46 So. 142 | Miss. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
Learned counsel for the appellee says frankly in Jiis brief that “the case at bar is for injuries resulting from the action of the conductor and crew in putting off deceased after he had passed Ecru, his destination, at a time and place and under
Now, what is the case made by the testimony ? Practically this: The deceased, Jackson, a section hand fifty-eight years-old, strong and robust, and one Purvis, twenty-one years old, got to drinking Peruna in the town of New Albany on the 2d of February, 1905, the day of the night on which Jackson was drowned, and drank along through the day a good deal of Peruna. They boarded the cars, having purchased tickets from New Albany to Ecru. After they got on the car they drank about a bottle and a half more of Peruna, making about four bottles or more of Peruna that the two consumed during the day and this part of the night. The conductor took up Purvis’ ticket. He did not take up Jackson’s ticket; but Jackson told him he had, and the conductor yielded the point. It is clearly shown that Jackson’s ticket was found in his pocket after his death. It is further clearly shown, by the uncontradicted testimony of the conductor, that after the train had passed Ecru the conductor asked these two men where they were going, and they told him they were going to Ball’s Crossing, whereupon he collected the cash fare from each, from Ecru to Ball’s Crossing. Learned counsel for appellee says, in the passage just above quoted, that the suit was for putting off the deceased after he had passed Ecru, his destination. There is not a particle of testimony to contradict the statement of the conductor that he took the cash fare from Ecru
The strongest feature of appellee’s case is the insistence that Jackson was drunk to the point of insensibility when he got on the cars — so drunk- that he could not sit, stand, or walk, or in any manner take care of himself, and that this condition was thoroughly known to the conductor, and that hence the conductor, in allowing him to- get off even, or he assisted off in that condition at the place, a public crossing and flag station, with the ground covered with sleet and snow and ice, and the temperature freezing, was guilty of willful and wanton wrong, for which the company should answer in damages. But on the point how drunk Jackson was when he. got on the cars at New Albany, and how drunk he was after the continued drinking on the cars between New Albany and Ball’s Crossing, the testimony is in utter conflict; the clear preponderance of the testimony, however, being that, whilst perhaps drunk when he-boarded the cars, he was not then in any insensible condition, and. that whilst, of course, much drunker when the train reached Ball’s Crossing, he yet could walk, though staggering — - had walked down the aisle and taken his seat on the opposite side from the one he had been sitting on — had walked down and
Now, from this rough outline, which we will fill in more in detail further on in this opinion, some things are perfectly clear: First, that there is not one particle of testimony in this record anywhere to show that Jackson was put off or ejected. He was simply permitted to get off, and assisted off at the place, Ball’s Grossing, at which he insisted on debarking, together with Purvis, and yet the plaintiff’s caso proceeds upon the theory that Jackson was wantonly and willfully ejected. It is perfectly
Another curious feature about the testimony will be noted, and that is this: That whilst the court instructed the jury that no punitive damages co-uld be allowed in this case, and hence the case was left to stand alone upon such actual damages as the proof showed, there is not one particle of evidence in the case to show what the earning capacity of Jackson was — how much money he was making per month or per year; in short,, not a syllable of testimony as to what he was earning for the support of his wife and children — what he was worth as a breadwinner. IIow a jury could render a verdict for $5,000 damages on the record thus made by this case on these instructions passes.
We add another observation or two as to the testimony. Jim Lyons, who was not in the service of the railroad company, testified uncontradictedly that he asked Jackson to go home with him, and Jackson said, “No,” he wanted to go to Ball’s Crossing; and, further, that he heard the conductor, Newberry, say to Jackson, “Mr. Jackson, if you will go on to Pontotoc, and not get off” (that is, at Ball’s Crossing), “I will take you free,” and Jackson said, “No, sir,” he wanted to stop at Ball’s Crossing. There is no contradiction of any sort of this testimony of this disinterested witness. A very earnest effort was made by the learned counsel for the appellee to elicit from this witness a statement that the conductor said he did not wish to put Jackson off, on account of its being so cold and Jackson being helpless, and the witness did so answer once; but in the further progress of his examination he says repeatedly that he could not say that was the reason, finally saying, “Well, I never heard him [the conductor] say no reason;” and this witness further states that he was “sure Jackson could walk around when he got to Ball’s Crossing, and that Jackson was standing-up on the ground when he, the witness, stepped back into the coach.” The witness Will Harvey makes a very positive statement that Jackson, when the train ran into an open switch at Cherry Creek, walked down the aisle and asked if this was Ball’s Crossing, and that, when the train stopped at Ball’s Crossing, Jackson got up and started out, and was staggering-in the aisle, when the conductor had him assisted off, and that, the last he saw of him, he turned and started and was standing
The last thing we desire to say about the testimony is that it is shown distinctly hy the testimony of Jackson’s son-in-law, Will Mercer, that he himself was a section foreman, and that Jackson was a section hand under him;, that ^Ball’s Crossing was in his section, and that Jackson was thoroughly familiar with the location and all the surroundings at Ball’s Crossing. This, then, is the case made by the facts, upon which we desire to make a single observation: That, manifestly, the clear preponderance of the testimony is with the appellant company on. this record, and that, unless, on a new trial, the plaintiff shall be able to materially strengthen the case, there should be a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, since no verdict should be allowed to stand on this testimony for damages.
But this is not the whole case. When we come to consider the instructions of the court, the confusion only deepens. The plaintiff asked sixteen instructions, the first twelve of which unbrokenly were refused. Without burdening this opinion by having all these instructions, refused and given, set out, it is sufficient to observe as to the refused instructions as follows: That running through nearly all of the refused instructions is the proposition that the defendant’s conductor put Jackson off— ejected him. All these instructions were properly refused, since there is not a particle of testimony showing that there, was any ejection of Jackson. Coming to the instructions given for the plaintiff, two of these, Nos. 15 and 16, are simply as to the right of the jury to judge of the weight of the evidence, etc., and were properly given. The thirteenth instruction for the plaintiff ought not to have been given, because it submits to the jury, as a doubtful question, the question whether the conductor collected Jackson’s fare from New Albany to Ecru, when it is plain
How was it, now, as to the instructions given for the defendant ? The court actually gave the defendant nineteen instructions and refused two, one of'the two being a peremptory instruction; and this in a casé where a half dozen instructions, at the most, should fully have covered the determining points in the case. Indeed, a half dozen instructions on either side, would fully and clearly have put the pivotal points in the case. The cloud of instructions could only have had the effect of obscuring the issues that should have been brought out in bold relief by a few crisp, clear charges. We will say, very briefly, in respect to the instructions for the appellant, at this time, just this: That instruction No. 8 was erroneous, since no question should have been submitted to the jury about Jackson’s being carried past his destination; and that instruction No. 9, and several others presenting the same principle, is too extreme in its statement of the law as to drunkenness. It is not a correct proposition to say, as instruction No. 9 does, that the jury are not to consider at all the drunkenness of the said Jackson, but that they are to view his acts and doings in the same way and in the
Reversed and remanded.