Pickwick Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Silver

125 So. 340, 155 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 361
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 28214.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 So. 340 (Pickwick Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Silver) 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
Pickwick Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Silver, 125 So. 340, 155 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 361 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee sued the appellant for a personal injury alleged to have been received by him because of the negligence of the appellant’s servant, and recovered a verdict and judgment for fifteen thousand dollars.

Appellant is a corporation engaged in operating a passenger motorbus line over the public roads, and, on the occasion in question, appellee was. a passenger on one of its busses for transport from Jackson, Mississippi, northward to Memphis, Tennessee. The bus in which appellee was traveling was overturned near the village of Gwin, in Jfolmes county, thereby causing his injury. The road curves at the place where the accident occurred, and the bus skidded and overturned just as it entered the curve. The evidence for the appellee discloses that the curve was sharp, but does not disclose the angle of the curve; while the evidence for the appellant is to the effect that it was not -sharp., that its departure from a straight line is about forty-nine degrees and thirty minutes. This curve can be seen for some distance in approaching it from the south, and a few days prior to the accident the road authorities had Worked the road at the curve and had widened it by placing loose dirt on each side thereof, and in doing so had permitted loose dirt, of the character designated in the evidence as “Gumbo,” to cover the surface of the road. In doing this work, the level of the road had been changed, so that it sloped toward the outer edge of the curve, which was lower than the inner *771 edge. The road was on an elevation; exactly how high at the place where the accident occurred does not appear. There had been a great deal of rain prior to the accident, and the road had become slick, so much so that at least two automobiles, that passed over the curve at a low rate of speed a short time prior to the accident, skidded. The driver of the bus knew1 of the existence of the curve, could see it for some distance as he approached it, and saw the evidences of its having beemrecently worked and that the gravel thereon was covered with dirt. He stated, however, that it looked firm to him and that 'he did not discover that it was not until he entered the curve.

According to the evidence for the appellee, the bus entered the curve at a speed ranging as high as forty miles an hour, the driver thereof applying his brake after entering the curve, whereupon the bus skidded and turned over. The driver testified that he slowed down to a rate of speed not exceeding twenty-five miles an hour, and released his brake before reaching the curve. He admitted that, with the road in the condition it was, to have applied his brake as he entered the curve would have caused the bus to skid.

The appellee’s contention that he was entitled to a directed verdict is without merit, and therefore it becomes necessary for us to consider the errors alleged by the appellant to have been committed during the progress of the trial.

Appellee, in order to prove that the appellant is a common carrier charged with the care incumbent on such a carrier for the safety of its passengers, introduced, over the appellant’s objection, a certificate from the Railroad Commission that the appellant had complied with the statute and was authorized to operate passenger motorbusses for hire over the public roads. This certificate set forth that the appellant had “filed insurance policies and bonds,” etc., and the ground of the objec *772 tion thereto is that it discloses to the jury the fact that the appellant carried insurance on its liability for injury to its passengers. Counsel for the appellee stated that he would not, and he did not, read that provision of the policy to the jury, and a line was then drawn through it with a pen or pencil, which left the words easily legible. The court then overruled the objection, and the certificate was introduced in evidence and was carried out by the jury when it retired for the consideration of its verdict. It will not be necessary for us to pass on this ruling of the court, for the judgment of the court must be reversed for other reasons, and on a retrial of the case this question, in all probability, will not again arise.

The appellee’s first and third instructions to. the jury permitted it to convict the driver of the appellant’s bus of negligence without reference to the condition of the road, and the appellant’s complaint thereof is without merit. The jury were warranted in finding* from the appellant’s evidence that the curve was sharp, the road graveled, and the bus, which was large and heavy, entered the curve at a speed of approximately forty miles an hour; the driver thereof applying the brake after the bus entered the curve. From this evidence the jury would have been warranted in concluding that the driver of the bus was negligent, and that it would have skidded and turned over because of the speed and the application of the brake although the road had been in good condition.

The third instruction also- permitted the-jury to award the appellee damages for a permanent injury and to allow him medical expenses that, might be thereafter incurred by him because thereof. The court refused a request by the appellant to- instruct the jury not to award the appellee damages for a permanent injury. The appellee testified that he had incurred medical expenses *773 to the amount of one hundred dollars, and the appellant was refused an instruction limiting the appellee’s recovery for such expenses to that amount.

The appellee suffered an injury to his head of a painful but temporary character, and claims also to have suffered the dislocation of one of the vertebrae of the spinal column, from which he suffers continuous pain and is prevented from work. Two physicians corroborated him as to this, and stated that liis spinal injury would be permanent and would probably grow worse unless relieved by medical treatment, and even with such treatment the injury might remain permanent. This treatment was to put the appellee in a frame with weights attached to his feet in which he would have to remain, according to one of the physicians, six or eight months. Whether the appellee was called on to undergo this serious treatment was at most a question for the jury, and its outcome was uncertain so that whether the appellee’s injury was permanent was for the jury’s determination.

' The authorities are in conflict as to whether medical expenses, which it is reasonably certain a person injured will necessarily incur in the future, are recoverable. 8 K,. C. L. 545. It will not be necessary for us to decide that question, for the reason that for such expenses to be recoverable as damages, a proper allegation relative thereto must be included in the declaration. Chapman v. Powers, 150 Miss. 687, 116 So. 609. There is no such allegation in the declaration here. The only allegation therein is as follows: “He has been put to great expense for doctors, nurses, medical and surgical treatment, the attention in an effort to- cure him and to save his life amounting to five hundred dollars.” Moreover, the evidence furnishes no basis whatever for determining what the appellee would have to pay for such medical treatment thereafter to be incurred, if any. It follows from this that the appellant’s recovery for medical expenses *774

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 340, 155 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickwick-greyhound-lines-inc-v-silver-miss-1929.