73 So. 62 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
Julia Turner, the appellant, sued the Southern Railway Company in the circuit court of Alcorn county for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the railway company, and from a judgment in favor of the appellee railroad she appeals to this court, and, among other errors assigned for reversal, she contends that the lower court erred in granting a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for the railway company. It appears from testimony in the record that Julia Turner, a negro woman, went to White, Tenn., a flag station on the defendant’s railway, for
“I went down to the depot that morning to get on the train ‘The Newsboy,’ and was standing right where they get on it and struck the match, and as I went to flag the train it ran right on up, and it just brushed by and hit me on the arm. Had made a light. The paper was burning, but the wind from the train blew it out. The train did not stop. It just brushed right on by. When I knowed anything to do any good, I was between Mr. Holloway’s store and the steps. I was lying there where the train hit me, I suppose. The train hit me on my arm. It just deadened me all over. It broke my arm in three places and tore all this off. I can’t get it up to my head; it draws back here. I suffer now, and have to take medicine all the time to keep the swelling down on this side.”
We will say here that the doctor who attended appellant testified that she received the injuries complained of and was unconscious and in a comatose condition for about twelve hours after the injury.
John Toney testified:
*362 “I was down there to go back to Moscow to work; was. going’ back on the train we call ‘The Newsboy,’ about four o ’clock in the morning. Plaintiff is the woman who was there .that morning. She got a match from me and went to the track to strike the match, which she struck on the rail or the ties right on the side of the track; said she had to flag the train. She was on the track when she struck the match. The train was some one hundred and twenty-five or more yards away when she went to strike the match. Just as she got started up from the track the train ran up and blew her light out and the match she had struck, and she went across about ten feet just like I would throw my hat across to the wall. The train had given no signal for that particular station before it struck her. I heard the whistle, which seemed to be further down the road, but not at that place. It was so far down the road I could not tell how far it was, but I heard the whistle. It did not whistle or ring any bell for White station. It did not check its speed at all in passing White station that morning.”
The appellee introduced E. 0. Mays, the engineer of the train, as a witness in its behalf, and he testified that he was the engineer in charge of the engine on that occasion; that the train was going east and was due at White station at four-eleven a. m.; that his engine had a good electric headlight;' that he gave the station whistle and whistled at a road crossing about three-quarters of a mile west of White station; that White station is a flag station; that he received no signal from the conductor or any one else to stop at White’s; that he-passed through White station on time, running about fifteen miles per hour, and that ‘the station is right on the curve of the track which bends to the right, and with the train going east it throws the light from his headlight almost entirely on the left side where the passengers get on and where the appellant, Julia Turner, claims she was standing; that he was on the bos on the engine and on the lookout, and saw no one at all; that no obstruction ap
The appellant bases her right of recovery upon a violation of the precautionary statutes of Tennessee, which are applicable in this case, as the injury occurred in the state of Tennessee. We here quote the statutes (Shannon’s Code) relied upon:
1574 (1166) 1298. “Every railroad company shall keep the engineer, fireman, or some other person upon the locomotive, always upon the lookout ahead; and when any person, animal, or other obstructions appear upon the road, the alarm whistle shall he sounded, the brakes put down, and every possible means employed to stop the train and prevent an accident.
“1575 (1167) 1299. Failure to Observe Precautions.— Every railroad company that fails to observe these precautions, or cause them to he observed by its agents and servants, shall be responsible for all damages to persons or property, occasioned by, or resulting from, any accident or collision that may occur.
“1576 (1168) 1300. Observance of. — No railroad company that observes, or causes to be observed, these precautions shall be responsible for damages -done to the person or property on its road. The proof that it has observed said precautions shall be upon the company.”
It seems clear to us, from the testimony in this record. that the appellant, Julia Turner, went to the flag station White for the purpose of hoarding the train, and attempted to flag it while she was standing on the track with the lighted paper in her hand. She pursued the only means she had of stopping the train at this flag station.
The testimony of the engineer and conductor amounts to a denial that the appellant was there at the station or on the track or was in any way injured at all. The engi
In view of these conclusions, we think the lower court erred in directing a verdict for the appellee, and the judgment of the lower court is reversed and remanded.
jReversed and remanded.