21 F.2d 185 | S.D. Miss. | 1927
The plaintiffs, Mrs. Dannie May Stokes et al., filed suit in the state court jointly against the Great Southern Lumber Company, a nonresident corporation operating a logging steam railroad, and its engineer, Otho Dykes, a citizen of Mississippi. On petition of the defendants, the cause was duly removed, and motion is now made by the plaintiffs to remand.
While several grounds are urged by the defendants in support of jurisdiction here, it will suffice to say that, if no cause of action is stated against the engineer, the resident defendant, the cause is removable. It appears from the face of the declaration that the plaintiffs’ intestate, while employed as a brakeman of the defendant lumber company, was killed while undertaking to couple ears, because, in the language of the declaration, “the engineer,. Otho Dykes, the agent and servant of the defendant, in charge of and operating the engine, negligently caused said cars to come together with tremendous force, thereby crushing defendant between said two cars and killing him instantly.”
It is not sufficient to allege negligence merely as a legal conclusion, but facts must be exhibited showing in what the negligence consisted. Horton v. Lincoln County, 116 Miss. 813, 77 So. 796.
It is conceded that under the Mississippi statute (chapter 215, Laws 1912) negligence is presumed against the company upon proof of injury inflicted by the operation of the trains. In such ease it is sufficient to charge that the person was injured or killed by the running of the train. Hudson v. Railroad Co., 95 Miss. 42, 48 So. 289.
But it is urged that no such presumption of negligence arises against the engineer, and that therefore no cause of action is stated against him. The plaintiffs claim that under chapter 215 of the Laws of 1912 the same presumption of negligence exists against the engineer as against the company, and that therefore, even though negligence is not sufficiently alleged in the declaration, a presumption of negligence exists against the engineer by reason of the statute upon the simple allegations that the deceased was killed by the train while being operated by the engineer.
Chapter 215 of the Laws of 1912, amending section 1985 of the Code of 1906, extends the presumption of negligence, upon proof of injury inflicted by the running of engines, locomotives, or ears, to all actions against railroad and all other corporations, companies, partnerships, and individuals using engines,- locomotives, or ears under the circumstances therein stated. The word “individuals,” as used in the statute, was not intended to create a presumption of negligence against the individuals using the locomotive or cars in the capacity of employes, but only against those individuals who stand in the relation of master or owner to an injured einployé or other party.
The statute raises the presumption of negligence against the Great Southern Lumber Company alone, because the injury was inflicted by the ears “of” such company. So far as applicable to individual defendants, the statute reads as follows:
“In all actions against * * * individuals using engines, locomotives, or cars of any kind or description whatsoever, propelled by the dangerous agencies of steam, electricity, gas, gasoline or lever power, and running on tracks, for damages done to persons or property, proof of injury inflicted by the running of the engines, locomotives or ears of any such * * * individual shall be prima facie evidence of the want of reasonable skill and care of such * * * individual in reference to such injury. This section shall also apply to passengers and employés of * * * such * * * individuals.”
The word “of” (above underscored), as used in the statute, denotes possession or ownership, and limits the class of individual defendants “using engines, locomotives, or ears” to cases of injuries inflicted by locomotives or cars belonging to or in the possession of such individuals.
The case of Poorman v. Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co. (D. C.) 255 D. 985, has been duly considered and is not regarded as applicable. The Illinois statute there involved created a prima facie, ease of negligence against “those in the use and occupation of the railroad as owners, lessees, or mortgagees, and those at the time having the ‘care and management’ of the engine.” This statute was held to embrace an engineer, but it is clearly broader than the Mississippi statute under consideration.
Therefore, as a cause of action is stated against the nonresident, and none is stated against the resident defendant, the motion to remand will be overruled.