Shemper v. Cleveland

54 So. 2d 215, 212 Miss. 113
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1951
DocketNo. 37920
StatusPublished

This text of 54 So. 2d 215 (Shemper v. Cleveland) 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
Shemper v. Cleveland, 54 So. 2d 215, 212 Miss. 113 (Mich. 1951).

Opinion

[115]*115The original opinion was as follows:

Kyle-, J.

Appellee, Richard Cleveland, a minor, a plaintiff in the court below, who appeared and sued by his father as next friend, recovered a judgment against the appellant, Ben Shemper, doing business under the trade name of Shemper & Company, defendant in the court below, for damages for personal injuries sustained by the appellee as a result of the explosion of a 40-millimeter antiaircraft shell found on or adjacent to the appellant’s junk yard in the city of Hattiesburg, and from that judgment the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The appellant was engaged in the business of buying and selling scrap iron, hides, brass, wire, used automobile parts, parts of airplanes and other junk in the city of Hattiesburg, and owned a large junk yard, where great quantities of junk were unloaded from trucks and stored and later reloaded upon railroad cars for shipment to distant points in the regular course of business. The junk yard extended from Jackson Street in the city of Hattiesburg in a northeasterly direction along' East Fifth Street, a distance of approximately one block. There was a wire fence along the appellant’s property line running parallel with Fifth Street, but according to the testimony in the record the appellant had permitted the fence to fall into a state of dilapidation and disrepair, and appellant had permitted junk to be piled on top of the fence and to overflow into the right-of-way of the street, not [116]*116including, however, the travelled portion of the street, and the fence in many places had been mashed to the ground. The junk yard had been maintained in this condition for a period of several years.

On the morning of September 17, 1949, the appellee, a boy of the age of 13% years, who had a hobby for building small airplanes, rode his bicycle to the junk yard for the purpose of inspecting some airplane parts which he had seen piled on the junk yard near the Fifth Street right-of-way, and while he was on this mission he picked up two shells near the entrance to the junk yard, one of which was a live shell and was later identified as a 40-millimeter anti-aircraft shell, and took them to his home, a distance of about eight blocks from the junk pile. The shells were about four inches long and between one and two inches in diameter. That afternoon about 5:00 o ’clock, while the appellee was playing with one of the shells in a neighbor’s back yard near his home he threw the shell about six feet and when it struck the ground it exploded. The appellee was knocked to the ground and was seriously injured by the explosion. Fragments of metal or other substances which were released from the shell by the explosion were embedded in the appellee’s face, arms and body, and appellee’s left thumb was badly lacerated. His eyes were seriously affected by the particles of foreign matter which were thrown into his eyes when the shell exploded, and the upper part of appellee’s body was peppered with fragments of the exploded shell, some of which were still embedded in appellee’s face and other parts of appellee’s body at the time of the trial. In addition to the above mentioned physical injuries the appellee also suffered severe nervous shock, and for several weeks after the accident appellee suffered from severe headaches and dizziness.

' The appellee testified that he visited the junk yard on the day hereinabove mentioned for the purpose of looking at an old airplane body that he had seen on the junk pile; that he was especially interested in looking at some [117]*117airplane parts, 'which he hoped to get his daddy to hny for him, and which he proposed to nse in trying to make an airplane for himself; that when he arrived at the junk yard his attention was attracted to piles of small bombs or shells which he saw scattered around on the ground on the outside of the fence and near the edge of the junk pile; that there were probably 50 or 75 shells scattered around in small heaps; and that he picked up two of them. The appellee stated that the shells were on the outside of the fence, about five or six feet from the fence posts, and that he saw outside the fence parts of airplane wings, stoves, stovepipes and wire. The appellee stated that he had been by the junk yard about ten times before.

E. C. Harris, Chief of Police of the City of Hattiesburg, made an investigation at the site where the shells were found a day or two after the appellee was injured and found shells on the ground near the junk yard fence. The shells were about 4 inches long and about one inch in diameter, and were partially buried, as if they had been stepped on. The shells were ‘ ‘ laying on the ground ’ ’, and he did not have to dig into the junk pile to find them.

The proof showed that the appellant had purchased during the year 1948 quantities of steel shrapnel at Camp Shelby, which had been brought to the junk yard from the rifle range at Camp Shelby in trucks. The appellant sometime prior to the purchase of the shrapnel had been notified by the United States government that a crew of men would be sent to the riffle range to examine the grounds and to search for and find and bury all live or explosive shells; and appellant had been notified not to buy any of those shells, but had been advised that it would be all right to buy shrapnel. Appellant testified that “it was shrapnel we were buying at the time these shells may have come to our property. ’ ’ Appellant also testified that he did not knowingly buy any shells, and that he hired a man to stay out on the yard and inspect the trucks in which the shrapnel was delivered, and that he issued instructions that “if he found any shells or [118]*118anything of that nature, to leave them on the trucks.” Appellant testified that he did not know there were any shells on Fifth Street between the fence and the street, or between the street and the row of posts where the appellee said he found the shells which he carried home with him.

Mike Costin, who had been employed by the appellant as a watchman to inspect the trucks which were used in hauling shrapnel to the yard, testified that he worked for the appellant during the month of March and a part of the month of April 1948, and that his instructions were that he should not permit the unloading of shells on the junk yard; that he carried out these orders as far as possible; that he never consented to the unloading of shells on the yard; that he worked for the appellant several weeks; and that he thought that during that time he practically broke the truck drivers from bringing such shells into the yard. Costin stated that he left Hattiesburg during the month of April, and that he did not know what happened after he left.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 2d 215, 212 Miss. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shemper-v-cleveland-miss-1951.