Hercules Powder Co. v. Tyrone

124 So. 74, 155 Miss. 75, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 264
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
DocketNo. 27968.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 So. 74 (Hercules Powder Co. v. Tyrone) 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
Hercules Powder Co. v. Tyrone, 124 So. 74, 155 Miss. 75, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 264 (Mich. 1929).

Opinions

J.W. Tyrone, a resident and citizen of Jefferson Davis county, Miss., filed suit in the circuit court of Pearl *Page 81 River county against the Hercules Powder Company, a Delaware corporation doing business in the state, and having its main office at Hattiesburg, in Forrest county, Miss.; the suit being to recover damages in the sum of three thousand dollars on account of a personal injury sustained by the plaintiff while working for the defendant. The plaintiff secured judgment for the amount sued for, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellant, Hercules Powder Company, has a large manufacturing plant located at Hattiesburg, in Forrest county, Miss., where pine stumps are ground up and the turpentine and resin are extracted therefrom. In order to secure pine stumps for the operation of this plant, the company establishes "camps" at various places within a radius of ten to seventy-five miles of Hattiesburg, and at these "camps" large crews of men are employed to blast the stumps from the ground, cut them up, and haul them to the railroad station. The appellant company also in connection with its "camps" operated a "dummy" or log line from the railroad to the "camps," and the plaintiff was employed as engineer upon one of the locomotives which propelled these cars from the camps to the railroad, upon which locomotive, as part of its equipment, there was a rubber or fiber hose several feet long, attached to an iron pipe directly connected with the boiler or steam chamber of the engine; the hose being there for the convenience of the engineer in washing and cleaning the engine. There were two methods of cleaning the engine, one to clean it with the hot water hose, and the other to clean it with waste and coal oil. This hose was several feet long and was composed of rubber and fiber, and was attached, at the time of the injury by being wrapped with wire; that is to say, the hose was attached to an iron nipple and was wrapped around with wire.

It is contended by the plaintiff, and substantiated by the testimony, that the proper way to fasten this hose *Page 82 to the nipple was to have clamps which could be tightened by means of screws when it should become loose or insecure. Plaintiff had been in charge of the locomotive for some time before the injury, and was an experienced engineer in operating locomotives. Seeing the method that was used in attaching the hose to the locomotive, and deeming it an insecure method, he used, ordinarily, the coal oil and cloth method of cleaning the engine, and preferred that method, which seems generally to have been preferred by owners of locomotives because the hot water and steam of the hose method tended to remove the paint from the locomotives and cause them to rust.

The engineer, plaintiff here, was employed by agents of the appellant, and was under the direction of a camp foreman, who, in turn, was under the direction of a superior officer in charge of all the camps. On the day of the injury, taking the plaintiff's version of it, the superintendent of the camps directed the plaintiff to take the hose and use the steam and hot water method in cleaning the locomotive thoroughly, as he was expecting a superior officer to visit the camp next day and wanted the engine in good shape. Plaintiff stated that he did not like to use the hose as he regarded it as unsafe, but that he was directed by the camp foreman to use it that day, and the camp foreman promised plaintiff to procure another hose for said locomotive on the following Monday. Plaintiff stated that, relying upon that promise, he used said hot water on said occasion, and while using it, the nipple slipped off and plaintiff was injured by the escape of hot water and steam, one of his eyes being severely injured, and that he suffered great pain, and was treated for his injured eye for several weeks.

There was testimony for the defendant which contradicted the plaintiff's statement about his being directed to use the hose on that occasion, and which tended to show that the method used in attaching the hose to the locomotive was a proper and safe method. *Page 83

The jury's finding adopted the theory of the plaintiff.

When the case came on for trial, the appellant moved to either dismiss the suit, or transfer it to appellant's principal place of business at Hattiesburg, in Forrest county, Miss. This motion was overruled, and this is assigned as error, constituting the first assignment of error.

Section 500, Hemingway's Code, 1927, chapter 166, Laws of 1908, reads as follows: "Civil actions of which the circuit court has original jurisdiction shall be commenced in the county in which the defendant or any of them may be found, and if the defendant is a domestic corporation, in the county in which said corporation is domiciled, or in the county where the cause of action may occur or accrue except where otherwise provided, and except actions of ejectment and actions of trespass on land, and actions for the statutory penalty for cutting and boxing trees and firing woods and actions for the actual value of trees cut which shall be brought in the county where the land or some part thereof, is situated; but if the land be in two or more counties, and the defendant resides in either of them, the action shall be brought in the county of his residence, and in such cases, process may be issued against the defendant to any other county. If a citizen resident in this state shall be sued in any action, not local, out of the county of his household and residence, or if a public officer be sued in any such action, out of the county of his household and residence, although a surety or sureties, or some of the sureties, on his bond, or other joint defendant, sued with him, be found or be subject to action in such county, the venue shall be changed, on his application, before the jury is impaneled, to the county of his household and residence."

It is contended by the appellant that granting the right of change of venue to a citizen constitutes a discrimination against it, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment *Page 84 to the Federal Constitution. It is also contended that the above-quoted statute discriminates against a foreign corporation as against a domestic corporation, and that appellant had the right to either have the cause against it dismissed or to have a change of venue to Forrest county, where its principal office existed.

This court was confronted with a similar contention in Morrimac Veneer Co. v. McCalip, 129 Miss. 671, 92 So. 817. In discussing this contention, at page 683 of the Mississippi Report, 92 So. 818, we said: "It is clear that the legislature in this last sentence was making provision for individuals, and not for corporations, and it was so understood and construed in Plummer-Lewis Co. v. Francher [111 Miss. 656, 71 So. 907], supra, and the court below refused the change of venue because of the announcement in the above case. It is insisted by the appellant that it comes within the purview of this clause, as it is legally a citizen resident of this state, and to deny it the same right to a change of venue as a natural person would render the statute unconstitutional, because obnoxious to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The appellant has cited no authority so holding, and we do not understand that the Fourteenth Amendment" to the Constitution "prevents the state from providing different rules as to venue as to corporations and individuals."

The appellant contends that these cases were decided prior to the time the supreme court of the United States decided the Power Mfg. Co. v. Saunders,

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 74, 155 Miss. 75, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hercules-powder-co-v-tyrone-miss-1929.