Bozeman v. Tucker

203 So. 2d 795, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1393
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1967
DocketNo. 44635
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 203 So. 2d 795 (Bozeman v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bozeman v. Tucker, 203 So. 2d 795, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1393 (Mich. 1967).

Opinion

BRADY, Justice.

Appellant instituted suit in the Circuit Court of Neshoba County seeking to recover for the loss of two cows which were killed when struck by an automobile being driven by the appellee. From a jury verdict and judgment in favor of the appellee, the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

There is little dispute as to the essential facts in this cause. The appellant, D. W. Bozeman, lives approximately six miles from Philadelphia, Mississippi, on the south side of Mississippi State Highway 21, a blacktop highway running generally southwest-northeast. He owns cattle which he grazes on his farm. The appellant testified that two days prior to December 21, 1962, he had examined the fences surrounding his land on which his cows grazed, finding them in good condition and sufficient to keep the cows in the pasture. However, on the date of the accident a limb from a red oak tree fell upon the fence and broke the top strand of wire so that two cows, unknown to the appellant, got out of his pasture. Around five o’clock that afternoon appellant’s neighbor, Mr. R. N. Townsend, saw the two cows near or on his farm and proceeded to drive them along the shoulder of Highway 21 toward the homestead of the appellant. At approximately the same time, the appel-lee, Mr. William H. Tucker, who was driving his father’s automobile in a northeasterly direction along the highway, came over the brow of a hill. He testified that he saw the two cows on the shoulder of the road when he was one-quarter of a mile away, but that he did not see Mr. Townsend. The appellee further testified that when he first saw the cows they were five or six feet off the blacktop portion of the road. He said that as he approached the hill he was making a maximum speed of sixty-five miles per hour. As he proceeded down a little hill he allowed his automobile to slow to approximately forty-five miles per hour. When his car reached a little rise, he resumed his speed of sixty-three to sixty-five miles per hour. Mr. Townsend estimated appellee’s speed at seventy miles per hour.

Appellee testified that he thought the cows were on the side of the road and it wouldn’t matter. He stated: “I was foolish, I guess, in not knowing animals as they are.” As he came over the little rise, the first thing he noticed was one of the cows about halfway on the right side of traffic, “before you get to the middle line.” The cow was at an angle across the road. He testified that he then applied his brakes, and estimated that he was approximately forty-five yards or more from the cow at the time. He stated:

I thought if I couldn’t stop, I could go between those two cows. I didn’t stop and the way that I presumed that Mr. Townsend was behind the cows — I never did see Mr. Townsend — I hit one cow on the left fender and I hit the other cow on the right fender because the other cow, just before I got there, just as it skidded, the other cow started across the road also at a straight angle.

The record discloses that appellee’s car knocked one of the cows against Mr. Town[797]*797send, breaking his leg and inflicting other injuries, and the other cow was knocked into the ditch on the opposite side of the highway. In response to a question concerning when he saw the cows turn and cross in front of him, he replied: “As I come up over that little hill out there, as I said, I must have had a mind loss there for a moment. When I saw them, they were in the road.”

The appellant sued for $350 actual damages, the value placed on the cows, plus $5,000 punitive damages. The appellee filed a counterclaim asking for damages in the amount of $902.09 covering the damage done to his automobile. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellee.

Errors committed in the granting of certain instructions render it unnecessary for us to consider other assigned errors. The first instruction requiring our attention reads as follows:

The Court instructs the Jury for the defendant that under the law when a person is suddenly confronted with sudden emergency, not of his own making, and is by reason thereof placed in a position of peril to himself without sufficient time in which to determine with certainty the best thing to do, he is not held to the same accuracy of judgment as if required of him under ordinary circumstances, and in this instance if you believe from the evidence that William Tucker, the defendant driver of the automobile, was immediately prior to the collision with the two cows confronted with a sudden emergency which he did not create and was by reason thereof placed in a position of peril to himself, then weighing the evidence and in determining whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence at the time of the collision you may take into consideration all the facts and circumstances as shown by the evidence and the situation with which the driver was confronted, and you must believe from a preponderance of all the evidence in this case that the defendant was guilty of negligence which contributed to the collision with the two cows before the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict at your hands, and if the plaintiff has failed to prove to you by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence which contributed to the collision with the cows, then your verdict must be for the defendant.

This instruction is erroneous for two reasons. First, if there was an emergency, it existed at least in part as a result of the actions of the appellee, and for this reason he was not entitled to this instruction. May v. Pace, 197 So.2d 220 (Miss.1967). The proof conclusively shows that he knew the cows were in the road when he was over a quarter of a mile away. The record does not show that he was unable to see the cows when he went down into the slight depression. Second, the instruction did not define and describe the facts which would warrant the jury in finding that the sudden emergency arose. In this case this requirement is important because the jury could have inferred from the instruction that the cows suddenly ran into the road, as to which there is no proof. On the other hand, the jury might have thought the sudden emergency was the presence in the road of the cows after the appellee came over the rise. We have, with metronomic regularity, undertaken our Sisyphean task of imparting to the Bar the three essentials which must be present in an instruction concerning a sudden emergency and which must factually exist to justify the granting of a sudden emergency instruction. See, e.g., Continental So. Lines, Inc. v. Lum, 254 Miss. 655, 182 So.2d 228 (1966); McClure v. Felts, 252 Miss. 234, 172 So.2d 549 (1965); Kettle v. Musser’s Potato Chips, Inc., 249 Miss. 212, 162 So.2d 243 (1964).

The second instruction to require consideration reads as follows:

The Court instructs the Jury for the defendant that when the driver of an automobile is driving the same at a reasonable speed and has the automobile under rea[798]*798sonable control, and is keeping a reasonable lookout, then no liability as for negligence attaches for an inquiry (sic) to animals who (sic) are straying adjacent to the paved portion of the highway and said cattle unexpectedly turns (sic) and dashes (sic) in front of the automobile, when so close thereto the driver by exercise of due care is unable to avoid a collision, and provided he then exercises reasonable care and in this case, if you believe from the evidence the cattle of D. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 So. 2d 795, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bozeman-v-tucker-miss-1967.