Merchants Co. v. Tracy

166 So. 340, 175 Miss. 49, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 12
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1936
DocketNo. 32121.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 166 So. 340 (Merchants Co. v. Tracy) 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
Merchants Co. v. Tracy, 166 So. 340, 175 Miss. 49, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 12 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the night of January 2, 1934, between seven-forty-five and eight-thirty o’clock, or about that time, Gwen Tracy, while riding in an automobile being driven by her sister, Dean Tracy, was injured by a collision with a *55 commercial truck. The girls were driving south from D ’Lo and were within the city limits of Mendenhall when they met a truck going north; the truck did not turn to the right and give them room to pass; it struck the automobile in which appellee was riding and threw it from the highway. Appellee sued for her injuries, recovered a verdict on which judgment was entered, and appellant appeals here.

The facts as to the injury are not in dispute. As we view the evidence, there is a conflict as to the owner of the truck, the driver thereof, and whether at the time of the injury the truck was being driven in the course of the master’s business, and in the furtherance thereof.

On these points the evidence is about as follows: The truck which struck the car was being driven on the wrong side of the road; it did not stop, but continued north toward D ’Lo after the collision. Miss Dean Tracy testified that it was a large red truck, that she saw it going up the hill, and there was a big M in a circle painted on the side of the truck. She said that later that night she called Mr. Givens, the manager of the Merchants Company at Magee, by telephone and asked him if he had a truck out on that route, and he answered, “Yes”; that she then asked him what color it was, and he asked, “why,” but did not answer the question and disconnected the telephone after she told him the truck had run into her car.

J. M. Tracy testified that he had a conversation with Givens, and Givens told him that he had a truck out on that route that night but he did not think it was his truck which struck the Tracy car. Berry, a witness for appellee, testified that he heard a noise at the foot of the Westmoreland hill, that immediately thereafter a truck with a big M on it passed his home; that he had seen the truck before; that at the time a negro was driving it, and that he supposed it was loaded because it shifted gears going up the hill; that the truck was the property *56 of the Merchants Company which ran between Magee and Mendenhall every few days delivering goods.

Kennedy testified that he was in Magee around eight o’clock that night repairing a tire at a filling station which adjoins the warehouse of the appellant, and that he saw a truck being loaded in the warehouse, then he saw the truck leave and drive north, a colored man driving ; that the truck was red and had a big M on it. He stated that he left Magee going to Mendenhall and that about four miles north of Magee he passed the truck at the top of Combs Hill; that later on he stopped at Mr. Hilton’s house and the truck passed him about a mile from Mendenhall, and that when he arrived in Mendenhall the collision had occurred' and he heard of it, he supposed, about fifteen minutes afterwards.

Givens, the manager of the Magee branch of the Merchants Company, testified that the company sold canned goods, hay, and other products wholesale and made deliveries by truck to D’Lo, Mendenhall, Braxton, and other points. He testified positively that at that time his warehouse used only one truck and it was a faded blue one, and that the warehouse did not operate a red truck ; that the letter M in a circle was the insignia of the Merchants Company. He stated that the warehouse at Magee had only two drivers, both negroes; that Mr. Stockstill was the shipping clerk in the warehouse on the day of this collision; and that on that day several orders had been delivered to Braxton, D’Lo, and Mendenhall. Stockstill testified that he was employed in the warehouse as shipping clerk and it was his business to ship the orders on the truck; that the Merchants Company had only one truck at the Magee branch which was a blue International, and that truck had been engaged in delivering orders north at D ’Lo, Mendenhall, and Braxton until about four thirty or five o’clock p. m. and did not again go in the direction of Mendenhall that day but was sent to Hattiesburg about six o’clock p. m. with Steve Me- *57 Donald and R. T. Lee, the colored drivers, in control thereof. He remained in the warehouse until about eleven or twelve o’clock, when the truck returned from Hattiesburg with goods that had been ordered and which he checked in the next day; the truck was partially unloaded that night. He stated that the Magee branch did not have a truck in Mendenhall between seven-forty-five and nine on the night of January 2, 1934, and also that on that day his company did not operate a red truck from Magee.

The former night shipping clerk of the Merchants Company at Hattiesburg testified that on January 2, 1934, he loaded goods on the Magee branch truck for delivery at Magee; he did not know how many trucks were operated by the Magee branch; the one he loaded was blue. He stated that subsequently the Merchants Company had changed the color of its trucks to red. He said that two negroes, Steve and R. T., arrived in Hattiesburg on the evening of January 2d around seven o ’clock, that it took about an hour or an hour and a half to load, and that immediately after the truck was loaded to capacity it left the warehouse, and that he knew nothing about the wreck.

R. T. Lee, one of appellant’s truck drivers, testified that he was on the blue truck south of Magee on the night of the injury, either at Hattiesburg or enroute there, and his testimony corroborated that of Stockstill.

Two witnesses testified that they lived at Magee, and that on January 2, 1934, the Merchants Company there was using a red truck.

Appellant contends that the court below erred in refusing to grant it a peremptory instruction, because the proof fails to show that the truck involved in the collision was owned by the appellant, that said truck was being operated at the time by its agent or servant, and that the truck was being operated at the time in the scope of its employment and in the furtherance of itg *58 business, but that tbe proof affirmatively shows the opposite as to each of these propositions.

Appellant contends that the verdict of the jury is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

Appellant argues that the court erred in not ordering a mistrial when its objection to a question propounded by appellee’s counsel as to whether a witness being examined was employed by an insurance company had been sustained.

We are of the opinion that the court properly submitted all these questions of fact to the jury upon specific and proper instructions. It will be observed that the appellee’s witnesses were positive that the truck involved in the collision was a red one; two of the witnesses stated that it was appellant’s truck; three of them testified that it carried appellant’s insignia, the big’ M in a circle. Two other witnesses testified that on the date of this accident the appellant was operating a red truck in and out of Magee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 So. 340, 175 Miss. 49, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-co-v-tracy-miss-1936.