Clifford H. Robbins v. Milner Enterprises, Inc.

278 F.2d 492, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 902, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4818
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1960
Docket18144
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 278 F.2d 492 (Clifford H. Robbins v. Milner Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clifford H. Robbins v. Milner Enterprises, Inc., 278 F.2d 492, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 902, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4818 (5th Cir. 1960).

Opinions

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge,

Th.e immediate question is whether summary judgment for defendant in a Mississippi diversity case was properly entered on the theory that the facts showed without a substantial likelihood 0f contradiction that the plaintiff had assumed the risk of operating an automobile with faulty brakes.^ F.R.Civ. Proc. 56, 28 U.S.C.A. We think not and reverse.

Robbins, the plaintiff, was a sergeant in the United States Army. He was a skilled driver and, indeed, at the time of his accident, was en route to another Mississippi city where he was to conduct written driver examination tests for members of the Reserve. His claim was a simple one. He was assigned a car [493]*493from the motor pool at the Jackson, Mississippi military installation. That vehide — later involved in the wreck which severely injured him — had been turned over to the defendant garage for adjustment and repair of the brakes and repair „ ,, , , of the speedometer. The motor pool dis- , , . , -r. xi • j. -i patcher instructed Sgt. Robbins to pick .. , ,, ” , ,, up the car at the defendants garage. . _ .. . , ,, When Sgt. Robbins came to the garage „ . . , , , £ for tne car, the work had not been fan- • i ... ,, . ished. Within a short time, the repairs .... , i . , were reported to have been completed, ... , . , . . . , and the car was turned over to him. At , . ,. ... , , . - this place arises the critical element of ,,, T ... „ , , Sgt. Robbins theory. In positive factual , . .... j ... o 4. terms m the discovery deposition, Sgt. ,, ,. Robbms stated that at the time the car ... ,,,• j X. ■, 4. was delivered to him, the defendant rep- , resented that the brakes had been re- . . ,. 4. ,, , , paired, and that the car was ready and „ , , . 83,1(3 to drive*

Sgt. Robbins then drove the car away on his mission. His itinerary is important, not because of any idea of digression, but in giving meaning to the critical, and perhaps decisive, testimony on what Sgt. Robbins knew on each leg of his indirect journey. His ultimate destination was Indianola, Mississippi, some 103 miles from Jackson. He proceeded, however, by an indirect route to afford transportation to a fellow noncommissioned officer. The first leg was Jackson to Yazoo City, approximately 43 miles. The second leg was Yazoo City to Greenwood, 55 miles further. The third leg was Greenwood to Clarksdale approximately 57 miles. After dropping his passenger there, he began the fourth leg from Clarksdale to Indianola, an expected distance of 57 miles. While on the fourth and last leg, the wreck occurred.

., , , , The details of the accident are not too important. Sgt. Robbins was driving the car at a very moderate speed behind a large truck. When the truck pulled off the road, he saw for the first time a slow moving farm tractor in his lane ahead. He put on his brakes to re«duce speed. When he did so, the brakes locked, the car jerked violently to the left, the steering wheel was pulled out of his hands, and the car “just went over to the left and turned over and rolled me out.”

... Neither here nor below did the de- , , . , „ , fendant question the existence of a sub- , „ „ , . . stantial dispute of fact on (a) the rep- ... ,, , ,, , , resentation that the brakes on the car , , , , , , . , ... ,, had been completely repaired, (b) the .. , , , r . accident occurred because the brakes , . ,. . . ,, ., , were defective, (c) the accident was the , ’ : „ ,. . , proximate result of the misrepresentaf. . ... tion and (d) substantial injuries were . , '■' „ ,, received. More than that, m view of tne ... . . . ,. ,, Mississippi comparative negligence stat- , , , 1 x ' , ,,,, ute,1 defendant does not assert that con- , .. , .. 4, c. . -r, 1..1 • tributory negligence of Sgt. Robbins 4., » would bar his recovery. The theory of , „ ... , . . defense, successfully pressed below, was , 0 ’ _ t , • A , • ,. that Sgt. Robbins, after leaving the gai i i n i-i in t rage and while on each of the three legs preceding the accident, knew that the brakes were not in fact working properly. His continued driving with this knowledge of the defect and its hazards was a voluntary assumption of risk. Disagreeing strenuously on how to read them, all seem to meet for momentary agreement that in our Erie search for the Mississippi concept of assumed risk, we are to find it in the three leading cases. Saxton v. Rose, 1947, 201 Miss. 814, 29 So.2d 646; McDonald v. Wilmut Gas & Oil Co., 1937, 180 Miss. 350, 176 So. 395; Runnels v. Dixie Drive-It-Yourself System, 1954, 220 Miss. 678, 71 So. 2d 453, 46 A.L.R.2d 397. Akin to these perhaps is our decision in Harris v. Gulf Refining Co., 5 Cir., 1957, 240 F.2d 249, where, disagreeing with the Mississippi trained judge who tried it and a Circuit Judge dissenting in it, this Court held it to have been a question of fact for the -u

As we view the case in its limited frame, we do not find it either necessary or desirable that we undertake to determine or expound just what are the minima-maxima reaches of the Mississippi doctrine by which, on one hand, assump[494]*494tion of risk is established as a matter of law, and, on the other hand, as a matter of law is not present leaving all in between for jury resolution. Ours is the narrower inquiry whether in advance of the traditional trial, the evidence brought forward on motion for summary judgment forecasts that there is no substantial possibility that the evidence actually adduced will permit a jury finding that Sgt. Robbins did not knowingly assume the risk of injury.

For our purposes, it is enough to say that the Mississippi doctrine rests on the basis that “one who knows, appreciates, and deliberately exposes himself to a danger ‘assumes the risk’ thereof.”2 The essence of the defense is knowledge of the defective condition, conscious awareness or appreciation of the dangers inherent in it, and a voluntary decision to risk likely injury.3 The quality of deliberate exposure to known danger is graphically portrayed in the distinction drawn by the Mississippi courts between contributory negligence and assumed risk. “The distinction has been tersely said to be that assumption of risk is ‘venturousness’ on the part of the person injured, while contributory negligence is his ‘carelessness’.” 4

Approaching in this light, the evidence produced on the motion for summary judgment to establish that there cannot be any genuine controversy on the “true facts,” we think that it did not compel a conclusion that Sgt. Robbins knew of the defect which caused the brakes to lock during the occurrence of the accident. Neither did it compel the conclusion that the condition of the brakes which he did know of was necessarily the equivalent of knowledge that such deficiencies would likely result in locking, or that he was consciously taking that risk.

In his pretrial deposition testimony upon which motion for summary judgment was largely based, Sgt. Robbins did use the terms that the brakes were “pulling” or “grabbing.” But despite the difficulty in finding suitable words into which to translate the varying shad-jngS which the bare word can connote, we must recognize that there may be vast actual differences, both in degree and kind, in the extent to which brakes may be “grabbing.” It may be slight, or ft may be severe. It might be grad-ual or it might be sudden.

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Bluebook (online)
278 F.2d 492, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 902, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clifford-h-robbins-v-milner-enterprises-inc-ca5-1960.