McConnell v. Eubanks

193 So. 2d 425, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1286
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1966
DocketNo. 44173
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 193 So. 2d 425 (McConnell v. Eubanks) 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
McConnell v. Eubanks, 193 So. 2d 425, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1286 (Mich. 1966).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice:

John Malcolm Eubanks, Jr. died January 24, 1964, as the result of injuries received when the Volkswagen which he was driving collided with a trailer-truck, being driven by appellant Mid Thomas, Jr. on Mississippi Highway #26, a few miles west of Lucedale.

An action for damages was brought by Eubanks’ wife and children, under the pro[426]*426visions of Mississippi Code Annotated section 1453 (Supp.1964), sometimes referred to as the “wrongful death” statute, against appellants, Mid Thomas, Jr., the driver, and Aero Mayflower Transit Company, and James E. McConnell, Jr. and James W. McConnell d/b/a McConnell Transfer & Storage, about whose business Thomas was alleged to have been at the time.

This suit was filed originally in the Cir•cuit Court of Jackson County. That court entered an order dismissing as to Aero May'flower Transit Company, and granting a ■change of venue to the other defendants to the Circuit Court of Lowndes County. An ^appeal to this Court was attempted to be taken from this order, and that appeal was ■dismissed as premature, as reported in Eubanks v. Aero Mayflower Transit Co., 253 Miss. 159, 175 So.2d 169 (1965)

The plaintiffs entered a voluntary non-suit in the Lowndes County Circuit Court, and then refiled the same action in the Circuit Court of George County against all defendants, including Aero Mayflower Transit Company. That court likewise dismissed as to Aero Mayflower, and appellees have filed a brief as appellants from the order of dismissal. The case was tried in the Circuit Court of George County, before a jury which returned a verdict for the plaintiffs against the individual defendants in the sum of $35,000. From that judgment appellants have prosecuted this appeal and appellees have cross-appealed.

Aero Mayflower Transit Company has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal of the Eubanks heirs as to it, asserting that the former order of dismissal became final when plaintiffs voluntarily entered the non-suit, that the appeal was not timely, no bond has been filed, and no process has been served upon it. ■

Numerous grounds are assigned for reversal; but, in view of the conclusions reached upon the merits, it is necessary to notice only one. It is contended by appellants that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury and that the trial court should have sustained their motions to direct the jury to return a verdict in their favor.

The collision occurred about 5 :00 a. m. on January 24, 1964. It was a dark, foggy night and it was raining. The blacktop pavement of the highway was wet, and there was water puddled on the highway and water in the ditches.

The only surviving witness to the accident was appellant, Mid Thomas, Jr., driver of the tractor-trailer with which the Volkswagen collided. The substance of Thomas’, testimony was as follows: He had been driving trucks and trailers for ten years. On the occasion in question, he was proceeding in a westerly direction at a speed of about 30 to 35 miles per hour. He was in the north lane of the two-lane blacktop highway, his vehicle was north of the painted center line, and his lights were on. He saw the Volkswagen approaching from.the opposite direction when it was about 200 yards away. Its lights were on, and it was proceeding easterly and was in the south lane of the highway.

The Volkswagen passed the tractor portion of the tractor-trailer combination, but struck the van-type trailer near its center. Thomas felt the impact, instantly glanced in his rearview mirror and saw that the Volkswagen had struck the side of the van. At the time, he was in his proper lane. He brought his rig to a halt in about 75 feet. He put on his flashing lights and ran back to the Volkswagen, which was partly on the south shoulder and partly on the blacktop pavement. He found Eubanks pinned inside it. He ran to the nearest house, which was only a short distance away, and from there was sent to another nearby house where he asked the man who came to the door to call an ambulance and to notify the highway patrol. He then ran back to the scene, and flagged an approaching log truck, which stopped in the eastbound lane. He and the driver of this vehicle then attempted to get Eubanks out of the Volkswagen, but it was jammed and they were unable to do so. In [427]*427the meantime, some ten or fifteen cars had passed, a number had stopped, and some fifteen or twenty people were milling about the scene.

After a time, an ambulance arrived. By employing a long iron lever, supplied by the driver of the log truck, and said to be known in logging as a “cheeta,” the door of the Volkswagen was finally forced open, Eu-banks was extricated from inside, and placed in the ambulance. The ambulance backed into a small dirt or gravel road which left the highway on the south, at a point about eight feet in front of the Volkswagen, pulled out, and went back to town. This was a “turn off” road leading to the house of one Morris Scott.

The only other person who testified in the case who had any actual knowledge of the occurrence, although she did not see it happen, was a Mrs. Fuquay who lived about fifty feet off the highway, nearly opposite the place where the collision occurred. She testified that she had heard the impact. Her house was located in the intersection of the highway with the little dirt or gravel road which left the highway at a point about eight feet in front of the spot where the Volkswagen had come to rest.

She said she had been in her bed, which was right by a window, and, upon hearing the impact, she had immediately lifted the vénetian blind and looked out. She did not see the Volkswagen at first, but saw the trailer truck and said that, as she looked, it moved on about fifty or sixty feet and stopped. She said the truck was “just moving down the highway” and that “it wasn’t going too fast.” She also stated, “It was straight in the road, and she could tell because it had its lights on.” She went out and was there when the ambulance came and removed Mr. Eubanks from the Volkswagen. She said the ambulance pulled up the little road and got behind the car with the stretcher to take him out. There were a good many other people there too, who had stopped their cars and were milling around.

The ambulance driver testified that when he arrived, the Volkswagen driver was. “pinned in the car.” He further said:

“I found Eubanks sitting under the' steering wheel of the Volkswagen. His* feet were pinned with the clutch and the-brake pedal. The holes where the glass, was, the windshield and door was in on it, We couldn’t move him. We had to use iron pipe to prise some of the metal off to get his feet out and a couple of colored men and Mr. Morris Scott got ahold of the post of the Volkswagen by the door and pulled it back and we got him out on the driver’s side.” (Emphasis added.)

He parked his ambulance “in the middle of the road, pulled up beside the Volkswagen.” He turned the ambulance around in the little dirt or gravel road just in front of the Volkswagen, by backing the ambulance into it and then pulling out and heading back to town. He had remained parked by the Volkswagen until after he had! gotten Eubanks out and loaded him into the ambulance. The ambulance had come and gone before the highway patrolman arrived,' some fifteen or twenty minutes later. The ambulance driver corroborated Thomas in his testimony that they had used the iron lever to pry open the lefthand door of the Volkswagen on the driver’s side, in order to remove Eubanks.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 2d 425, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-eubanks-miss-1966.