Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Blakeney

43 Miss. 218
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 Miss. 218 (Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Blakeney) 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
Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Blakeney, 43 Miss. 218 (Mich. 1870).

Opinion

Tarbell, J.:

This suit was brought in the county court oí Tishomingo, in 1867, to recover the value of two cows killed by the cars of the plaintiff in error, in April of that year. At the August term, 1868, a trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff below, the jury assessing the value of the cows at $80. A motion for a new trial was overruled. On a hearing on appeal in the circuit court, the judgment of the county court was affirmed, and thereupon a writ of error was taken to this court. The bill of exceptions discloses the following facts:

W. R. Smith, a witness for plaintiff, testified that in April, 1867, he heard the cars of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad Company coming; heard the whistle once or twice, and then heard no more; thought the cars had run off the track; went down there, a very dark night, and took a lantern ; found two cows by the side of the track, bruised and mangled, as if they had been run over by the cars. One was lying thirty steps beyond the west end of the trestle, and the other about thirty steps further west; and going up the road about eighty yards further, found a third cow wounded. The train was going west, and moved off about the time he got to the road. He was three or four hundred yards from the [220]*220road when he heard the whistle ; thinks the whistle sounded ■ before the cars crossed the trestle. The road for one hundred and fifty yards east of the trestle is about level. The trestle is eighty yards long. One hundred and fifty yards east of the trestle a grade in the road commences and runs back one-fourth of a mile. Where the grade begins it is pretty steep, but gradually lessens toward the trestle, till within about one hundred and fifty yards of the trestle, when it becomes level.

Solomon Jones, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that at the moment of the accident he was one hundred and fifty yards northwest therefrom; heard the cars coming and heard the whistle; cars stopped and he went down. When he arrived they were throwing off a wounded cow. About forty yards east of this he saw another cow, dead; about thirty yards still further, saw a third cow, dead. It was daylight down; the moon was shining. The road was straight for over a quarter of a mile east from the accident. The road was level for about one hundred and fifty yards east of the accident, then up grade for one-fourth of a mile. The trestle is about eighty yards long. The road bed is clear of obstructions, but two feet from the ties the briers and bushes are thick — cows could run off the track by going through the briers.

John W. Blakeney, plaintiff, testified that two of the cows belonged to him — worth $45 and $35; total, $80.

Frederick Blakeney testified same as John W. Blakeney.

The defendant then introduced the engineer of the train in question, who testified that he was looking ahead for cattle; had a good headlight; of a bright night a headlight will not show more than fifty yards; it shows much farther on a dark night; did not see the cows till in about fifty yards of them; immediately sounded the signal to put on brakes ; knows the brakes were set because he felt the cars check; then immediately sounded the alarm whistle, and kept blowing to drive the cows off the track; thinks it was a bright night, but if the moon was shining, the spot where the cows were stand[221]*221ing was shaded, as the moon was not shining where the cows were; the cows were thirty or forty yards from the west end of the trestle, on the track, when thej were discovered; nothing could prevent striking them; was within fifty yards of them on an engine with four cars attached; could not he stopped on a level road short of one hundred and fifty to one hundred and eighty or two hundred yards; one quarter of a mile east of trestle a considerable down grade begins and continues to about where the cows were killed; was near the western end of trestle when first sounded alarm, about fifty yards from cows.

The conductor of this train testified that he set the brakes of one car immediately after the signal was sounded, and the brakesman set another; the alarm was also immediately sounded; an engine cannot be stopped with four cars attached, under one hundred and fifty yards; were running twenty miles an hour, schedule time.

Here the testimony for defendant closed, and this is all the material testimony in the case. As to the condition of the road, the witnesses substantially agreed. In fact, there was no essential difference or conflict between any of them.

All the instructions asked were given, one for plaintiff, eight for defendant, without objection or exception by either party.

A motion for a new trial on the ground that the jury found contrary to law and the testimony, was overruled, to which defendant excepted.

The jury could have derived little benefit from the instructions in this case. Indeed, the only legitimate instructions were so involved with unnecessary, if not improper, propositions, and these in such mischievous numbers, that the real questions for their consideration could scarcely have been understood by them. But as neither party objected or excepted, we shall consider only the question raised by the motion for a new trial, to-wit: Is the verdict in this case contrary to the law and the testimony ?

1. The law. Numerous decisions have defined the law [222]*222'beyond controversy. It is no longer open to discussion. So numerous and so uniform have been the decisions that it has been, almost literally, “line upon line, and precept upon precept,” so that railroad companies and residents along their roads, ought, by this time, to be well informed of their respective rights and duties.

Article 43, p. 299 of the Revised Code is as follows:

“ Every railroad company shall be liable for all damages which may be sustained by any person in consequence of the neglect or mismanagement of any of their agents, engineers, or clerks, or for the mismanagement of their engines.”

In an exhaustive opinion by a learned Associate, at the present term, the opinion of this court is thus stated :

“ A party asking damages under the 43 article of Rev. Code (above cited), must show some mismanagement or neglect on the part of the servants of the company, and that the injury resulted therefrom.” Raiford v. Mississippi Central Railroad Company. Opinion by Simrall, J.

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Related

N. O. & N. E. R. v. Jones
1 Miss. Dec. 206 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1886)
M. & O. Railroad v. Hudson
50 Miss. 572 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1874)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Miss. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-charleston-railroad-v-blakeney-miss-1870.