102 So. 66 | Miss. | 1924
The appellee sued the appellant for a personal injury. The declaration contained three counts: First, the failure to ring the bell and blow the whistle, etc., on approaching public crossings in the town of Philadelphia; second, for the operation of said train at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour within the corporate limits of the town of Philadelphia; third, that on said occasion said train was being driven at a rapid rate of speed and in a northerly direction and in the direction of plaintiff’s team and defendant’s warehouse, where plaintiff was unloading feed from defendant’s car; that when said train was more than one hundred yards from a point on said track opposite from where said wagon was standing said train came in plain view of plaintiff’s team, and the engineer or fireman upon said train saw the plaintiff and saw that the team of the plaintiff was frightened, and that there was imminent danger of said team running away and seriously injuring the plaintiff unless said train was inst-antly stopped-; that, notwithstanding the fact that the team,was in plain view of the said engineer and fireman, after the train came to a point where the said engineer and fireman saw the said team and the plaintiff, the said engineer and fire
The facts developed by the plaintiff, that is to say, the plaintiff and his witnesses testified that a car loaded with hay was situated upon the team track of the appellant’s road in the town of Philadelphia about seventy-two yards north of the depot in said town; that there were several public crossings below the depot and one crossing between the car and the depot, and that the plaintiff had gone to the car on the team track with his wagon and team, which were animals of ordinary gentleness, and was unloading feedstuff from the car into the wagon in pursuance of the practice and custom of the railroad company to so deliver its freight to its customers; «that, while so engaged in unloading, the train approached the depot from the south without giving the statutory signals of sounding the whistle and ringing the bell three hundred yards from said crossing and keeping them ringing until such crossing was passed. Plaintiff also showed that the train approached at a rate of speed estimated by most of plaintiff’s witnesses to be from twelve to fifteen miles an hour, and by some of the witnesses as high as twenty miles per hour, and that no
The testimony for the defendant was that it did give the signals by sounding the whistle and ringing the bell on approaching the station, and at each of said crossings, and that the train was not moving in excess of the statutory speed limit, and that it stopped when it discovered plaintiff’s peril.
The defendant requested and was granted a peremptory instruction as to the sounding of crossing signals. It requested and was refused a peremptory instruction as to the second count based upon the train being operated at a speed in excess of six miles per hour, and the case was submitted on this ground, and on the third count, to the jury under instructions. There was a verdict for the plaintiff for $8,500.
Appellant insists that the refusal of the peremptory instruction as to the second count of the declaration was error. That is, that no liability could be predicated upon the train being operated in excess of six miles per hour for the reason that there was no physical contact with the train which produced or resulted in the injury. It
“If the jury believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff’s mare was killed by or because of the running of a locomotive of defendant’s within the corporate limits of the city of Water Valley, when said locomotive was running at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour, then the defendant is liable for all injury and damage occasioned thereby, unless the accident was unavoidable with the exercise of reasonable skill and care on the part of defendant’s servants.”
In passing upon this question in that case the court said:
“The instructions asked by the plaintiff and given in the court.below are applicable only in cases in which the injury has been inflicted ‘by the ‘running’ of the trains of a railroad. There is no allegation in the declaration that the injury was caused by the running of the train within the meaning of the statutes on this subject, nor was there any proof from which said fact could have been found by the jury.”
Four of the judges are of the opinion that that case, I. C. R. Co. v. Weathersby, 63 Miss. 581, supra, is decisive of the controversy here, and that there was no liability on the defendant under the second count of the declaration. Two of the judges are of the opinion that a peremptory was properly refused, and that the law of the case is in accordance with the decisions of Y. & M. V. R. Co. v. Lambuth, 74 Miss. 758, 21 So. 801; L. & N. R. Co. v. Crominarity, 86 Miss. 464, 38 So. 633; Skipwith v. M. & O. R. Co., 95 Miss. 50, 48 So. 964. Four of the judges are of opinion that the case should have been submitted to the jury under proper instructions under the third count of the declaration. Two of the judges are of the opinion that the plaintiff should have had a peremptory instruction on all of the counts.
Reversed .and remanded.