Graves v. Gulf S.I.R. Co.

110 So. 234, 146 Miss. 130, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 43
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1926
DocketNo. 25693.
StatusPublished

This text of 110 So. 234 (Graves v. Gulf S.I.R. 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
Graves v. Gulf S.I.R. Co., 110 So. 234, 146 Miss. 130, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 43 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

*136 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, who was a minor, instituted this suit, by next friend, against the Gulf & Ship Island Railroad Company, seeking to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him, as a result of a collision between a motorcar, on which he was riding, and a gravel train which was being operated by said company; and, from a verdict and judgment in favor of the railroad company, this appeal was prosecuted.

The declaration charged that the appellant was employed by the appellee, as a laborer in a section crew, and was required to work under the directions and orders of the section foreman, who was in charge of said crew; that, while riding on a motorcar which was furnished by the appellee for the use of said crew in the discharge of their duties, there was a collision between said motorcar and gravel train being operated by appellee, which resulted in the motorcar being knocked from the track and onto the appellant, breaking his leg and otherwise seriously injuring him; and that such collision was the result of the negligence of the defendant railroad company in the operation of the gravel train, and the gross negligence of the section foreman in the operation of the motorcar, in ordering it to be moved in the direction of the gravel train, at the time and place of the injury.

To this declaration the appellee filed a plea of the general issue and a special plea setting up that the appel-lee was engaged in interstate commerce and the appellant was so employed at the time of his injury, a plea of assumption of risk, and a plea of former judgment and payment thereof as a bar to the action. By consent, it was agreed that the parties were engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the injury and that the Federal *137 Employers’ Liability Act (U. S. Comp. St., sections 8657-8665) controls as to liability, while issue was joined on the plea of assumption of risk. To the plea of former snit and judgment, a replication was filed denying that appellant had ever employed or authorized any attorney or other .person to bring or file said suit, and averring, among other things, that he had no knowledge whatever of said suit or judgment; that the declaration therein was prepared and the case altogether conducted by the agents, attorneys, and representatives of the appellee, without the knowledge or consent of the appellant; that the declaration therein and the pleas thereto were filed on the same day by attorneys representing the appellee company, and the judgment of the court was entered on the same day; that no attorney or other person representing appellant had any right or authority to institute said suit or to agree to the entry of judgment thereon; that appellee did not pay appellant the sum of five hundred dollars, the amount of such judgment, or any other sum; that the alleged payment of five hundred dollars was made to appellant’s father and mother, hut nothing was ever received by appellant; and that the said suit and judgment was fraudulent and void. To this replication a rejoinder was filed, joining issue on the matters specially pleaded therein. On the trial of the several issues, a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant company, and from this judgment this appeal was prosecuted.

As to the circumstances of the injury, the appellant testified that he was about eighteen years of age, was employed as a section laborer, and, at the time of the injury, was riding on a motorcar going south on the main line of the railroad; that this motorcar was being driven at the rate of about thirty-five or forty miles per hour, and that he was sitting on the front seat thereof; that, upon rounding a sharp curve, they unexpectedly came upon a gravel train running north at about the same rate of speed; that when he first saw this gravel train, it was *138 only thirty yards away; that, upon discovering the approach of this train, the section foreman suddenly applied 'the brakes on the motorcar with such force that the car was suddenly jerked and slowed down, thereby causing the appellant to be thrown in front of the car, that the car ran over him, breaking his leg and otherwise injuring him; and that the motorcar was knocked some eight or ten feet off the track by the gravel train.

For the appellee, the testimony is to the effect that the gravel train was about one thousand or twelve hundred feet away at the time .it was first seen by those on the motorcar; that the appellant voluntarily jumped off in front of the motorcar while it was running, and was injured ; that the motorcar was stopped and removed from the track when the gravel train was still about three hundred feet away; and that the appellant’s injury was due solely to his act in voluntarily jumping off the motorcar while it was in motion.

The prior proceedings, which were pleaded in bar to the present suit, were filed in the Second district of Jones county, while the appellant resided with his parents in Covington county, and, upon the issue as to whether this suit was filed, in good faith, under the authority of the appellant, acting by and through his father, as next friend, the evidence is conflicting. The testimony for the appellant was that neither he nor his father, acting for him, had authorized any one to file such suit, and that they had no knowledge of the filing thereof or the entrj of the judgment thereon, and that the appellant received no part of any payment that may have been made in settlement of such judgment. For the appellee, there was testimony that the father of appellant, acting as next friend, authorized the filing of said former suit, and the settlement thereof at an agreed sum of five hundred dollars; and that the declaration in said suit was read to and signed by the appellant’s father, and the money paid to him.

*139 Appellant assigns numerous grounds for reversal of the judgment of the court below, but we will considei only one, and that is the granting of the second instruction requested by the appellee. In response to the argument of counsel for appellant, the appellee contends that the judgment should be affirmed, regardless of any errors in the instructions, for the reason that the appellee was entitled to a peremptory instruction at the conclusion of the evidence. The grounds upon which the- ap-pellee contends that he was entitled to a peremptory instruction are first, that there was a variance between the pleadings and the proof; and, second, that appellant assumed all the usual, normal, and ordinary risks of his employment, which included the risk of meeting approaching trains and the risk of being precipitated from the ears by the sudden application of the brakes which might be necessary to avoid collisions with such trains; and that the facts, as testified by appellant, failed to show anything unusual or negligent in the operation of the motorcar, or in the manner of applying the brakes and stopping the car.

"While the averment of the declaration as to the manner in which the appellant was thrown under the motor-ear differs somewhat from his testimony on this point, this variance cannot here aid appellee’s cause for the* reason that the motion to exclude the evidence and grant the appellee a peremptory instruction was not based upon a variance in the allegations of the declaration and the proof.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 234, 146 Miss. 130, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-gulf-sir-co-miss-1926.