11 So. 2d 442 | Miss. | 1943
The appellants are the father, mother, brothers and sisters of David Jefferson, deceased, and they bring this *734 suit against the Yazoo Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, and Forest Waldrop who was on the occasion complained of acting as a patrolman and special agent of the railroad company and charged with the duty of guarding and protecting its property on the railroad's premises, and the plaintiffs seek by their suit to recover damages for the fatal shooting of the said David Jefferson by the said Forest Waldrop at a time when the latter was engaged about his appointed duties of apprehending persons suspected of stealing coal at the coal chute on the railroad switch yards within the corporate limits of Cleveland, Mississippi, on the night of January 9, 1942. At the conclusion of the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, the trial court granted a peremptory instruction in favor of both defendants and from the judgment entered thereon, dismissing the suit, this appeal is prosecuted.
Appellee Waldrop was introduced by the plaintiffs as an adverse witness and testified that he was a patrolman of the railroad company acting as a special agent under a Mr. Paul, and that it was his duty to "guard and protect the railroad property, on their property," and that he went armed for that purpose; that under the duties of such employment he frequently made arrests on the company's property and turned the accused law-violators over to the local officers; that on the occasion complained of he brought with him two other railroad patrolmen from Clarksdale, Cox and Dennis, and en route picked up the deputy sheriff, Fred Conner, at the Town of Merigold; that they all then proceeded in his automobile to a wooded grove near the railroad right-of-way but on land not belonging to the railroad company, and not far from the coal chute at the switch yard in Cleveland, Mississippi, where they got out of the automobile to let the said Cox and Dennis go onto the right-of-way and down toward the coal chute while the said Waldrop and Conner proceeded down a pathway alongside the wooded grove and parallel with the railroad and met up with the said David Jefferson, a colored man about twenty *735 years of age, who was carrying a sack of coal on his back toward the negro settlement, when the deputy sheriff asked him "Boy, what you got there?"; that Jefferson replied "Coal"; that he was then asked by Conner "Where did you get it?," and replied "Down by the railroad tracks," and then later stated "Down at the coal chute on the railroad." That, thereupon, Conner told him he was under arrest, and that "I (Waldrop) was Mr. Waldrop with the railroad, and he (Conner) was a Deputy Sheriff, and consider himself under arrest, or something similar to that"; that the appellee Waldrop then called Conner's attention to two more persons who were approaching them in the pathway leading from the general direction of the coal chute, whereupon Conner went to meet them and told the said Waldrop "You hold this boy here, take care of this boy, and I will go on and meet them"; that neither the deputy sheriff nor Waldrop had any warrant for the arrest of Jefferson and that while Waldrop was guarding him with a pistol in his hand, and was holding him by the coat tail, after Conner had left, Jefferson struck Waldrop on the head and face with his fist and freed himself from the hold, by knocking Waldrop loose; that Waldrop then backed away while Jefferson was advancing on him and continuing to strike him with his fist, and fired his pistol once and continued to back away and later fired four more shots, and one of which five shots struck Jefferson near the mouth, ranging downward, another in the right side of the back near the shoulder, which went through his body ranging about one and one-half inches downward, two in the arm and another somewhere in the fleshy part of his body; that all of the shots save the first were fired after Waldrop was knocked down on his knee and that they were all fred while Jefferson was advancing toward him; and it was shown that the fatal shot was the one which entered the right side of his back as aforesaid, ranging downward. No other eye-witness testified except the two persons who had been taken in charge by Conner fifty-eight *736 steps away, and they said they heard no words passed between Waldrop and Jefferson, although Waldrop testified that when Jefferson first struck him he asked Jefferson "What in the Hell is the matter with you? Have you gone crazy? Behave yourself," as he kept advancing on him. Jefferson was not armed, and the only disparity between his size and that of the appellee Waldrop was slightly in the latter's favor.
It does not appear from the record whether Jefferson had picked up the coal along the railroad tracks where it had jolted off the coal cars, as alleged in the declaration, or had taken it from a coal pile at the chute. No one saw him when he got the coal, but the two other persons taken into custody by Deputy Sheriff Conner testified that Jefferson had inquired of them before going to the railroad about whether he would be able to get some coal down there and that they had told him that he might be able to scrape up a sack full.
It will be seen from the foregoing testimony of the appellee Waldrop that it was a question for the jury to decide as to whether or not the physical facts in regard to the location and range of the shots were in contradiction of the claim that Jefferson was advancing on Waldrop while he was backing away from him and when the shots were being fired, and especially as to whether the fatal shot near the center of the right side of the back of the deceased, which ranged downward as aforesaid, was fired at a time when Waldrop was on his knee as is contended for by the appellees; also as to the reasonableness of the claim that one who is unarmed would advance on another and assault him with his fist while the latter is standing guard over him with a pistol in his hands. No contention is made that at any time during the altercation there was ever any attempt to seize the weapon, although the deceased was in such close proximity as to be able to continue striking the appellee Waldrop in the face until the fatal shot was fired. *737
It was held in the case of Walters v. Stonewall Cotton Mills,
The fatal shooting of Jefferson by the defendant Waldrop under the foregoing circumstances, together with the further fact that the claim made by him that his own face was badly bruised during the altercation was contradicted by another witness, makes a case for the consideration of the jury under the plea of self-defense.
It is next urged on behalf of the appellee Waldrop that he is absolved from liability for the reason that he was acting under instructions from the deputy sheriff when undertaking to detain Jefferson while the deputy went to arrest the other two persons suspected of stealing coal, and that he is therefore protected without regard to whether the arrest was legal or illegal. In support of this defense, the rule is invoked that when a known officer summons a bystander for the purpose of assisting him in making an arrest, the bystander is bound to respond, and that whoever in good faith renders assistance and obeys the orders and directions of a known officer *738
in response to a call for assistance is protected in making an arrest although the officer may be acting wrongfully or without lawful authority, citing 6 C.J.S., Arrest, sec. 16, pp. 616, 617, 4 Am. Jur. 79, 80; and several court decisions, among which is the case of Watson v. State,
Finally, it is urged that the appellee railroad company is not liable because there was no proof that the appellee Waldrop had authority to guard and protect the railroad's property except on its premises. We are of the opinion that there is no merit in this contention since this special agent was admittedly about his appointed duties in trying to apprehend those suspected of having taken the railroad property from its premises, and the fact that he had gotten off of the right-of-way to discharge his appointed duty would not necessarily exonerate his employer from liability.
In the case of Loper v. Yazoo M.V.R. Co.,
The action of the court below in granting a peremptory instruction in favor of either or both of the defendants was erroneous, and the judgment of the court in dismissing the suit must therefore be reversed.
Reversed and remanded. *741