Dement v. Summer

165 So. 791, 175 Miss. 290, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 3
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1936
DocketNo. 32072.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 165 So. 791 (Dement v. Summer) 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
Dement v. Summer, 165 So. 791, 175 Miss. 290, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 3 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

*299 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was seriously injured by being struck at the right-angled intersection of Sixteenth street and Twenty-third avenue in the city of Meridian, in the daytime, by an automobile driven northward on said avenue by the appellant Sarah Dement, an adult daughter of the other two appellants. We quote from the brief of appellants as, follows: ‘ ‘ The testimony of Miss Dement, driver of the car, and all the other witnesses who saw the accident, was succinctly this: That when they first saw the appellee he was standing in the street near the curbing. He had stepped off the sidewalk and was standing in the street looking for cars. ” It is undisputed that this was at the street intersection aforesaid, and Miss Dement stated on cross-examination that she saw the appellee standing in the street near the curbing at the street intersection just before she arrived in front of the Kimbrell house, which appears in the evidence to be about one hundred feet south of the center of the intersection. The testimony is that the automobile was traveling at the rate of from fifteen to twenty-five miles an hour and that appellee was struck when he was near the center of the pavement of Twenty-third avenue and while attempting to cross said avenue, the paved part of the avenue being thirty-three feet wide.

We have stated in the foregoing paragraph only enough of the facts to disclose the pertinency of what we shall hereafter say in regard to the argument to the jury. The stated facts, when taken in connection with the further facts developed in the record, are such that the peremptory instruction requested by appellant Sarah Dement was properly refused; and since the request for that instruction was made jointly in her behalf and that of her mother, the court was not required to separate them. We presume the separate or respective liability as between the daughter and mother was not *300 even argued to- the trial court, as it has not been here. We leave the question whether Mrs. Dement shall be entitled to a peremptory instruction entirely open, and for determination on a new trial, if such an instruction shall then be separately requested by her.

The separate request for a peremptory instruction in behalf of the appellant J. Y. Dement should have been, granted. To refuse it was to apply the; “Family Purpose Doctrine,” which has been definitely rejected in this state. Smith v. Dauber, 155 Miss. 694, 125 So. 102; Harrington v. Dough, 164 Miss. 802, 145 So. 621; Culpepper v. Holmes, 170 Miss. 235, 154 So. 726, and other cases cited in those opinions. Nothing that was shown here was sufficient to take the case out of these holdings, or to make either the adult daughter or the wife the servant or servants of the father and husband, who was not present and had no part in the alleged tort.

The assignment of error upon the refusal of the court to grant a new trial upon the newly discovered evidence presents a close question. Such a ground for a new trial is not favored by the courts, should be subjected to the closest scrutiny, and is to be sustained only in an extremely exceptional case when it has been made clear that the interest of justice definitely requires it. We have concluded, however, taking the entire transcript of the trial, that this case comes within the allowance of the rule in the interest of justice, and that the motion for a new trial should have been sustained. We do not pursue the discussion of this point further, because of the length necessary to properly deal with the next succeeding point.

The third point raised is one which has in some form been frequently presented in very recent years, and for that reason we have determined to deal with it more fully at this time, and so far as the present record will permit. The point has reference to the argument made to the jury by plaintiff’s attorney, wherein, without re *301 questing any instructions from the court and when not covered hy any instruction granted at the request of defendants, the attorney for plaintiff stated and argued to the jury a vital point of law which, as stated' hy him. was erroneous in substance, and which, if the same statement of the law as made by plaintiff’s attorney and in the form as stated by him had been contained in a written instruction granted by the court, would have amounted in practical effect to a peremptory instruction in behalf of the plaintiff, and would have constituted reversible error.

We have already noted, in effect, that the overwhelming weight of the proof is that the plaintiff had first reached the crossing and had proceeded a foot or two into the street and was looking to see if be bad an open way to get across, and this was before the automobile had reached that crossing. In his argument plaintiff’s attorney opened as follows:

“May it please the Court and you gentlemen of the jury: This is a case that Mr. Summer is willing for any twelve men to decide. We are not only willing for the first twelve men that came in this box to decide this case, but he is willing to rest his right to recover without a single instruction to this jury except the instructions asked for by the defendants. Now gentlemen, when a case is that plain there is not much use in using much time, it seems to me, in arguing. We are willing to rest our right to recovery without a single instruction except the instructions granted for the defendant. There is not a single instruction asked for by Mr. Summer in this lawsuit.
“Gentlemen, what are the theories in this case? I say under the law if you believe the testimony of Miss Dement and her very close and personal friends that went on the stand — now what is her statement about it? She says that when she was at Dr. Day’s down there she saw this man standing in the street, looking for a *302 chance to cross in safety. She saw that old man when his head was turned away from her, looking- to the north in the opposite direction from the one she was driving. She didn’t take her eyes off of it.
“Why, gentlemen, it is a law of the State that the first to the crossing has the right of way. It wasn’t a case of anticipating the presence of others, and that is the duty of anybody that drives an automobile to do that.”

At this point counsel for defendants did not object or interrupt upon the statement that it is the law of the state that, in regard to pedestrians and automobiles, the first to the crossing has the right of way. It is quite probable that the attorney for the defendants did not at once realize or appreciate what bearing this would have or what the attorney for the plaintiff would make out of the statement or how he would develop it as the argument progressed. But after what now, appears in the transcript as at a.

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 791, 175 Miss. 290, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dement-v-summer-miss-1936.