Parkinson ex rel. Parkinson v. Williamson

262 So. 2d 777, 1972 Miss. LEXIS 1324
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1972
DocketNo. 46663
StatusPublished

This text of 262 So. 2d 777 (Parkinson ex rel. Parkinson v. Williamson) 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
Parkinson ex rel. Parkinson v. Williamson, 262 So. 2d 777, 1972 Miss. LEXIS 1324 (Mich. 1972).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, Justice:

Plaintiff, Will Parkinson, a minor, by his father and next friend, sued defendants, Walter Williamson, a Minor, Jim Black-mon, a minor, and Wayne Ross, a minor, in the Circuit Court of Washington County, Mississippi for $400,000.00 damages for the loss of his left leg below the knee. His leg had to be amputated below the knee because both bones were shattered by a shot from a 30.06 rifle, accidentally fired by Wayne Ross.

After a full trial, the trial court sustained a motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendant, Jim Blackmon. The court overruled motions for directed verdicts in favor of defendant Walter Williamson and defendant Wayne Ross.

The case was submitted to the jury and the jury, by 12 individual verdicts, each written in the handwriting of a different juror, returned a unanimous verdict for defendants Walter Williamson and Wayne Ross.

Parkinson does not appeal from the directing of a verdict for Jim Blackmon, but does appeal from the judgment, based on the jury verdict, in favor of defendants Williamson and Ross.

Parkinson assigns as error that the trial court erred:

1.
[I]n failing to grant Plaintiff’s motion to strike the affirmative defenses alleged by the Defendants of engagement of the parties to this action in a joint venture and criminal act.
[778]*7782.
[I]n granting Instruction Number 11 for Defendant Ross.
3.
[I]n granting Instruction Number 12 for Defendant Ross.
4.
[I]n instructing the jury on behalf of Defendant Williamson as follows:
“The Court instructs the jury for the Defendant, Walter Williamson, that the word ‘negligence’ used in these instructions means the doing of something which a reasonably prudent person would not have done under like circumstances or the failure to do something which a reasonably prudent person would have done under like or similar circumstances.”
5.
[I]n failing to direct a verdict against the defendant, Wayne Ross.
6.
[I]n overruling Plaintiff’s alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.
7.
[I]n refusing to grant the Plaintiff the following instruction:
“The Court instructs the jury for the Plaintiff that, under the law of the State of Mississippi, firearms are considered extraordinarily dangerous and that the highest degree of care is required of one who handles a firearm; that where a person handles a firearm which is discharged, he is liable for any injury caused thereby unless he shows by a preponderance of the evidence that he was entirely without fault. Accordingly, you are further instructed that if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence, if any, that Defendant, Wayne Ross was handling a firearm which discharged into Plaintiff’s body and that such discharge proximately caused or proximately contributed to the shooting, and injuries, if any, of the Plaintiff, then it is your sworn duty to return a verdict for the Plaintiff against Defendant, Wayne Ross, unless you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that Defendant, Wayne Ross, was entirely without fault in the handling of such firearm.”

On Saturday afternoon, March 7, 1970, Will Parkinson, Wayne Ross, Walter Williamson, Jim Blackmon, Danny Jones, James Dunaway and Jesse Brent rode around in Brent’s dune buggy in the vicinity of Lake Ferguson and in Greenville, Mississippi. Parkinson drank one or two cans of beer during the afternoon. About 7:00 P.M., after securing their parents’ permission to camp out, 16-year old Parkinson and his young friends, including the defendants, bought vodka and orange juice and prepared mixed drinks therewith.

From about 8:00 until 11:00 P.M., Black-mon and Dunaway were separated from the others, and during this period continued to drink vodka and orange juice and about 11:00 P.M. Blackmon passed out.

About midnight, Williamson, Ross and Parkinson broke into a cabin on Lake Ferguson and stole a shotgun, a 22 rifle, and a 30.06 rifle. Although they had gone to Lake Ferguson with Jesse Brent in his car, Brent took no part in the breaking and entering of the Morehead cabin from which the guns were stolen. When they had come out of the cabin and were under an outside light at the Girl Scout camp, the three stolen guns were passed around and were checked by Williamson, Dunaway, Parkinson and Ross.

Brent, Parkinson, Williamson and Ross, in Brent’s Mustang, found Blackmon’s Volkswagen headed into a roadside fence and Blackmon in it, passed out. Ross and [779]*779Parkinson got into Blackmon’s Volkswagen, put Blackmon on the back seat, and departed, with Ross driving and Parkinson on the front seat with him, “riding shotgun” as Parkinson expressed it. Brent and Williamson, in Brent’s Mustang, took the three guns to some point on the Mississippi River levee and hid them. Brent took his Mustang home and, having been denied permission to camp out he sneaked out, and joined Ross, Parkinson, Williamson and Blackmon in Blackmon’s Volkswagen.

About 2:30 A.M. Sunday, March 8, these five teenagers decided to drive to Vicksburg from Greenville, and they did so with Ross driving Blackmon’s Volkswagen. Parkinson testified that on this trip to and from Vicksburg he and Williamson were the principal drinkers of the vodka and orange juice. When they returned from Vicksburg shortly after sunup on Sunday morning, they took Jesse Brent home. Worried about the stolen guns not being hidden well enough, they returned to the Mississippi River levee, and Parkinson and Williamson put the guns on the rear floor of the Volkswagen with a sleeping bag on top of the guns. They then went to a Junior Food Mart in Greenville. Black-mon and Parkinson were on the back seat, Wayne Ross was driving and Williamson was seated on the front seat beside the driver.

The testimony becomes confused at this point, but it appears that Williamson and Parkinson went in the Junior Food Mart, bought a Coke and some B.C. powders, and on returning to the Volkswagen Williamson and Parkinson swapped seats, with Williamson getting on the back seat and Parkinson on the right front seat.

All of them now give their undivided attention to picking a good spot to hide the stolen guns, and finally decide to hide them in the field next to the subdivision in which the Parkinson and Ross homes were located. In carrying out this plan, Ross drove the Volkswagen to the back of the field next to a ditch and parked it. Parkinson got out the right door, pulled the shotgun out from under the bedding roll, and moved around with it outside the open right door of the Volkswagen. Ross got out the left door, reached in, took hold of the 30.06 rifle, and attempted to pull it out of the left door of the Volkswagen. It was then that the 30.06 rifle fired and the full charged hit the rear portion of Parkinson’s left leg, shattering both bones below the knee.

Ross, when he saw what had happened, screamed and ran to his home nearby. Blackmon and Williamson took Parkinson to the hospital where his left leg was amputated about 2Yz inches below the knee.

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Related

State ex rel. Johnson v. Cunningham
65 So. 115 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
262 So. 2d 777, 1972 Miss. LEXIS 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkinson-ex-rel-parkinson-v-williamson-miss-1972.