D & W JONES, INC. v. Collier

372 So. 2d 288
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1979
Docket51046, 51047
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 372 So. 2d 288 (D & W JONES, INC. v. Collier) 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
D & W JONES, INC. v. Collier, 372 So. 2d 288 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

372 So.2d 288 (1979)

D & W JONES, INC.
v.
Hampton COLLIER et al.
D & W JONES, INC.
v.
Wilbur COGGIN et al.

Nos. 51046, 51047.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 6, 1979.
Rehearing Denied July 18, 1979.

Robertshaw & Merideth, H.L. Merideth, Jr., Greenville, for appellant.

Mansour & Thomas, Stephen L. Thomas, Greenville, Robert L. Crook, Ruleville, Satterfield, Allred & Colbert, Michael S. Allred, Jackson, Campbell & DeLong, Roy D. Campbell, Jr., Lake, Tindall, Hunger & Thackston, Frank W. Hunger, Greenville, Shell, Buford, Bufkin, Callicutt & Perry, Charles L. Howorth, Jr., Jackson, Taylor Webb, Leland, for appellees.

Before ROBERTSON, LEE and COFER, JJ.

LEE, Justice, for the Court:

D & W Jones, Inc., a farming corporation, operated approximately five hundred (500) acres of commercial catfish producing lands at two (2) locations in Washington County. It filed two suits in the Circuit Court of that county against several defendants for damages resulting from killing or contaminating fish in said ponds through the use of poisonous agricultural chemicals applied by farmers and their crop duster agents. The defendants filed affirmative defenses of misjoinder of parties and misjoinder of causes of action and the trial court sustained those defenses. Jones amended its declarations, the same pleas were filed and were sustained in each case, Jones declined to plead further and final orders were entered dismissing the suits. The cases were consolidated for appeal to this Court, the same question being applicable to each of them. They are referred to as (1) Murphy Road Farm and (2) Highway 12 Farm.

The sole assignment, and question, is that the trial court erred in sustaining the motions of appellees to dismiss appellant's suits due to misjoinder of parties and causes of action.

Murphy Road Farm (No. 51,046)

The Murphy Road Farm consists of approximately four hundred (400) acres divided into nine (9) separate catfish ponds [two *289 hundred forty (240) acres of water]. In 1974, the appellee, Jimmy Hollingsworth, was engaged in the agricultural production of cotton and soybeans on lands adjacent to and north and west of appellant's lands. The appellee, Hampton Collier, in 1974, produced cotton on lands adjacent to and east and south of appellant's lands. Each of those appellees applied agricultural poisons during the crop year 1974, by equipment that operated on the ground and was called a "ground rig," and by airplane referred to as "aerial application."

The appellee, Valley Flying Service, was a corporation engaged in the aerial application of agricultural poisons and, on at least one occasion, applied such poisons to the lands of appellee, Jimmy Hollingsworth. The appellee, H.W. Lowery, was an individual aerial applicator and, on at least one occasion, he applied by aerial application agricultural poisons to the lands of the appellee, Hampton Collier.

The catfish in appellant's ponds either were killed or contaminated to the extent that they could not be harvested, they had to be removed from the ponds, and the ponds could not be used for the year 1975.

Highway 12 Farm (No. 51,047)

The Highway 12 Farm consists of approximately one hundred (100) acres of water. The appellees, Wilbur and Vernon Coggin, in 1974, conducted a joint farming operation for the production of cotton and soybeans on lands located on the north side of Highway 12 and north and east of the appellant's catfish ponds. The appellees, Edward Nerren and Owen Nerren, farmed jointly as Nerren Brothers and produced cotton, soybeans and catfish on lands north of Highway 12 and generally northeasterly of appellant's lands and on the east side of Sunflower River in Humphreys County. The appellees, Melvin Pearson and Linda Pearson, in 1974, farmed lands both north and south of Highway 12 and northeast and east of appellant's catfish ponds, their lands being located on the east side of Sunflower River and in Humphreys County.

The appellee, Edmond Franklin Duke, was an aerial applicator, d/b/a Duke's Flying Service, and he made an aerial application of agricultural poisons to the lands of the abovementioned appellees. Also, each of said farmer appellees applied agricultural poisons to their lands on a number of occasions with ground rigs. The catfish in appellant's ponds either were killed or contaminated to the extent that they could not be harvested, they were removed from the ponds and the ponds could not be operated for the year 1975.

Were the appellees in each case jointly and severally liable for the appellant's damages?

The declarations charged, or proof on the defenses is undisputed, as follows:

(1) The farmer appellees in each case in the application of agricultural poisons in 1974 acted independent of each other in that they conducted and carried on separate farming operations over which the particular appellee exercised management control without regard to any other appellee (except the appellees farming together and conducting the same farming operation).

(2) Each of the appellees knew, or should have known, that the appellant was engaged in the commercial production of catfish in the ponds on its lands in 1974.

(3) Each of the appellees in each case made applications of the agricultural poison described as Toxaphene within an area of one-half (1/2) mile to one (1) mile of the appellant's catfish ponds.

(4) That Toxaphene is highly toxic and deadly to aquatic life and particularly fish.

(5) That Toxaphene either from primary drift or secondary drift would escape out of the target area up to a distance of one-half (1/2) mile to one (1) mile, depending on the wind velocity and the distance above the crop that the poison was released.

(6) That the direction of the prevailing winds and the velocity of the prevailing winds either from primary or secondary drift either did or probably did move quantities of agricultural poison applied by the various appellees over and into the appellant's catfish ponds.

*290 (7) That each of the appellees knew that Toxaphene was highly toxic and deadly to aquatic life and fish.

(8) That the appellant used no Toxaphene on its crops in 1974.

(9) Each of the appellees, from past experience as agricultural producers either knew, or should have known, that the other appellees were likewise applying agricultural poisons toxic to fish on their respective crops for all practical purposes adjacent to the appellant's catfish ponds (Hollingsworth and Collier) and, in any event, within a distance not exceeding a mile (Coggin, Nerren, Pearson).

(10) Each of the appellees knew, or should have known, of the primary and secondary drift characteristics of the agricultural poison being applied; and that their acts in so doing would join with like acts of the other appellees and produce a combined, collective, cumulative and continuing threat to the health and quality of the appellant's fish; that the appellees impliedly acted in concert for a common purpose and a common goal, in applying the economic poisons to their agricultural crops adjacent to or in close proximity to, appellant's catfish ponds.

(11) That the appellant sustained a loss on both farms in 1974 and loss of production in 1975 in the approximate amount of three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000), as a direct result of the combined Toxaphene applications by appellees.

Appellant contends that joint and several liability rested on each appellee in each case for an indivisible injury.

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Bluebook (online)
372 So. 2d 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-w-jones-inc-v-collier-miss-1979.