiction to entertain such motion during the pendency of an appeal.

On stipulation of the parties, the trial court has since ordered this appeal dismissed as to two of the three defendant bar owners. Hence, the only appellees remaining are Alta E. Bourrie, doing business as Yellow Jacket Bar, and her statutory surety, joinable because jointly and severally liable.

The first issue to be determined is the applicability to this case of the General Court Rules of 1963. We ruled in Twomley v. Arnold, 372 Mich. 230, that a case dismissed by order signed in December, 1962, was thereby disposed of under the former practice despite the delay in entry of the order until January 1963. GCR 1963, 14, makes the new rules effective January 1, 1963, and applicable to all proceedings subsequent to that date in actions brought before that date, unless it would not be feasible or would work injustice. Since a final order had been signed in this case before the effective date of GCR 1963, the latter rules do not govern any proceedings in this case.

Plaintiff urges that its motion for rehearing was erroneously denied, and cites in support of its position Janes v. Hope Evangelical United Brethren Church, 359 Mich. 561. That case quoted Miles v. Harkins, 335 Mich. 453, 455:

"`We have many times held that Court Rule No 56, § 1, does not nullify Court Rule No 48, relative to the trial court's discretion to grant a rehearing.'" (p 564)

Both of those cases were equity cases and involved motions under old Court Rule No 48 (1945), which would not apply to this motion, made under the former practice in a law case. Therefore, the trial court did not err in ruling that old Court Rule No 56, § 1 (1945), applied to vest exclusive jurisdiction in this Court.

In answer to plaintiff's claim that the trial court erred in refusing to permit the substitution as a real party in interest of the widow of plaintiff's decedent, defendants indicate that the substitution of the widow was not moved for until after the order of dismissal, on the motion for rehearing. Since the record reveals no earlier request, any right to such substitution has been waived.

Plaintiff's declaration and motion to amend each indicates that the action is being brought under the death by wrongful act statute, and neither mentions nor cites the dram shop act.

CL 1948, §§ 691.581, 691.582 (Stat Ann 1959 Cum Supp §§ 27.711, 27.712).

Supra, footnote 1.

Plaintiff claims that the action could properly be brought only under the wrongful death act by reason of the provision added by the 1939 amendment as the last sentence of the act:

PA 1939, No 297.

"All actions for such death, or injuries resulting in death, shall hereafter be brought only under this act." (Emphasis supplied.)

Plaintiff was not precluded by the above provision from instituting an action under the dram shop act which provides a distinct statutory right of action directly in favor of "every wife, husband, child, parent, guardian or other persons who shall be injured in person or property, means of support or otherwise, by an intoxicated person by reason of the unlawful selling, giving or furnishing to any such persons any intoxicating liquor." Under the dram shop act the personal representative of the decedent is not a proper party plaintiff.

The dram shop act does not depend at all upon any condition such as specified in section 1 of the death act, that the wrongful act is "such as would (if death had not ensued) have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages." Contributory negligence of the decedent, Duane B. Owings, would not be a valid defense to any action which might have been timely instituted under the dram shop act; whereas contributory negligence of the decedent would have been a valid defense had suit been timely instituted under the death act.

The death act creates a right of action in wrongful death which applies generally in favor of the personal representative as a trustee for eligible beneficiaries suffering "pecuniary injury" as the result of death.

Plaintiff's motions to amend its summons and to file an amended declaration were, in effect, attempts to introduce a new cause of action. The only proper posture for this case would have involved the injured parties (for instance, the widow and the guardian of the children of deceased) suing defendants under the dram shop act. A change to that from the actual plaintiff-chosen posture of administrator of the estate of decedent as plaintiff under the wrongful death act amounts to the introduction of a new cause of action.

See Simonelli v. Cassidy, 343 Mich. 657, and Walker v. Lansing Suburban Traction Co., 144 Mich. 685.

Such was barred by the two-year limitation on the cause of action, contained as it is within the remedy-creating statute itself.

See Holland v. Eaton, 373 Mich. 34.

Affirmed. Costs to appellee Bourrie only, defendant Michigan Surety Company not having filed a brief.

BLACK, SOURIS, and ADAMS, JJ., concurred with T.M. KAVANAGH, C.J.


I concur with the result reached by the eminent Chief Justice but I confine my concurrence to the applicability of the rule of Simonelli v. Cassidy, 343 Mich. 657, 661, which I believe here controls the dispositive question. I quote therefrom:

"`In my opinion the amendment constitutes a new cause of action. It allows Eleuterio Simonelli as an individual representing one cause of action to get out of court and Mr. Simonelli as administrator representing an entirely different cause of action to get into court. This is not permissible. (See Walker v. Lansing Suburban Traction Company, 144 Mich. 685; and Cugell v. Sani-Wash Laundry Company, 280 Mich. 286.)'"

The alternative is to overrule Simonelli, which apparently the Court is not presently disposed to do.

DETHMERS and KELLY, JJ., concurred with O'HARA, J.

SMITH, J., did not sit.


Summaries of

Genesee Merchants Bank v. Bourrie

Supreme Court of Michigan
May 10, 1965
375 Mich. 383 (Mich. 1965)

In Bourrie, the plaintiff's decedent was allegedly intoxicated when he was served alcoholic beverages by the defendant bar owners.

Summary of this case from Herron v. Biggies Wolf Den, Inc.

In Genesee Merchants Bank Trust Company, the Court stated at p 389 that, "Under the dramshop act the personal representative of the decedent is not a proper party plaintiff."

Summary of this case from Plowman v. Satkowiak
Case details for

Genesee Merchants Bank v. Bourrie

Case Details

Full title:GENESEE MERCHANTS BANK TRUST COMPANY v. BOURRIE

Court:Supreme Court of Michigan

Date published: May 10, 1965

Citations

375 Mich. 383 (Mich. 1965)
134 N.W.2d 713

Citing Cases

Lambert v. Calhoun

It is well-settled that a specific legislative time limitation on bringing suit contained in a statute…

Brannstrom v. Tippman

Rather, an action for loss of companionship or support under the dramshop act must be brought by the injured…