Johnson v. Richardson

108 So. 2d 194, 234 Miss. 849, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 559
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1959
Docket40952
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 108 So. 2d 194 (Johnson v. Richardson) 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
Johnson v. Richardson, 108 So. 2d 194, 234 Miss. 849, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 559 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

*853 Lee, J.

C. H. Johnson, plaintiff, in his declaration, charged that, on January 18, 1957, while he was operating his 1956 model Plymouth automobile in a westerly direction on Airline Road in Lowndes County, the defendant, Earl Richardson, operating his 1956 model Ford automobile in an easterly direction on said road, negligently drove his automobile across the center of said road and struck the plaintiff’s automobile with great violence, as a proximate result of which, he was seriously and permanently injured.

The defendant, in his answer, admitted that the automobiles were being operated in the directions and at the *854 time charged, but denied that he was guilty of negligence proximately causing or contributing to the collision. He made his answer a counterclaim and charged that he was the acting constable of District 3 of the county in the immediate pursuit of a suspected violator of the law and was operating an emergency vehicle, as provided by Sections 8148 and 8180, and other applicable provisions of the Code of 1942, Becompiled, with his siren sounding at maximum capacity, and driving on his right hand and proper side of the road; that the plaintiff and cross-defendant negligently continued to operate his automobile in a cloud of dust raised by the pursued motor vehicle; and that the plaintiff and cross-defendant negligently drove his automobile across the center and into the south, or defendant and cross-complainant’s side, colliding his Plymouth with the Ford of defendant and cross-complainant with such violence that the defendant and cross-complainant was seriously and permanently injured.

The cause was submitted to the jury, and it found a verdict for the defendant and cross-complainant in the sum of $20,000. From the judgment entered, Johnson appealed.

(1) The appellant contends that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

Johnson testified that just as he came off of the blacktop, he saw a car, operated by Jim Bradley, a Negro, at a speed of about seventy miles an hour, and that he pulled to the right in order to let it pass. A “ball of dust” was raised. At that time Johnson was going about thirty miles an hour, but, because of the dust, he cut down his speed and was then traveling at about fifteen miles an hour. He had his right wheels near the edge of the right side of the road when the Bichardson car came across the road onto his side and struck him. He heard no siren. In other words, at a time when he was driving properly on his right side of the road, Bichardson came across the road and hit him.

*855 Mrs. Ed. Fortner, her daughter Barbara, age seventeen years, and her younger son, Ellis, in front of whose home the collision occurred, testified that they heard the collision and went to the scene shortly afterwards. They saw some debris and chrome north of the center line of the road. The tracks of Johnson’s car went along the shoulder for fifty or sixty feet. Mrs. Fortner said that the debris which she saw was about a foot over the center. All of them said that they could not tell where the impact occurred. Mrs. Fortner and Barbara also saw some glass on the south side of the road. Ellis heard the siren as it was dying. Neal McCluskey testified that the debris from the cars, where, he took it, they hit, was north of the center line; and that Johnson’s tracks went through the debris and ang-led off. The Fortners knew Richardson only because of the fact that some time previously he had arrested their husband- and father.

On the other hand, Richardson testified that he was chasing the Negro, Jim Bradley, in his car because he thought it was being used to transport liquor, and that Bradley had driven recklessly in his presence; that the Negro was driving seventy to eighty miles an hour, and that he dropped back on account of the dust and in order to see which end of Highway 69 Bradley would take; that he cut his speed and stayed on the right shoulder, and Johnson’s car “floated” out of the cloud of dust, came across the center line at a forty-five degree angle, and ran into his car just behind the left front light, causing it to go forward only eight or ten feet and turn over on its side.

Will Perrigan testified that he heard the siren and that it stopped, and he heard the noise and saw a big dust. He hurried to the scene. The tracks showed that Johnson’s car went over to the south side of the road; that gravel was piled up and plowed back; that Johnson’s car then made a change of direction and the tracks led directly to his car; and that when the cars collided, Rich *856 ardson. was plowed off the south side and lacked only eighteen inches of being off the shoulder. A photograph, taken before the cars were moved, was introduced in evidence and the scene, as there shown, was testified to by both Richardson and Perrigan.

Woodfin Green testified that he heard the siren and that he arrived at the scene within one and a half minutes after the wreck occurred; that the Fortners were in their yard throwing up their hands and yelling; that they did not check the tracks of the car; that there was debris on the south side near Richardson’s car; that grass, etc. was on the fenders and wheels, showing that the right-hand wheels had been dragged down the side of the road; and that at the time one could not understand anything that Richardson said. He observed the physical facts and testified that the photograph accurately represented them. His evidence could reasonably be deemed corroborative of Richardson’s version.

This was the second trial of the case, and by reference to the transcript of the evidence on the first trial, certain answers were susceptible of perhaps showing a difference in the statements of some of the witnesses. Johnson had answered a number of questions by an investigator just after he got out of the hospital. The questions and answers were taken by a court reporter, and some of the answers therein were different from his testimony on the stand. However, he said that he could hardly talk at the time and that the inquisitor and the stenographer must have misunderstood what he said. Of course the credibility of the witnesses is judged by the jury.

The evidence being in sharp dispute, the issue was properly submitted to the jury; and this Court cannot say that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the great weight of the evidence.

(2) The appellant also contends that the trial court was in error in refusing his requested instruction *857 on Page 387 of the record. This was a peremptory that Richardson was not on an emergency mission and was ilot in pursuit of a criminal for the purpose of making an arrest. It is true that Richardson testified that he did not have information that the Negro, Jim Bradley, was transporting liquor on that particular day, but he also testified that Bradley was driving recklessly in his presence at the time. In the latter event, he was committing a misdemeanor in the presence of the officer, who, on that account, was authorized to make an arrest without a warrant. The jury was the judge as to which statement of Richardson should be believed. F. W. Woolworth v. Freeman, 193 Miss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 So. 2d 194, 234 Miss. 849, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-richardson-miss-1959.