Cox v. Dempsey

171 So. 788, 177 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 155
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 32283.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 So. 788 (Cox v. Dempsey) 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
Cox v. Dempsey, 171 So. 788, 177 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 155 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries sustained by the appellee, L. L. Dempsey, as the result of the alleged negligence of D. S. Cox, owner of a cream truck; William Hemby, employee of D. S. Cox and driver of the cream truck; C. L. Jones, owner of a wrecker which was towing the said cream truck; John Turner,, an employee of C. L. Jones and the driver of the said wrecker; and 0. NJ. Harris, the owner and operator of a log truck on which the appellee was riding when he sustained his injury. At the conclusion of the evidence offered by the appellee, each of the defendants filed a separate motion to exclude the testimony and direct a judgment in his favor, and these motions were sustained as to 0. N. Harris and C. L. Jones and overruled as to the others. Upon the entire evidence offered by the respective parties the cause was submitted to the jury and there was a verdict and judgment for twenty-five thousand dollars against the three remaining defendants.

The facts necessary to be here stated are, in substance, as follows: A cream truck owned and operated by .the appellant D. S. Cox became disabled on a public highway near Winona, Miss. The appellant William Hemby, who was the driver of the truck, telephoned to the creamery owned and operated by Cox at Columbus, Miss., and requested that a wrecker be sent out to tow the disabled truck to Columbus. Cox’s office at Columbus then directed Joe Ross Gentry, who operated a *692 wrecker service, to go to the relief of Hemby. Gentry started to the scene with his wrecker and, when he reached S'tarkvill-e, the wrecker developed tire trouble, and Gentry then telephoned to the place of business of C. L. Jones in Columbus and requested that tires be sent to him at Starkville. Jones’ wrecker, in charge of the appellant John Turner, then carried tires to Starkville, but on reaching Gentry’s wrecker it was found that they were insufficient. Gentry then directed Turner to proceed with Jones’ wrecker to the disabled truck and bring it into Columbus.

When the Jones’ wrecker, in charge of John Turner, reached the disabled truck, it was fastened on to the truck by a chain and towed toward Columbus, with John Turner driving the wrecker and William Hemby steering the cream truck. While proceeding in this manner up a hill, and when about sixty feet from the top of the hill, a log truck loaded with about seven and one-half tons of wooden blocks came over the hill on the wrong side of the road at a speed of about twenty-five miles an hour. The appellee was riding in the cab of this log truck by the side of O. N. Harris his employer, and the owner and driver thereof. The truck came on down the hill until it reached a point about fifteen or twenty feet from the wrecker, when it suddenly turned to the right and skidded on a diagonal line from the center of the road into an embankment—a distance of about thirty-five feet. The head-on impact of the truck and the embankment was of such force as to telescope the cab and throw the heavy blocks of wood onto the occupants thereof and seriously injure both of them.

The facts stated above are not controverted, but the testimony bearing upon the position of the respective vehicles just before and at the time of the accident is sharply conflicting. Both the appellee and 0. N. Harris, who was offered as a witness in his behalf, admitted that the log truck came over the top of the hill on the *693 inside of a curve and on the wrong side of the road, but they both testified when they saw the wrecker coming up the hill the log truck was immediately turned to the right side of the road; and that the wrecker was coming slowly up the hill, a little to its left side of the center of the road. Harris testified that upon being thus suddenly confronted with this wrecker, practically in the center of the road, his first impulse was that he should turn to its left and attempt to pass on that side of the wrecker, but he realized that the rear of the cream truck was too close to the embankment to permit him to do so, and he attempted to pass on his right side of the road; that there was not sufficient room to safely pass on either side of the wrecker; and that in attempting to do so he applied his brakes, pulled to his right onto the edge of the drain, or ditch, and skidded into the embankment.

The testimony for the defendants was to the effect that the wrecker was proceeding slowly up the hill on its right side of the road, when the log truck came over the top of the hill on the wrong side of the road at a high speed; that the log truck came on down the hill at a high speed until it was in about twenty feet of the wrecker, when it suddenly cut across the road with its wheels locked and went head-on into the embankment.

Upon the above-stated facts as to the liability of D. S. Cox, the owner of the cream truck, and William Hem-by, his employee, who was in control of the truck, the decisive question is whether or not the appellant Cox was the master of John Turner, or, in other words, whether C. L. Jones was an independent contractor in the operation of the wrecker in towing the truck.

As to D. S. Cox and Hemby the declaration charged that the movements of the wrecker and truck were under the sole direction of the appellant Hemby, the agent and employee of Cox, that in the operation of towing the truck John Turner, the general agent of Jones, was *694 a subagent of Cox and subject entirely to the supervision, control, and direction of Cox through his agent Hemby, and that these appellants were grossly negligent in allowing John Turner, the agent of Jones, to drive the wrecker in the center of the highway, or in a place or position in the highway that would endanger travelers attempting to pass the wrecker and truck, and that they were grossly negligent in failing to require the said Turner to drive his wrecker in a proper and safe position on the highway.

When the cream truck became disabled on the highway, the driver of the truck requested his employer to send a wrecker out to tow the truck to its destination, and thereupon Cox, the owner of the truck, employed a third party, who was engaged in the business of operating wreckers, to perform this service. After starting upon the performance of the service for which he had been employed, the owner of the first wrecker, without the knowledge of Cox or C. L. Jones, substituted a wrecker owned by the said Jones to perform the service for which he had been employed. The service, or net result for which Cox contracted, was the removal of his disabled truck to its destination at Columbus. Jones’ wrecker in charge of his agent and employee undertook the performance of this service, and for the service Jones afterwards accepted payment in full from Cox. The evidence shows, as would be the natural conclusion from the circumstances, that the employee of Jones had full control of the details of the means and methods by which the service was performed, and that in the performance of his duties he was not subject to be controlled, or subject to the right of control, by Cox or the employee of Cox.

The obligation of the contract of Jones was to produce a certain net result by means and methods over which Cox and his employee had no control, and the contract between them was one “for service and not one of *695

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McMinn v. Lilly
60 So. 2d 603 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 So. 788, 177 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-dempsey-miss-1937.