Nicholson v. Gulf, Mobile & Northern R. Co.

172 So. 306, 177 Miss. 844, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 168
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1937
DocketNo. 32536.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 172 So. 306 (Nicholson v. Gulf, Mobile & Northern R. Co.) 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
Nicholson v. Gulf, Mobile & Northern R. Co., 172 So. 306, 177 Miss. 844, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 168 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was seriously injured at Jackson, Tenn., in a collision between a truck on which he was riding, *849 and a freight train operated over the tracks of the Gulf, Mobile & Northern Railroad Company. Paul Coleman, the driver of the truck, was a resident of the city of Jackson, in Madison county, Tenn., and, at the time of his injury, the appellant was temporarily a resident of the city of Jackson, Tenn., but shortly thereafter he returned to his former home at Booneville, in Prentiss county, Miss.

After the appellant had re-established his residence in Prentiss county, Miss., he filed this suit in Tishomin-go county, Miss., against the Gulf, Mobile & Northern Railroad Company and Paul Coleman, the driver of the truck on which he was riding when he was injured, seeking to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the concurring negligence of the said defendants. Personal service of summons on the defendant Coleman in Tishomingo county was secured under circumstances hereinafter stated.

Pleas to the jurisdiction of the Tishomingo county court were filed by each of the defendants. The plea of the defendant Coleman alleged', in substance, that he was not legally found and served with process in Tishomingo county; that he had never resided in the state of Mississippi, but had continually been a resident of the state of Tennessee; that when he was induced to come into the state of Mississippi, he did not know that any suit was contemplated against him; that he was carried to Tishomingo county without his consent, and against his will, by stratagem, subterfuge, and deceit for the wrongful and fraudulent purpose of securing service of process on him in that county. The plea set forth at length the facts alleged to constitute fraud, not only upon the defendant but upon the court.

The plea of the defendant railroad company, after alleging the facts as to the residence of the parties, alleged that either the defendant Coleman was carried into Tishomingo county through fraud, trickery, strata *850 gem, and deceit, for the purpose of securing process on him in that county, or that he was carried [here through a fraudulent agreement entered into by and between the appellant and his attorney, on the one hand, and the said Paul Coleman, on the other, as a result of a fraudulent conspiracy on their part, to the end that the said Coleman would go to Tishomingo county and fraudulently permit service of process on him in an effort to fraudulently acquire jurisdiction of the defendant railroad company in the court of that county. It was further averred that in neither event did the court acquire jurisdiction of the railroad company, for the reason that if the said Coleman was carried into the county by subterfuge, trickery, or fraud, no jurisdiction was acquired of him, and, therefore, none was acquired of his joint defendant, the railroad company; and, furthermore, that if the appellant, his attorney, and the said Paul Coleman entered into a fraudulent conspiracy to carry the said Coleman into the county for the purpose of thereby acquiring jurisdiction of the defendant railroad company, this was a fraud both on the court and the railroad company, being a fraudulent and unlawful attempt to defeat the statutes of the state of Mississippi relative to venue and jurisdiction in such matters.

Upon the evidence offered at the hearing of these pleas, the court held that the defendant Paul Coleman had not been carried into Tishomingo county through trickery, subterfuge, or deceit against his will, hut that he had voluntarily gone into that county through an agreement with the plaintiff and his attorney; and his plea to the jurisdiction was overruled. As to the plea of the defendant railroad company, the court held that the undisputed facts show that, by collusive agreement with the appellant, who then resided in Prentiss county, Miss., the defendant Coleman came into Mississippi and Tishomingo county, and there submitted to the service *851 of process solely and only for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction upon the circuit court of Tishomingo county against the defendant railroad, which did not have any line of railroad in that county, nor any office or agent in that county on whom process could be served, and that this constituted a fraud upon the court which required a dismissal of the suit as to the railroad company. This appeal is prosecuted from the order of the court dismissing the cause as to the railroad company.

On the day before the declaration in this cause was filed, in response to a telephone call from the defendant Coleman, the attorney of record for appellant, his son, and the son of appellant, drove to Jackson, Tenn., to interview Coleman. In this interview it was arranged that Coleman and his wife would go with them to Mississippi to spend the night at the home of the appellant, and that they would be returned to Jackson, Tenn., the next day in the attorney’s automobile. This arrangement was carried out; and on the following morning Coleman and his wife started on the return trip in the said attorney’s automobile, driven by an employee of the attorney, and accompanied by a son of the appellant. The automobile did not proceed on the direct route to Jackson, Tenn., but went to Iuka, the county seat of Tis-homingo county, where the declaration in this cause was filed by the driver of the automobile, and service of summons on Coleman was had. The party then proceeded to Coleman’s home in Jackson, Tenn.

The foregoing facts are undisputed; but Coleman and his wife testified that they merely came to Booneville, Miss., for a visit with the appellant, upon the promise that they would be returned to their home in Jackson, Tenn., on the next day; that until they discovered themselves at the courthouse in Iuka, Miss., they did not know that a suit against Coleman was contemplated; that they were not familiar with the roads from Jackson, Tenn., to Booneville, Miss., and did not realize that *852 they had been carried into Tishomingo county until Coleman learned that fact after arriving at Iuka, Miss. Coleman and his wife denied that they agreed to go to Iuka for the purpose of having process served on Coleman, hut asserted that the presence of Coleman in Tish-omingo county was secured by fraud and trickery, and without his consent.

The several parties who accompanied Coleman and his wife on the trip from Jackson, Tenn., to Mississippi, and returning therefrom, denied that the presence of Coleman in Tishomingo county, Miss., was secured by trickery, stratagem, or deceit, and they testified that he came into Mississippi and Tishomingo county under a distinct agreement that he would do so for the express purpose of submitting to process in that county, in order to acquire jurisdiction in that county against the railroad company.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 306, 177 Miss. 844, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-gulf-mobile-northern-r-co-miss-1937.