Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Hicks

46 So. 360, 91 Miss. 273
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 46 So. 360 (Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Hicks) 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
Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Hicks, 46 So. 360, 91 Miss. 273 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Whitfield, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 28, 1905, Ray Hicks, a section foreman on appellant’s railroad, was working with his crew at a point about two or three miles north of Decatur Junction, in Newton county. The crew had stopped for dinner, but were still on the track and near it, when a mixed passenger and freight train approached, Immediately behind the locomotive were several [352]*352freight cars, and a passenger coach was on the back end of the train. The train was going north. Hicks and his crew were walking in the same direction; Hicks being further north than the rest of the crew, and on the east side of the track. He had stepped off a few feet as the train approached. About the fourth car from the locomotive, when it was at a point about two hundred and eighty feet from Hicks, left the track, and about four other cars were then derailed; two of them falling on the west side of the track, and three on the east side, on which Hr. Hicks was. The last derailed car seems to have remained on the cross-ties until it reached a point nearly opposite where Hicks was standing, and it then turned over, falling on Hicks and inflicting injuries from which he died in about three days. There were a passenger coach and a caboose in the train; the passenger coach being at the rear end, and the caboose immediately in front of the coach. These two cars were' filled with passengers on their way to a Baptist Association at Philadelphia, in Neshoba county. The coach and the caboose did not leave the track, and the passengers were unhurt.

It is shown by the testimony that the schedule fixed by this railroad, for its freight trains, was fifteen miles an hour; that it was a new road, and not ballasted, and hence necessarily rough; that this was the first train ever run over this road carrying passengers, and that the speed at which this first train was actually run was thirty to forty miles an hour; that the passengers were very much alarmed, at the excessive rate of speed, and were in great concern about it, just before the derailment occurred. We think'the testimony shows, with sufficient clearness, that this injury was due to the incompetency of the engineer, which would make the master itself liable, and the excessive rate of speed of this first passenger train over this new, unballasted, and rough road. There can be no reasonable controversy as to the injury being due to these two causes. The incompetency of the engineer is manifested by the very nature of the occurrence. “ Bes ipsa- loquitur ” fits it perfectly as [353]*353showing his gross incompetency. Hicks was a young man about twenty-eight years of age, in good health, industrious, and of good habits. He left a widow, twenty-seven years old, and four children, from two to eight years of age. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $7,500, and it is from this judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

Two suits were filed — one by Mrs. Hicks as administrate, and another by the widow and children. The administratrix bases her • claim upon the allegation that the wreck was caused by the negligence of the enginéer in charge of the locomotive running the train at an excessive rate of speed, and on the further fact that the said engineer carelessly, grossly, and recklessly, while the train was running at this dangerous and rapid rate of speed, suddenly checked the speed of the locomotive. This declaration sets out Hicks’ earning capacity at $100 per month, and that he was the sole support of his widow and children, and that he lingered for several days before he died in great agony. The declaration claimed $30,000 damages, and it is manifestly bottomed on § 193 of the Constitution of 1890. The second declaration, by Mrs. Hicks for herself and her children, proceeds upon the theory of the negligence of the defendant company in knowingly employing an inexperienced, unskillful, and reckless engineer, as the result of which the train was run at the excessive rate of speed, in view of the condition of the track; and, second, upon the negligence of the engineer, in that he suddenly and wantonly attempted to check the train, and upon the negligence of the defendant company in having improper and defective appliances, trucks of an improper gauge, so that the wheels did not properly fit the tracks, and flanges on the wheels of the first box car. which jumped the track which were worn, defective, and unsafe, and in not having good and sufficient brakes and brake shoes on the car which first jumped the track, so that its speed could be controlled, and in not having said car properly equipped with air brakes, etc. This declaration also claims $30,000 damages, [354]*354and is bottomed, manifestly, on § 3559 of the Code of 1892, wbicb is a rescript of § 193 of the Constitution of 1890, and on ch. 65, p. 82, of the Laws of 1898, as explained later herein. We may say at once, and so dismiss this matter, that the cause on the testimony is bottomed chiefly, if not exclusively, upon the negligence of the master in having in its employ a thoroughly incompetent and reckless engineer, and upon the willful and reckless conduct of this engineer in running this first passenger coach over this new, rough, unballasted road at this excessive rate of speed.

The learned counsel for the. appellant set up six defenses, in briefs which we have never seen surpassed, either in ingenuity or profound ability, and which we direct the reporter to set out, together with the very able briefs of learned counsel for appellees, in full, in order that railroad attorneys -having cases of like kind hereafter may first read these briefs and know whether they should trouble this court with the suits of that sort which they may have in hand. There ought not to be repeated suits brought to this court by appeal bottomed on the same grounds. Once we have determined a cause, the principles in that cause settled ought to be decisive of all other causes of like nature; and it is because of the exceeding ability and the extreme thoroughness of the briefs of the learned counsel for the appellant, which present-, it seems to us, every possible phase that- could be given to a case like this, that we thus direct their full publication for the guidance of railroad counsel, and other counsel, in the future, where similar cases arise.

Taking up these defenses in the order in which they are presented, the first is that the injury was an accident, pure and simple. We cannot accept this view. There is nothing improbable, or which might not reasonably be foreseen as logically likely to happen, in the connection between negligence, such as here shown, and derailment. It is true that the railroad company could not possibly foresee what particular person might be hurt, or in what particular manner he might be hurt; but [355]*355that is not determinative. The question is: Ought not the company reasonably to have foreseen that sending its first mixed passenger and freight train over this new, rough, unballasted road at a rate of speed nearly three times its schedule rate would necessarily result in derailment, or at least would most probably so result ? It is said in 21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, at page 487, that: In order, however, that a party may be liable in negligence, it is not necessary that he should have contemplated, or even been able to anticipate, the particular consequences which ensued, or the precise injuries sustained by the plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Franklin v. Franklin Ex Rel. Phillips
858 So. 2d 110 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2003)
Heather Nicole Franklin v. Cathy Phillips
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2001
Rampy ex rel. Rampy v. Austin
718 F. Supp. 556 (S.D. Mississippi, 1989)
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad v. Wroblewski
227 S.E.2d 438 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1976)
Stoner v. COLVIN, ET UX.
110 So. 2d 920 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1959)
Thames v. Mississippi Ex Rel. Shoemaker
117 F.2d 949 (Fifth Circuit, 1941)
Gulfport Creosoting Co. v. White
157 So. 86 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1934)
Hildebrand v. Chicago B. & Q. R. R.
17 P.2d 651 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1933)
Seaboard Air-Line Railway Co. v. Fountain
160 S.E. 789 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
New Orleans G.N.R. Co. v. Walden
133 So. 241 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1931)
Wickton v. Louisville & N. R.
45 F.2d 615 (S.D. Mississippi, 1930)
Parchman v. Mobile O.R.R. Co.
109 So. 665 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1926)
Alabama & V. Ry. Co. v. Thornhill
63 So. 674 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1913)
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Hare
61 So. 648 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1913)
Davis v. Florida Power Co.
64 Fla. 246 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1912)
St. Louis & S. F. R. v. Herr
193 F. 950 (Fifth Circuit, 1912)
Fuller v. Illinois Central Railroad
56 So. 783 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1911)
Taylor v. Prairie Pebble Phosphate Co.
61 Fla. 455 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1911)
Alabama & Vicksburg Railway Co. v. Groome
52 So. 703 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 So. 360, 91 Miss. 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-jackson-kansas-city-railroad-v-hicks-miss-1907.