Southern Railroad v. Kendrick

40 Miss. 374
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 40 Miss. 374 (Southern Railroad v. Kendrick) 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
Southern Railroad v. Kendrick, 40 Miss. 374 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Handy, C. J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the defendants in error, to recover damages sustained by the wife, by reason of the negligence of the conductor of the railroad train from Meridian to Newton station, in not stopping the train at that station, for which Mrs. Kendrick had purchased a ticket as a passenger, and in failing to give her notice when the train reached there; in consequence of which she was carried about two miles past that place, and the conductor, refusing to take the train back to the station, put her off at the place to which the train had gone, late at night, and placed her under the charge of two strange negro men to be conducted back to the station, she being alone and without a protector; and she was compelled to walk back,to the station late at night, over dangerous bridges and almost impassable l-oads, in great bodily exposure and terror of mind. To this a demurrer was filed, assigning several grounds of objection; all of which were overruled, and we think properly, as they appear to be rather of the nature of pleas in bar than matters of demurrer. An amended declaration was then filed, stating in substance the averments of the original declaration, and alleging further, that the conductor was requested to back the train to Newton station, but refused to do so, and compelled Mrs. Kendrick to get off at the place to which the train had gone. To this and the original declaration, the defendant pleaded the .general issue, and- several other pleas amounting to the general issue.

On the trial, Mrs. Kendrick was introduced as a witness, and testified in substance that she purchased at Meridian a ticket for Newton station, took her seat in the car, and gave the ticket to the conductor when he called for it in passing through the train, a short time after leaving Meridian; that she was traveling alone and without a protector; that she did not know when the train arrived at Newton station, did not hear any one announce the station, and was carried to a water-tank about a mile and [381]*381a balf beyond that station, and as tlie train was near that point, she learned by inquiry of a passenger, who inquired of the conductor, that they had passed Newton station; and thereupon that the conductor told her to stand where she was, and he went forward and returned shortly with two. negro men with torchlights, °and informed her that they would carry her valise bach to the station, and assist her; that he -told her it would be dangerous to take the train bach to the station; that the negroes went bach with her to the station, carrying her baggage; that she and they walked on the track, passed oyer two pieces of trestle work, one high with water under it; that she had some difficulty in passing oyer it, but was assisted by the negroes; that the place where she got off the train was swamp and woods, and she got back to near the station about three o’clock in the morning; that the conductor told her it was half a mile back to the station, and when she got back there, she was considerably fatigued; that she went back because she expected her brother to meet her there, and did not know what else to do. On cross-examination, she testified that she may have slept some, but very little, if any, while on the train; that at one time, when the train stopped, she looked up and saw buildings, and supposed it was Hickory station, but now believes it was Newton station; she did not know of the train stopping again until it stopped at the place where she got off; that she did not see the conductor after he received her ticket until she saw him where she got off; that she did not recollect that he proposed to carry her forward until they met the up-train and to send her back by that train, nor that he said, that if she insisted upon it, he would back the train to the station, or that he made any proposi- ' tion to her; that he did not ask her to get off the train, but she got off because she preferred to do so, and did not know what else to do; that the conductor was every way respectful and polite to her, and the negroes were respectful and had good torchlights; that the conductor assisted her to get off the cars, and she made no objection to getting off and walking back, as she did not know what else she could do; that she was in no way injured, except the fatigue of walking; that one time, whilst she was [382]*382walking back, when one of the negroes asked the other for a stick, she felt much alarmed until she saw him put the stick in the handle of the valise, when her alarm ceased.

Doolittle, a witness for the plaintiff, testified, that he lives near Newton station, and that Mrs. Kendrick came to his house, as stated by her, some time after midnight; that the tank," where the plaintiff got off, is about one mile from his house, and that the road intervening, passes over swampy ground, there being two trestle bridges on it, one of which is about fifty feet long.

Maxcy was introduced by the plaintiff and asked whether he had traveled on the Southern Railroad at any time previous to September, 1862, and if the conductor called out the stations at any time whilst he was on the train. To this the defendant objected, but the objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted. The same question was propounded to Wansley and Williams, witnesses introduced by the plaintiff, which was objected to, but the objection was overruled, and the witnesses allowed to answer it, and the defendant excepted. The first witness stated that in May, 1862, and the last two stated that previous to September, 1862, they had traveled from Newton station to Meridian on the road, and did not hear the conductor call out any station between these points.

The defendant then introduced the deposition of Lucy, which states, in substance, that he was the conductor of the train of the railroad when Mrs. Kendrick came on, as a passenger from Meridian to Newton station; that she came on board in the night, it being the night train; that the train reached Newton station about one o’clock at night; that on the arrival of the train there, the witness had the name of the station announced by one of the brakemen, and it was also announced by himself, at the door of the car in which Mrs. Kendrick was, and he stopped the train from seven to ten minutes, longer than the usual time, which is three minutes, because there was freight to be unloaded; that, after leaving the station some mile and a half, in going through the cars, he recognized Mrs. Kendrick as one of the passengers ticketed for Newton station; that his impression is, she was [383]*383asleep, and he approached and touched her on the shoulder, her face being turned from him, and her head seemed reclining on the back of the seat; that she turned around, and he asked her if she was not to get off at Newton station; she replied, “ Yes ; where are we now ? ” He replied, some mile and a half west of the station. She asked what she was to do, and he told her he was to meet an approaching train some distance west of there, and if she chose to stay aboard of the train until he met that train she could do so, and he would put her on that train, and send her back free of charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Miss. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railroad-v-kendrick-miss-1866.