Oliver v. Miles

110 So. 666, 144 Miss. 852, 50 A.L.R. 357, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 420
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1926
DocketNo. 25964.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 110 So. 666 (Oliver v. Miles) 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
Oliver v. Miles, 110 So. 666, 144 Miss. 852, 50 A.L.R. 357, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 420 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Ethridge; J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lee Miles, the appellee, was plaintiff in-the court below and filed suit against the appellant, L. S. Oliver, and Gordon Shamburger, for one hundred ninety-nine dollars, his damage for an injury inflicted upon his son, Lavell Miles. The suit originated in a justice of the peace court, and judgment was rendered there in favor *856 of Lee Miles for the amount sued for, from which judgment both Shamburger and Oliver appealed to the circuit court, where the case was tried anew.

It appears from the evidence that Shamburger and Oliver had gone out into the country near Collinsville, northwest of Meridian, to hunt birds. They were traveling in a ear and passed the boy, Lavell Miles, a short distance from where they stopped the car and got out and went in a westerly direction from the highway, to a point where their dogs had located a covey of partridges. When they approached this place, the partridges, instead of flying in the opposite direction, flew over their heads and across the public highway, and Oliver and Shamburger fired back towards the highway in shooting at the birds and struck Lavell Miles, who was traveling along the edge of the highway in a footpath running along the outer ditches, but between the right of way of the highway. One of the shot fired struck the boy in the eye, resulting in its loss and the necessity of its. removal; and the expense of the father in having this done, and the loss of time of the boy from his work during the period he was disabled, and the cost of an artificial eye, and the inconvenience and loss of time caused Miles, the father, constitute the subject-matter of this suit.

Lavell Miles testified that he was traveling along, as above stated, when the guns fired; that he saw the smoke coming from the guns in his direction, and was struck by the shot, one in 'the eye and some in the leg, but that he was unable to say from which gun the shot that struck him came. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendants moved for a directed verdict on the ground that the proof did not show which one did the damage, and it devolved upon the plaintiff to show this, as a condition for recovery. The special judge who tried the case below announced that, unless he would elect one or the other, he would grant this peremptory instruction. Thereupon the plaintiff elected a nonsuit as to Shamburger and to proceed against Oliver, but no *857 order was entered upon the minutes of the court in reference thereto. The suit instituted against Oliver resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount sued for, and, upon this judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.

It is contended hy the appellant that the recovery cannot be upheld, first, because this amendment or order was not entered upon the minutes showing nonsuit, and that the declaration stands as though no amendment had been made thereto, under the holdings of this court in Lackey v. Railroad Co., 102 Miss. 339, 59 So. 97, and that the rule is that no recovery can be had, where the suit is a suit for a joint tort and not for a several tort; and, having brought suit for a joint tort, plaintiff cannot recover from one alone, and that the action of the defendants below was not joint, but was several, and therefore that one could not be held responsible for the act of the other. While the stenographer’s notes show that the plaintiff elected to nonsuit as to Shamburger, the case of Lackey v. Railroad, 102 Miss-. 339', 59 So. 97, holds that the order must be entered upon the minutes, that the court can only speak through its minutes, and we must treat the case as being one of joint suit against the two defendants.

In Sawmill Construction Co. v. Bright and Bright v. Finkbine Lumber Co., 116 Miss. 491, 77 So. 316, we held that it is settled in this state that tortfeasors may be sued jointly and severally, and that one joint tortfeasor is not released from liability by suit or judgment against the others. In the opinion on this point, we cited and relied upon Bailey v. Delta Electric Light, Power & Manufacturing Co., 86 Miss. 634, 38 So. 354. In the Bright case, Robert Bright, a. minor, brought suit against the Sawmill Construction Company and the Finkbine Lumber Company for' -an injury received. It was alleged that the Finkbine Lumber Company had contracted with the Sawmill Construction Company to do a portion of its work in erecting its mill; that the plaintiff was employed *858 as a common laborer to assist .in mixing or- making concrete.used in the construction of the. said mill, and that, while thus- engaged, the foreman of the defendants commanded the .plaintiff to crank an engine, commonly known as the ripsaw engine and used in said plant in the construction- thereof ;■ that he. .was ignorant .of. the .dangers, etc. ;■ and that by- reason .thereof he was injured. The .testimony in- that, ease showed that the .plaintiff ivas employed by the Sawmill Construction Company and was paid by-that Company, but that it. was the practice of the Sawmill Construction Company- and -the Finkbine Lumber Company to work- their respective employees in common and to exchange the services of the employees whenever either thought it.proper to do so. It was contended by the Finkbine. Lumber Company that they were not liable because the relation of master and servant did not exist.

In the case of Bailey v. Delta Electric Light, Power & Manufacturing Co., 86 Miss. 634, 38. So. 354, Bailey brought suit against the Delta Light, Power & Manufacturing Company and the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company to recover damag’es for personal injuries. The Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company pleaded the general issue and accord and satisfaction, and filed with the latter plea a written release from all actións, claims, etc., for 'the- injuries received by Bailey. The -Delta Electric Light, Power & Manufacturing Company pleaded the general issue and accord and satisfaction, and filed with the latter plea a copy of the release made by the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company. To this plea, the plaintiff replied that, in accepting the sum paid- by the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company, and in- executing the release, he should not be precluded from recovering, against the Delta Light, Power .& Manufacturing Company, because the release was not in-full settlement of the cause-of action, but was intended to be- a partial settlement of-the cause of -action. The court, in its opinion, said: -.

*859 ‘ ‘ The declaration states a cause* of concurrent negligence, but the legal principle which--fixes liability upon the two tortfeasors joined in the suit is- essentially- different; the .Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Com-* pany-being liable by. reason of-an-alleged’failure to discharge the duty which the master owes to‘his servants in providing anafe place to work;* the appellee [Delta Light, Power & Manufacturing Company] being liable, if at all, for the negligent act of -its employees; The' negligence of one is passive; and.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 666, 144 Miss. 852, 50 A.L.R. 357, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-miles-miss-1926.