Central Paving & Construction Co. v. McCaskin

184 So. 464, 183 Miss. 814, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 295
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1938
DocketNo. 33404.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 184 So. 464 (Central Paving & Construction Co. v. McCaskin) 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
Central Paving & Construction Co. v. McCaskin, 184 So. 464, 183 Miss. 814, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 295 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

*821 McGeh.ee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment rendered in the Circuit Court of Marshall County in favor of the appellee for personal injuries suffered by her when an automobile, driven by her husband', and in which she was riding, collided with a steam roller of the appellant Central Paving & Construction Company, Incorporated, on U. S. Highway No. 78, which was then under construction, a few miles northwest of Holly Springs in said county.

Appellants requested and were refused a peremptory instruction in the court below on the following state of facts: The appellant construction company was at the time of the accident engaged1 in constructing certain paving on the highway which leads northwest from Holly Springs toward Memphis. The pavement had been completed from Holly Springs to a point about 10 miles northwest thereof where the old gravel highway intersected it and was being used for a detour. It turned to the right northward. Immediately beyond the intersection was a barricade with a large detour sign, either immediately in front of the barricade or forming a part thereof, and which sign was about 4 feet square, painted in conspicuous colors, lighted with a Toledo torch, and contained the words “Boad Closed — Detour;” and above these words an arrow pointed to the graveled detour road. The paved portion of the road' was 20 feet in width and the barricade consisted of two poles, 6 inches in diameter, one extending from each side of the road toward this road-closed and detour sign, and' immediately behind which, and on the right side or slab of the concrete road, there was stationed a large steam roller used in packing and smoothing the asphaltic concrete behind the finishing or spreading machine. There were other steam rollers between this one and the spreading machine, and each of these steam rollers had boilers which had to be kept supplied with water during the progress of the work. The appellant Curtis Smith was *822 an employee of the construction company, and it was his duty to haul the water on a truck containing a large water tank for the purpose, from a point north of where the road was under construction. It was necessary for him to travel the graveled' detour road when coming south, so as to reach the pavement behind the construction work, and to then let down the barricade on the left side of the usable portion of the paved highway in order to back his truck northward through the same and supply the boilers with the water. He could not travel the new highway southward to that point for the reason that the spreading machine ran on steel forms 'between which the fresh asphaltic concrete was being poured, and occupied the entire width of the highway then under construction.. On the occasion of this accident the automobile in which the appellee was riding from Holly Springs toward Memphis collided with the steam roller located on the right side of the pavement immediately behind' the barricade aforesaid. The appellant Curtis Smith had a few moments prior thereto driven onto the pavement, at the intersection of the graveled detour road therewith and had backed his water truck northward on the left side or slab of the pavement either to a point immediately in front of the barricade, as contended by appellee, or had passed through the same and stopped after removing the pole, as contended by appellants. His lights were on, shining brightly down the pavement in the direction of the detour road and toward the approaching automobile. It is contended by the appellee, and also by her husband and1 his brother, who were in the automobile at the time, that the lights of the truck caused them to conclude that it was moving and coming toward them and that the highway was open for travel, although it was shown without dispute that the truck was standing still. They further contend that the water truck was immediately in front of and obscured the large road-closed and detour sign, as well as the light in front thereof, to such an extent as to obscure the sign, *823 light, barricade and steam roller. This contention, however, seems contrary to human experience and wholly unreasonable for the reason that the driver of the truck was engaged throughout the day in hauling water to this point and backing his truck through the barricade, after removing each time the pole situated on the left side of the road, where his truck was standing at the time of the accident. It does not seem reasonable to suppose that he would place this large road-closed and detour sign, and the torchlight in front thereof, in the portion of the road being used by him in backing his truck through the barricade each time, removing and replacing it on each trip, when admittedly neither he nor anyone else had occasion to use the center of the highway, where all the witnesses for the appellants say the sign and light were stationed, or occasion to use the right side of the highway along which appellee was traveling.

But be that as it may, the proof further disclosed that at a distance of approximately 4 or 5 miles south of the barricade there was a sign reading “Road under construction travel at your own risk,” and at a point only 600 feet south of the barricade there was another sign about 2% by 4 feet in dimension which read “Danger— G-o Slow,” in front of which was stationed a Toledo torch, lighting up the sign, which sign and light were placed in the center of the paved highway. This last mentioned sign in the center of the highway was observed by the appellee and her companions, and was discussed by them after they passed it, whereupon the driver of the. automobile remarked, in substance, that this sign and light must have been placed there on account of the fact that the shoulders of the road had not been finished; and the appellee herself commented that the road was open ahead, relying to some extent on a mention alleged to have been made in the Commercial Appeal, that the road would be opened that day. We are unable to see how they concluded that the lighted “danger-go-slow” sign, stationed in the center of the *824 pavement, was merely to indicate that the shoulders adjacent to the pavement were not suitable for use, instead of indicating real danger on failure to drive slowly on the pavement. Presumably, the traveling public would use the paved' portion of the highway and not the shoulders adjacent thereto. We are of the opinion that this lighted sign in the center of the highway at night was sufficient warning to require them to proceed cautiously with the automobile under control so as to be able to meet any nearby emergency ahead of them. This they did not do. The proof disclosed that sldd marks, of the automobile tires were observed immediately after the accident, and were then measured for a distance of 80 or 90 feet from the steam roller southward'. It is true that appellees contend that when they observed the skid marks on the next morning and afternoon, the same extended only back to the detour road, a much less distance than testified to on behalf of the appellants. However, this cannot be considered a contradiction in the proof, for the reason that the traveling public had used the paved highway and passed over the marks during that Saturday night, and up to the point of intersection with the gravel road.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 464, 183 Miss. 814, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-paving-construction-co-v-mccaskin-miss-1938.