Mobile & O. R. v. Campbell

75 So. 554, 114 Miss. 803
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 75 So. 554 (Mobile & O. R. v. Campbell) 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 & O. R. v. Campbell, 75 So. 554, 114 Miss. 803 (Mich. 1917).

Opinions

Stevens, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee as the plaintiff in the court below instituted this action against appellant to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him in a collision at Tupelo, July, 1914. Mr. Campbell was one of the regular engineers of the Frisco Railroad Company, and as such engineer had an earning capacity of at least two thousand four hundred dollars per annum. At the crossing in Tupelo, Miss., where plaintiff was injured, the Mobile & Ohio runs approximately north and south and the Frisco Railroad approximately east and west. Plaintiff was in charge of his Frisco engine doing switching on the Frisco Track at the point where it is intersected at right angles by the main line of the Mobile \& Ohio. The evidence for the plaintiff, and indeed the overwhelming weight of testimony, shows that Mr. Campbell at. the time of the collision was in possession of the crossing, and had been switching forward and backward at the crossing for some fifteen or twenty minutes prior to the collision. While thus upon the crossing the tender of Campbell’s engine was violently struck by several loose runaway cars of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company moving northward over the Mobile & Ohio tracks. The impact was so violent that Campbell’s engine was hurled some distance northward along the Mobile & Ohio tracks, and a bad wreck was left as a testimonial of some one’s negligence. The plaintiff in his declaration averred that he was operating his engine on the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad crossing in accordance with all the rules and regulations of his company, and that he was using due care and caution; that in doing his switching he had keen occupying that part of the track which crosses the Mobile & Ohio Railroad in the town of Tupelo for some [816]*816fifteen or twenty minutes; that in order to switch the cars it was necessary for him to move his engine to and fro on said crossing, and that while paintiff was thus engaged, one of the freight crews of the defendant company hacked or shoved a cut of loose cars in a- northerly direction from a point some hundreds of feet south of the crossing at a great rate of speed, which exceeded the limit allowed by law for backing a train within an incorporated town, and which exceeded the limit allowed for backing a train alongside a passenger depot; that the said freieht crew moved the Mobile & Ohio engine and cars in a recHess and .grossly negligent manner, and rushed the same upon the crossing without observing any care or, caution to prevent an accident, and collided with Mr. Camtpbell’s locomotive without giving warning oir without stopping; that when plaintiff became aware of-the sudden onrush of the freight train, it was too late to mjove his engine off the crossing, and in order to save his own life he was forced to jump- from his engine, and in doing so, fell upon a brick pavement in such way as to sprain his ankle, wrench his back, and permanently injure him. The defendant under its plea of the general issue gave notice that under section 1353, Code of 1906, it is the duty of any person running a locomotive propelled by steam upon or across the tracks of another-railroad to come to a full stop just before it approached the crossing tracks, and that the plaintiff had violated this statute by himself coming upon the crossing with his engine without coming to a full stop. Secondly, it gave notice that the plaintiff received his injuries as a result of his own negligence, in that he went upon the crossing without due care and caution and without observing whether or not the track was clear; and that defendant’s employees were flagging him in an effort to prevent his coming upon the crossing, and that plaintiff' failed to obey the signals. After issue joined, the cause was tried by the court and jury.

[817]*817The evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff fully sustained his contentions that he was upon the crossing some fifteen or twenty minutes prior to the time of the collision; that the locomotive and cars of the defendant company which collided with plaintiff’s engine were being operated at a high and dangerous rate of speed, estimated by the plaintiff’s witnesses from twelve to twenty-five miles an hour, all within the corporate limits of the city of Tupelo and along the regular passenger depot. The proof shows that the Mobile & Ohio train was engaged in switching; that the locomotive was not in charge of the regular engineer, but that the fireman with two negro brakemen had been directed to shove a cut of freight cars from the yard south of the crossing up the main line of the Mobile & Ohio tracks to what is termed the “house track.” The Mobile & Ohio locomotive was shoving these twelve cars in such way that it is difficult to determine whether the engine had been in fact securely coupled to the cars or not. The regular engineer at the time of the collision was some distance north of the crossing. The train also was not in charge of its regular conductor. The conductor; Mr. Underwood, had left his crew at the south end of the yard, with directions to the fireman to operate the engine and shove these loose ears up the line. The head brakeman and only white brakeman connected with the train, was also away from his post of duty, engaged in unloading freight at the freighthouse several hundred yards north of the scene of the accident.

The testimony shows that the acting engineer was a fireman, and nothing more than a fireman, and had never been licensed to operate an engine. The Mobile & Ohio engine, with the twelve freight cars, proceeded to move from one of the switch tracks of the Mobile & Ohio on to the main line, and proceeded north towards the crossing, and in doing so according to the plaintiff’s testimony, and according to the overwhelming testimony for both plaintiff and defendant, moved at a rapid rate of [818]*818speed variously estimated by the witnesses from five to twenty-five miles an hour. The witnesses for the plaintiff estimated the speed from twelve to twenty-five miles an hour. In moving at this rate of speed the train was approaching a prominent crossing, in the northwest angle of which was located the regular passenger depot at Tupelo. There is no question, then, about the fact that the train was being backed at a great and reckless rate of speed toward and along the regular depot, without being preceded by any kind of a flagman, and without stopping before going upon the crossing. The violent impact of the train with Campbell’s engine shows that the cut of cars was approaching the crossing at a rapid rate of speed. At that time there does not seem to have been a regular flagman at the crossing, but Conductor "Underwood, with flags in his hands, stood upon the crossing, and attempted to flag down or stop the fast-backing train, and thereby to avert a collision. The acting engineer in charge of the Mobile & Ohio engine reversed his engine in emergency, and in doing so,’ according to the defendant’s theory, “broke” some of the cars loose, and these loose cars were responsible for the collision. This is really the only excuse offered by the defendant for the collision.' It appears to be the theory ■of the defendant, and this is the argument of counsel, that the engineer, in attempting to stop, broke his train in two, and from this it is argued that no one could have averted the’ so-called accident. The proof, however, does not show that a coupling broke in two, but some of the defendant’s witnesses offered the theory that when the engineer reversed his engine, the draw-head of one car slipped over the other at a time when the cut of cars was nearing the crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 554, 114 Miss. 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-o-r-v-campbell-miss-1917.