New Orleans Great Northern R. Co. v. Frazer

130 So. 493, 158 Miss. 407, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 62
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1930
DocketNo. 28865.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 130 So. 493 (New Orleans Great Northern R. Co. v. Frazer) 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
New Orleans Great Northern R. Co. v. Frazer, 130 So. 493, 158 Miss. 407, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 62 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

H. D. Frazer was plaintiff in the court below, and filed suit against the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Company in an action of slander charging, in the first-count of his declaration that a right of action had accrued to him because of the fact that J. I. Smith, while in the discharge of his duties as roadmaster, had wickedly and unlawfully, falsely and maliciously, charged and published, in the presence and hearing of various and sundry persons, that the plaintiff was a thief and had stolen funds and property of the appellant; and charging in the second count of the declaration that a right of action had accrued to him by reason of the fact that J. L. Gould, general superintendent, at the office of the company in the city of Bogalusa, Louisiana, in the presence and hearing of various and sundry persons, while Gould, superintendent of the aforesaid defendant, discharged his duties to the said appellant railroad-company, while acting within the scope of his authority, unlawfully, falsely, and maliciously published and charged that the plaintiff in his opinion had been stealing from the said railroad company, and demanded judgment in damages in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars upon each of the said counts.

The defendant pleaded the general issue to each of the counts, and gave written notice under his plea of the general issue of affirmative matter in avoidance and of special matter in bar of appellee’s cause of action, in *414 which it was alleged tliat the plaintiff was discharged by roadmaster J. I. Smith because of disobedience of the plaintiff to' the orders of his superior officers, and because he was not successful in maintaining a crew of men for his work, and that he left camp without permission and was guilty of insubordination to his superiors, and had threatened to do personal violence to roadmaster J. I. Smith, and also that, after he had been discharged, the plaintiff had made complaint to J. L. Gould, superintendent of said railroad, and was advised by Gould that the company would arbitrate any cause of complaint he had to make under the contract between the appellant and its employees engaged in the maintenance of the right of way.

It appears from the plaintiff’s version of the case that J. I. Smith, roadmaster, came to where the plaintiff, Frazer, was working his men in the service of the railroad company and stated to Frazer, the plaintiff, that after that day the railroad would not need his services; that on the next train a person would come to take his place as foreman of the crew, and to turn in his books and accounts to the company and turn the men over to the charge of the person named; that after paying off the men, it being a pay day, Smith and his companion left the crew and walked in the direction of Byram, where the crew maintained a camp; that this conversation with Smith took place about eleven o’clock and that plaintiff continued in charge of his men until twelve o ’clock, and then started on their motor car to the camp. In route to the camp they overtook Smith and his companion, who were taken on the motor car and conducted to the camp. Within a few feet of the place where Smith and his companion and Frazer and the crew got off the motor car, Frazer asked Smith why he discharged him, or why he was discharging him, to which Smith replied, in the hearing of the men, “for stealing.” That afternoon at one o’clock the assistant foreman took the men back to their work upon the track, while Frazer made up his time books *415 and accounts to turn in to tlie company, and quit work at four o’clock P. M. on that day in accordance with the direction of Smith.

The defendant’s witnesses testified that, when Smith came to where Frazer was working the crew, he called him away from the crew and told him that after that day they would not need his services any longer, and that a person would be up on the next train to take his place as foreman. They stated that Frazer then said, in substance, they had better not fire him for stealing, or that Frazer asked him if he was firing him (Frazer) for stealing, and he answered that he was not; that if he wanted any further information to go to' Mr. Gould’s office at Bogalusa. Smith also' testified that he directed him to turn the men over to the assistant foreman at twelve o’clock and to make up his books and turn them in. Plaintiff, Frazer, was asked on cross-examination as to conversation with Gould in the office of the railroad company at Bogalusa, Louisiana, the day following, and their elicited from him statements that Gould had said the railroad company had checked Frazer’s books several times, and they thought he was stealing from the company, and also that Gould had offered to submit the matter to arbitration under a rule of the company which gave an employee that right. The defendant in his testimony also testified to the existence of such rule, and offered the rule in evidence; the pertinent part of the rule to this controversy reading” as follows: “An employee disciplined or who feels unjustly treated shall upon making a written request to the immediate superior within ten days from date of advice, be given a fair and impartial hearing within ten (10) days thereafter and a decision will be rendered within ten (10) days after completion of hearing. Such employee may select a committee,of employees to assist at the hearing. . . . An employee dissatisfied with a decision will have the right to appeal in succession up to and including the highest official designated by the management to handle such cases, if *416 notice of appeal is given the official rendering tlie decision within ten (10) dairs thereafter. The right of employee to he assisted by duly accredited representatives of the employee is hereby recognized. If the charge against the employee is not sustained, it shall be stricken from the record. If by reason of such unsustained charge, the employee has been removed from position held, reinstatement will be made and payment allowed for the assigned working hours actually lost, while out of the service of the railroad, at not less than the rate of pay of position formerly held or for the difference in rate of pay earned, if not in the service. ’ ’

Smith, the roadmaster, denied the statement testified to by the plaintiff and plaintiff’s witnesses that he charged the plaintiff with stealing, or answered, at the time and place testified to by them, that Frazer was discharged for stealing. He and other witnesses testified that the cause of discharge was insubordination and for abusing his superior officers and for leaving camp without leave of the railroad company. It appeared from the testimony that Frazer’s mother-in-law had been sick some time prior to the discharge, and that Frazer had been granted permission to go home any week-end during said illness, provided the assistant foreman was left in charge of the crew. Frazer’s mother-in-law had died, and Smith’s testimony was that the leave to be absent only existed during' the illness and did not extend to other times; while Frazer’s testimony was to the effect that he was given permission to go home any week-end, provided the assistant foreman was left in charge of the camp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 So. 493, 158 Miss. 407, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-great-northern-r-co-v-frazer-miss-1930.