MISSISSIPPI EXPORT R. Co. v. SUMMERS et al.
No. 35214
Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Jan. 18, 1943
Suggestion of Error Overruled Feb. 15, 1943
11 So. (2d) 429
Anderson, P. J., delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellees, the wife and children of Seth Summers, brought this action in the circuit court of Perry County
The Holifield case is the leading decision in this state on this question. In that case the evidence showed that the collision occurred on a dark night when the road was dusty, that the automobile was properly equipped with brakes and lights in good condition and was being driven at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour, that the driver was constantly keeping a lookout ahead but on account of the absence of lights at the crossing and the darkness and dust he was unable to see the box car on the railroad track until within about eight feet of it, and then it was too late for him to stop. The court uses this language [152 Miss. 674, 120 So. 751]: “The appellant had the right to occupy the crossing for its legitimate business purposes, and while so occupying the crossing it was not required to maintain lights on its cars, or to station a man with a lantern at the crossing to give warning that it was obstructed by the cars, unless the conditions and circumstances were such that the employés knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care and caution should have known, that a person driving upon the street at a reasonable rate of speed in an automobile properly equipped with lights, and carefully operated, could not see or might not be able to see the cars in time to avoid a collision therewith, or, in other words, as said by the Supreme Court of Alabama in the case of St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Guthrie, 216 Ala. 613, 114 So. 215, 56 A. L. R. 1110: ‘The employes of the defendant, in the absence of some peculiar environment, are justified in believing that travelers in automobiles properly lighted and driving at reasonable speed will observe the cars upon the crossing in time to avoid coming into collision with them.’ ”
The authorities referred to simply mean that the railroad company had the right to assume that Summers was complying with the law. If he had been it is manifest that the collision could not have occurred. The only warning due him was the presence of the box car, which he could have seen in ample time to stop. The comparative negligence statute has no application because the negligence of Summers was the sole proximate cause of his death—so far as the railroad is concerned.
Reversed and judgment here for appellant.
ON SUGGESTION OF ERROR.
Griffith, J., delivered the opinion of the court on suggestion of error.
In Summerford v. Illinois Central R. Co. (Miss.), 196 So. 264, the facts were that the injured party was acquainted with the crossing, having passed it many times before; it was night and was raining; he was driving
No stronger appeal is presented by the case at bar than in that case. Appellees urge that we should overrule the Summerford case and all those which it followed, from the Holifield case (Gulf, M. & N. R. Co. v. Holifield), 152 Miss. 674, 120 So. 750, on down. Those cases are sustained by the weight of authority in other states upon the same point, whence we are constrained to decline the stated suggestion; and in so doing we have not at all overlooked any of the other contentions made by appellees.
In next to the last paragraph of our former opinion we referred to
Suggestion of error overruled.
