66 So. 730 | Miss. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for damag’es resulting from the death of Harry Daniell, in which a judgment was rendered in the court below for appellees, who were, plaintiffs therein. Appellees attempted only to prove a prima facie case of liability under section 1985 of the Code, and upon the court’s overruling the motion to exclude this evidence from the jury, the defendants introduced a number of witnesses, from whose testimony it appears that on-August 22, 1911, at about two-thirty a. m., appellant’s passenger train No. 1, from Birmingham to Meridian, arrived at Cuba, a station in Alabama about two miles from the Mississippi-Alahama state line, and while there Harry Daniell, for whose death this action is brought, and John Shannon, were discovered upon the train “stealing a ride.” They were ejected therefrom without violence on the part of the railway employees or complaint' on the part of Daniell and Shannon, and the train proceeded upon its journey. A little over two hours thereafter, that is, about four-thirty a. m., of the same day, appellant’s freight train No. 214, also from Birmingham to Meridian, arrived at Cuba, and there passed appellant’s freight train No. 72 from Meridian to Birmingham, this train No. 72 being the only one of appel
When he was discovered on the track Daniell told appellant’s conductor in charge of train No. 214, and afterwards Dr. Reynolds, who treated him for his injuries, that he and Shannon walked to the place where the accident occurred, sat down upon the track, and went to sleep, “and that he didn’t know anything until he waked up and found he had been struck by a train.” Appellant’s employees in charge of train No. 72 testified that the train was equipped with all the necessary appliances and that they were then in good order; that each one of them was attending to his duties at the time the train crossed The state line, and each of them stated that he did not see Daniell and Shannon on the track, and did not know that they had been struck by the train until notified thereof after they had been discovered by the crew of train No. 214. The engine was equipped with an ordinary oil-burning headlight, which at the time was lighted, and by means of which an object could be seen on the track on the occasion in question for a distance of not exceeding one hundred and fifty feet. The train was
In the testimony of the engineer appears the following questions and answers.:
“Q. What were you doing at the time you passed that point between the stations of Kewanee and Cuba and along about the Mississippi-Alabama state line, particularly on the Mississippi side of it? A. I was attending to my duties on the engine. Q. Where do those duties place you? A. Place me on the engineer’s side, on the right-hand side of the engine. Q. On the seat provided for the engineer? A. Yes, sir. Q. Well, what were you doing? A. I was running the engine. Q. Well, what were you doing, if anything, with reference to keeping a lookout? A. I was keeping a lookout; that is my duty ■at all times when I have got the engine, in motion. Q. Were you in fact doing that? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was your headlight burning or not when you passed along there between those stations of Kewanee and Cuba? A. Yes, sir; it was burning. Q. Was it burning or not when you reached the station of Cuba? A. Yes, sir; the headlight was burning at Cuba. Q. State whether or not you met on the railroad track at any point between the stations of Kewanee and Cuba or about the Mississippi state line any persons on the track, either walking or sitting, or in any way on the track or close enough to your train to be in danger of being struck by it. A. I did not. Q. State whether or not you saw the deceased, Harry Daniell, at that place. A. I did not. Q. State whether or not you had any knowledge or warning or notice of any kind, at or about that place, that Harry Daniell or any other person was on the railroad track in a position of danger to be struck by your train. A. No, sir; did not. Q. State whether or not you have any personal knowledge at all of Harry Daniell, or any other person,*367 being struck or injured by your train No. 72 at that place or at any point between Kewanee and Cuba. A. No, sir.
“Q. You could see an object that was on the track? A. If it was put on the track, I could; yes, sir. Q-. I said on the track. A. Well, in the track, maybe down on the side; I say up in the middle of the track. Q. Is your line of vision confined to any pa.rticular part of the track? A. Well, the principal light is in the middle of the track. Q. I- didn’t ask you that, I asked you, in looking ahead, do you restrict your observation to the center of the track or do you take in the whole track? A. The whole track. Q. And any object then on the track as large as a man you'couldn’t see further than one hundred and fifty feet? A. No, sir. Q. It don’t make any difference what the object is, a man, or cow or horse, or anything, if you saw it on the track you would apply your brakes, wouldn’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And sound the alarm? A. Yes, sir. Q. You didn’t sound any alarm or apply any brakes, did you? A. No, sir. Q. And you didn’t see anything on the track? A. No, sir.”
A peremptory instruction was' requested by appellant and its refusal is assigned for error. As Daniell was a trespasser upon appellant’s railroad track, its employees owed him no duty to keep a lookout, and in fact owed him no duty at all unless and until he whs seen by them in a position of peril. Railroad Co. v. Harrison, 61 So. 655. In order for appellees to recover, .appellant’s engineer must have seen Daniell on the track in time to have prevented the accident by the exercise of reasonable care on his part. The only evidence, if any, from, which it can be said that the engineer did see Daniell is that he could have seen him one hundred and fifty feet ahead of his engine, and that since he says he was keeping a lookout at the time, he therefore must have and in fact did see him one hundred and fifty feet ahead of his engine. It is true that it was impossible for the engineer to have
Complaint is made of appellees’ first and second instructions, which instructions the reporter will set out in full.
One of the objections to these instructions, as we understand the brief of counsel for appellant, is that by them the rules governing the burden of proof were violated and a greater burden placed upon appellant than it was called upon by section 1985 of the Code to bear; that they entirely change “the rule of evidence which prevails in other civil cases, and substitute therefor the rule of the criminal law which, requires a prosecuting to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.” The language in these instructions, which it is claimed put upon: thé defendant a greater burden than it was called upon to bear; is that wherein.the court charged the jury in the first instruction that it devolved upon the appellant “to exculpate itself by establishing to the satisfaction of the jury such circumstances or .excuses as will relieve it from liability ; and the- jury are further instructed that the statutory presumption. cannot be overthrown by conjecture,
In Railroad Co. v. Thornhill, 63 So. 674, practically all of the prior decisions of this court dealing with the presumption of negligence arising from proof of injury by the running of the locomotives or cars of a railroad company were reviewed, and, among other things, it was pointed out that:
“When the facts and circumstances under which the injury was inflicted have been ascertained, the presumption of negligence created by the statute disappears, and the defendant’s negligence vel non must then be determined alone from such facts and circumstances,” but that “even though the facts and circumstances are in evidence, and although there may be no conflict therein as to what these facts and circumstances are, unless they justify the court in directing a verdict, it- is proper to charge the jury, on request of the plaintiff, that proof of injury by the running of the cars is prima facie evidence of negligence, and on request of defendant that, since the facts and circumstances under which the injury was inflicted are known, they will determine whether or not the defendant was negligent solely therefrom without resorting to any presumption of negligence.” '
As was further pointed out in that case, the only effect of section 1985 of the Code is to relieve the plaintiff from proving the facts and circumstances of ah injury and to shift the burden of so doing to the defendant, but when this burden has been met and the evidence discloses “the doing or omission of every act from the 'doing or omission of which an inference of negligence vel non could be drawn,” the verdict of the jury must then be arrived at in the same manner as it would have been
It is not necessary, under this statute,.any more than it was before its enactment, that the proven facts and circumstances should exonerate the defendant — that is, that it should appear therefrom that he had acted with due care on the occasion in question — before he can be relieved from liability. On the contrary, under the statute, as before its enactment, when the facts and circumstances have been ascertained, the jury must be able to say therefrom that the defendant was guilty of negligence; otherwise, he cannot be held liable.
In order that the statutory presumption may be overcome, the facts and circumstances must not be left to conjecture; the evidence must be of such character that from it the jury can determine what these.facts and circumstances are, but when they have been determined, the statute has served its purpose and can no longer be invoked.
The language hereinbefore quoted from the first of these instructions is taken almost literally from the opinion of this court in the case of Railroad Co. v. Brooks, 85 Miss. 269, 38 So. 40, and was approved in Railroad Co. v. Landrum, 89 Miss. 399, 42 So. 675; Easley v. R. R. Co., 96 Miss. 396, 50 So. 491; R. R. Co. v. Hunnicutt, 98 Miss. 272, 53 So. 617; Fuller v. R. R. Co., 100 Miss. 705, 56 So. 783; Railroad Co. v. Cole, 101 Miss. 173, 57 So. 556; and Railroad Co. v. Thornhill, 63 So. 674. In the Brooks, Landrum, Hunnicutt, Fuller, and Cole cases, the court had under consideration rulings of the lower courts on requests by the defendant railroad companies for instructions peremptorily charging the juries to find verdicts in their favor, and in using the language here in question, was setting forth what the evidence must disclose before it can be said, as matter of law, that the pre
The height to which evidence must' rise in the scale of proof in order to entitle a party litigant to a peremptory instruction is, of course, very much greater than that to which it must rise in order to entitle such a party to the verdict of a jury. In Swan v. Liverpool, etc., Ins. Co., 52 Miss. 707, this court quoted with approval the following statement made in Perry v. Clarke, 5 How. 500, with reference to the circumstances under which a peremptory instruction should be given:
“ ‘The evident tendency of all the cases is against the exercise of such a power as that claimed in the present instance, unless in cases where there can be no room for doubt, and this is the extent to which they go.’ To this we yield our unqualified assent. It is a delicate power, and one which should be used with the greatest possible caution. If there be any room for doubt, such a charge ought not to be given.”
Again, in Whitney v. Cook, 53 Miss. 559, it was said:
‘ ‘ Snch an instruction is proper only where, all the facts in evidence being taken as absolutely true, every just inference from them failed to maintain the issue.”
• The rule invoked by the instructions here under consideration is one which should always be acted upon by the court in determining whether a peremptory instruction should be granted, but was not intended to be given in charge to the jury as a guide to be' followed by it in arriving at its verdict.
In the Easley case, supra, no question of the granting or refusing of an instruction predicated upon the presumption of negligence created by the statute was involved. The court simply referred to the language used in the Brooks case in order to show that one of the instructions- granted the defendant railroad company, and
In the Thornhill case, supra, which was decided after the case' at bar was tried in the court below, although an instruction in practically the same language as one of those here under consideration was granted to the plaintiff, the judgment of the court below was affirmed. It will be observed, however, from the statement of the case that the court was not there considering whether the instruction imposed a greater burden of proof upon the appellant than it was called upon by the statute to bear, but was simply responding to the contention that all of the facts and circumstances under which the injury was inflicted were in evidence, and therefore the jury should not have been charged at all with reference to the presumption of negligence created by the statute. -That case may be misleading in as far as the precise question here involved is concerned, but it is in fact not in conflict with the rule here applied, for the reason that this rule was not there under consideration by the court. All that was said in that case is reaffirmed, and is not intended to be in any wise departed from by anything here said.
It follows from the foregoing views that the court erred in granting the two instructions, here under consideration.
Complaint is also made by counsel for appellant.pf one of appellees’ instructions, by which the jury were charged in accordance with our' comparative negligence statute. The ground of this objection is that in going to sleep upon the track Daniell “was guilty of an act so rash as almost to warrant the inference of willful suicide,” and therefore the statute has no application. There is no. merit in thi^ contention. Conceding for the sake of the argument that counsel are correct in saying that the statute has no application in a case wh.e're it appears that the injury'was intentionally brought about by the party injured,'it was for the jury to'say whether such was the
Appellees’ sixth instruction charged the jury that:
“It is not contributory negligence per ,se to be on a railroad track at a place where a .person has no right to be. A person’s being there is a condition but for which injury could not be done him by the locomotive or cars, hut his being there is not what constitutes contributory negligence. ’ ’
This instruction should not have been given. The language in which it is couched is a literal, though never-. theless a mutilated, quotation from the opinion of this court in Railroad Co. v. McGowan, 62 Miss. 696, 52 Am. Rep. 205; for it omits the sentence immediately following the one quoted, which is essential to be taken into consideration in understanding what the court there held. What, the court in fact said was this.:
“It is not contributory negligence per se to be .on a railroad track at a place where the person has no right to be. A person’s being there is a condition but for which injury could not be done him by the locomotive or cars, but his being there is not what constitutes 'contributory negligence. Being there at such a time and under such circumstances as may be shown, or failing to use his senses as becomes him, and to act under the circumstances with ordinary care and caution to avoid harm, may constitute contributory negligence, which will prevent recovery. ’ ’
The instruction should not have been given, however, even had it properly set forth what the court in the McGowan case said, for the reason that while being on a railroad track is not per se contributory negligence, going to sleep on such a track under the circumstances here
The court refused to instruct the jury for appellant:
“That the defendant’s engineer was not bound to keep a lookout for persons walking along the track, or sitting upon the. railroad track in the nighttime, at a place between stations, for purposes of their own convenience, nor is the defendant railroad company under any obligations to such persons to equip its locomotives with head-flights, or to see that the headlights, are burning, but its only duty and obligation to such person is to not wantonly or willfully injure him.”
This instruction should have been granted. The only duty which appellant owed to Daniell was to abstain from inflicting upon him a willful and wanton injury. It was under no obligations to him to keep a lookout, to equip its locomotives with headlights, or, if so equipped, to keep them burning. Railroad Co. v. Harrison, 61 So. 655. The error in refusing this instruction was partially, though not wholly, cured, by other instructions granted at the request of appellant which partially announced, in different, and less clear and concise language, the rule here sought to be invoked.
Several other instructions requested by, appellant charging the jury in effect as it was sought to be charged by the instruction hereinbefore set out, were modified by the court so as to hold appellant liable in event its employees could have discovered the presence of Daniell
Dr. Reynolds, a witness introduced by appellant, testified to the statement, made to him by Daniell before his death, that he was sitting on the railroad track when he was struck by the train. In.adidtion to this, appellant sought to prove by this witness that a part of Daniell’s statement to him was that “it,” referring to his being struck by the train, “was his own fault.” This evidence, on objection by counsel for appellee, was excluded. It may be, as contended by counsel for appellee, that the objection to this ruling of the court was not made in the court below in such manner as to reserve it for this court, as to which we will express no opinion; but in order that the matter may not be in doubt when the case is again tried, we will say that the evidence was competent and should have been admitted for such consideration as the jury chose to give it. 2 Wigmore on Ev. 1053; Railway Co. v. McLellan, 80 Miss. 700, 32 So. 283.
After the evidence had disclosed that Daniell had been struck by a running train, appellees, over the objection of appellant, were permitted to show, on the cross-examination of appellant’s witnesses,- the mutilated condition in which the body of Shannon was found, and the fact that his blood and brains were smeared on and scattered along the track. It is almost impossible to prove that Daniell was struck by this train without the evidence at the same time disclosing that Shannon was also struck by it. The evidence with reference to the condition of Shannon’s body, and the fact that his blood and brains appeared on the track, however, should not have been admitted. Conceding that such testimony might have been of some value in determining whether or not Shannon and Daniell were struck by a train, that fact was not in doubt, and the evidence objected to shed no light whatever upon the question at issue — this is, the negligence vel non of
Thfe court also, over the objection of appellant, admitted evidence that when Daniell was put on the train and carried to Meridian, the body of Shannon was left by appellant’s employees lying on the track where it had been found. This evidence should not have been admitted. Its harmful effect, however, was probably cured by other evidence introduced on behalf of appellant, showing why the body was left as it was, and what steps were taken to care for it.
Reversed and remanded.