Dixon v. Southern Railway Co.

71 So. 306, 111 Miss. 144
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 So. 306 (Dixon v. Southern Railway Co.) 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
Dixon v. Southern Railway Co., 71 So. 306, 111 Miss. 144 (Mich. 1916).

Opinions

Holden, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was filed in the circuit court of Alcorn county by W. L. Dixon, administrator of the estate of Luther Dixon, deceased, against the Southern Railway Company, for damages for the alleged killing of the said Luther [145]*145Dixon by one of its trains in July, 1913, in McNairy county, Tenn., about one-half mile east of Pocahontas. The suit for damages was based upon paragraph 4 of section 1574 and sections 1575 and 1576 of Shannon’s Code of the state of Tennessee; the alleged hilling having occurred in the state of Tennessee. The said Tennessee statutes in question read as follows:.

Section 1574, subsec. 4, is as follows:

“Every railroad company shall keep the engineer, fireman, or some other person upon the locomotive, always upon the lookout ahead; and when any person, animal or other object appears upon the road, the alarm whistle shall be sounded, the brakes put down, and every possible means employed to stop the .train and prevent the accident. ’ ’

“Sec. 1575. Failure to Observe Precaution.— Every railroad company that fails to obesrve these precautions, or cause them to be observed'by its agents and servants, shall be responsible for all damages to persons or property occasioned by, or resulting from, any accident or collision that may occur.

“Sec. 1576. Observance of. — No railroad company that observes, or causes to be observed, these precautions shall he responsible for any damage done to person or property on its road. The proof that it has observed said precautions shall be upon the company.”

After the plaintiff in the court below, appellant here, had introduced all of his evidence at the trial, the defenddant railroad company, appellee here, moved the court to exclude the testimony' offered by the plaintiff and grant a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for the defendant. The circuit court excluded the testimony, and granted the peremptory instruction for the defendant,

from which action the appellant, Dixon, appeals here, and urges that the lower court erred in granting the peremptory instruction.

[146]*146The plaintiff below proved his case by testimony in substance as follows: Luther Dixon, deceased, a young farmer, left Memphis and came to Pocahontas on the defendant’s train which arrived there at about one o’clock in the morning. He got off of the train at Pocahon- , tas. ' He had two bottles with him. He was last seen alive at this station, on the south side of the track, at one o’clock in the morning. Plis wife was spending that night at her mother’s house two miles east of Pocahontas, and the nearest way to where his wife was spending the night was to go up the railroad track east. The next morning he was found dead on the defendant railroad’s right of way, about six or eight feet from the track, about one-half mile east of Pocahontas. His back and the back of his head were badly bruised, and his arm broken. At the place where his body was lying the track was built on a high fill or dump ten or twelve feet high. His feet were nearly at the bottom of the dump, and his head resting up the bank. The weeds for a distance of six ■or eight feet were knocked down and bent over toward where his body was lying; the weeds bending in a southwesterly direction from a northeasterly direction. On the ■end of the cross-ties of the track pieces of broken bottle glass were found, which was about thirty feet in a northeasterly direction from the body. Several trains of the defendant railroad passed along this track between the time deceased was last seen at Pocahontas station and the time his body was found the next morning. Some time that night after one o’clock a light (loose) engine with a bad headlight passed along this track going west. A witness by the name of Thomas Moreland, introduced by the plaintiff, testified that he had lived on the railroad •and had seen a good many persons and stock knocked off by trains, and that he examined the ground and the surroundings and the weeds near the body of the deceased, Dixon, and that he could tell from the way the weeds were bent over toward the body that the deceased was knocked off the track by a train; that he could tell that this was [147]*147the way it happened as he conld see where he hit the ground and rolled over the weeds like a yearling or large hog had been knocked off by trains. An objection to part of the testimony of this witness, Moreland, was sustained by the court, and the appellant excepted.

Under the statutes of Tennessee set out above the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff in the court below to show by competent testimony that the deceased, Dixon, had appeared upon the track in front of a moving train, by which he was struck and killed. Proof that he was killed by the running of locomotive or cars of the railroad company is not sufficient, under the Tennessee statute, unless the testimony also tends to show that the deceased appeared as an obstruction upon the track when he was killed. This construction of the statute in question is well settled by the courts of Tennessee. Boiled down, the vital question and test here is whether or not the plaintiff in the court below introduced any substantial proof, by circumstances or otherwise, tending to show that the deceased was struck and killed by the front end of a moving train of the appellee railway company. Many' cases are cited by counsel on both sides to sustain their respective contentions here, but it will be observed, upon reading these different cases, that the facts in the cases cited are different, and in none of them are the facts precisely the same as in the case before us now. Therefore, in passing upon the question of the correctness of the decision of the court below in granting the peremptory instruction for the defendant railway company, we must look to the facts in this particular case alone to guide us in our conclusion, as each case must stand upon its own facts.

In the case of Railroad Co. v. Salmon, Administrator, 2 Higgins, 721 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee), which is a recent decision, the court of Tennessee said:

‘ ‘ The contention below, and the one ably and earnestly pressed upon us here, is that the defendant in error had failed to introduce any substantial proof to the effect [148]*148that the déceased had appeared upon the track in front of a moving train as an obstruction. It is undoubtedly true that the burden was upon the defendant in error to-adduce evidence directly or indirectly showing this fact. It was not incumbent upon the railroad company to observe the precaution prescribed by the statute until the deceased did appear upon the track in such a manner as to become an obstruction; . . . and it is not required to show observance of the statutory precaution until that is shown, or introduction of evidence tends to show it. The statement of the question shows that it is one of fact, and courts certainly should, hesitate to invade this domain and 'decide the issue. It is the duty of the court, however, to determine whether or not there was adduced any material facts or circumstances upon which a jury could found a verdict. If the testimony he made up of possibilities and conjectures, the question should not he submitted to the jury. On the other hand, if there are facts, surroundings, and circumstances from which a jury could, following the logic of the layman, draw the inference that the deceased was as a matter of fact upon the track, the trial judge should submit the case to the jury.

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Related

Margie Gilreath v. Southern Railway Company
323 F.2d 158 (Sixth Circuit, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
71 So. 306, 111 Miss. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-southern-railway-co-miss-1916.