Harper v. Wilson

140 So. 693, 163 Miss. 199, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 28
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1932
DocketNo. 29927.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 So. 693 (Harper v. Wilson) 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
Harper v. Wilson, 140 So. 693, 163 Miss. 199, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 28 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*204 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, a minor child, by her next friend, filed suit against Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Dr. R. J. Wilson, and their servant Yirner Roberts, and Mr. John T. Chisolm, for a personal injury resulting from a collision between a truck owned by Mrs. R. J. Wilson, driven by Yirner Roberts, and a truck owned and being operated by Mr. John T. Chisolm. The truck owned by Mrs. Wilson was proceeding along the public highway between her residence and the city of Meridian transporting a bunch of negro cotton pickers to Meridian, among whom was the plaintiff, a thirteen year old girl.

The declaration alleges that Teresa Harper, with others, had been transported from Meridian to the Wilson plantation in the truck, and that they had picked cotton for Mrs. Wilson at sixty cents a hundred pounds, and, when the work was over, the plaintiff was transported back in the truck to Meridian with the other cotton pickers. It was alleged that Yirner Roberts, the driver of the truck, was a reckless, careless, and negligent driver, and that Mrs. Wilson and her husband knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care could have known, that fact; that Yirner Roberts, being such a reckless, careless, and negligent driver, would frequently operate the truck at a highly negligent and dangerous rate of speed to the knowledge of Mrs. Wilson and her husband.

It was averred that on the day of the injury, soon after the plaintiff got into the truck, it began to move at a very *205 rapid rate of speed in a southerly direction, and, while said Virner Eoberts was so operating the truck on and over the public highway at a high and dangerous rate of speed, there was only one light burning, and the truck was zigzagging from one side of the road to the other when it met a truck operated by Mr. John T. Chisolm, moving in an opposite direction, with only one light burning, in violation of the law.

Mr. Chisolm pleaded the general issue. Mrs. Wilson and Dr. Wilson pleaded the general issue, and a special plea alleging that the plaintiff, Teresa Harper, was a fellow servant of Virner Eoberts at the time the injury occurred, and that the defendants were not liable for her injury by reason thereof.

The testimony is very conflicting about how the injury occurred. It was testified to by some of the witnesses that the Wilson truck was being driven at a rapid rate of speed, some placing it at fifty or fifty-five miles- per hour, some between thirty and- forty miles per hour, and Virner Eoberts placing it at twenty to twenty-five miles per hour. Some testified that the Wilson truck was being operated headed in the direction of Meridian, being on the right-hand side of the road, and that Chisolm was on the same side of the road, coming from Meridian. Some of the witnesses testified that both trucks, the one driven by Virner Eoberts and the one driven by Mr. Chisolm, were on the left-hand side of the road.

' Mr. Chisolm and another white man in the truck with him both testified that Chisolm was on the right-hand side of the road going from Meridian, and his car was proceeding on an up grade at a very slow rate, sis or seven miles per hour; that he had one light only on the right-hand side, and that the Wilson truck approached at a very high rate of speed on the same side of the road, going toward Meridian; that he was attempting to turn his car to the right, but was struck by the Wilson truck coming at a high rate of speed, with only one light burning.

*206 Mr. Chisolm also testified that he first saw the Wilson truck at about thirty yards distant, and Mr. Hurt, the man with Mr. Chisolm, testified to the same effect.

The driver of the Wilson truck, Virner Boberts, testified that his truck was equipped with two lights, and they were burning, and that he saw the Chisolm truck about three hundred yards distant, but that it was on the right-hand side of the road, and that, about the time he saw it, Mr. Chisolm began to pull out into the road, and he turned to the left to avoid running into the Chisolm truck. Another witness on the front seat of the Wilson truck with Virner Boberts testified that he did not see the Chisolm truck until within twenty feet of it, that the Wilson truck was on the right-hand side of the road, and had only one light burning, and that he did not see any lights at all on the Chisolm truck.

One witness testified that, when the truck was loaded at the Wilson plantation, it had only one light burning, and that it had only one light burning at the time of the collision; also that he saw the truck on Saturday night previous to the accident on Tuesday, and it had only one light burning. He further testified that he saw the truck on Tuesday morning, about four o’clock in the morning, and it had only one light burning. Several witnesses testified that the Chisolm truck had no lights burning.

Witnesses who went to the scene of the accident the following morning and made observations testified that the Wilson truck had not been moved when they made the observations, and that the Chisolm truck was just starting to be moved when they appeared on the scene, and that the tracks made by the Wilson truck were some distance, between six and twelve inches over the gravel, and was on the “left hand side to where the Wilson truck was going,” going in the direction of Meridian with the left wheels off of the gravel, and both trucks were on the same side of the road, which is the east side of the road, the road running from northwest to southeast.

*207 Testimony as to the employment of the plaintiff, Teresa Harper, is merely that she was hired to pick cotton at sixty cents per hundred pounds, and that she was a girl about thirteen years of age, without previous experience in picking cotton, and that she was transported, with other cotton pickers, as a part of her employment, and that there was some difference in amount between cotton picking rates for persons who were transported to and from work and those who were not so transported.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the plaintiff took a nonsuit against Dr. Wilson, it being shown that he was not the owner of the truck, and that Mrs. Wilson owned the truck and owned the plantation, and employed the cotton pickers thereon. On motion, the court granted a peremptory instruction in favor of Mrs. Wilson, but submitted the issue to the jury as to Virner Roberts and Mr. Chisolm, and the jury returned a verdict against Virner Roberts and in favor of Mr. Chisolm.

The appellant, Teresa Harper, assigns as error the granting of the peremptory instruction in favor of Mrs. Wilson, and complains of the admission of evidence and the giving of certain instructions in favor of Mr. Chisolm, and the rejection of evidence offered by the appellant. Í

It is argued by the appellant that the proof does not show that plaintiff was a fellow servant of Virner Roberts, but that she was an independent contractor.

We are of opinion that the independent contractor theory is not maintainable on the facts of this case. The plaintiff was a girl thirteen years of age, without previous experience, and had no definite contract, except that she was to pick cotton and receive therefor sixty cents per hundred pounds.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 693, 163 Miss. 199, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-wilson-miss-1932.