Southern Ry. Co. v. Buse

193 So. 918, 187 Miss. 752, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 250
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1940
DocketNo. 33846.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 So. 918 (Southern Ry. Co. v. Buse) 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 Ry. Co. v. Buse, 193 So. 918, 187 Miss. 752, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 250 (Mich. 1940).

Opinions

McG-ehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Tishomingo County in favor of the appellee for damages sustained while he was riding as a trespasser on the appellant’s freight train in the State of Tennessee on December 23, 193*2', and on which alleged cause of action the suit was filed on the 20th day of November, 1937.

The most important error assigned is the refusal of the court below to peremptorily instruct the jury to find a verdict in favor of the appellant Railway Company. The appellee sought to establish a case of liability by attempting to prove a constructive ejectment from the train, while he and a companion, Audie Rowell, were stealing’ a ride thereon from Memphis, Tennessee, to Corinth, Mississippi, when the appellee got his foot caught and mashed off in the drawhead of the coupling between two box cars as the engineer in charge of the train, who knew nothing of his position of peril, suddenly put on his emergency brakes to stop the train as it approached a station at some point between .Memphis and the state line. Hence, the question of liability is governed by the laws of the State of Tennessee, where contributory negligence is a complete defense, except in cases where there has been wilful or wanton injury, constituting an intervening efficient cause of the accident such as would insulate the negligence of the trespasser.

The appellee, who lived at Cunt own, Mississippi, and his companion Rowell, who lived at Delmar, Alabama, went to the State of Oklahoma, some time prior to the accident complained of, where they remained for several months and until the fall of 1932, when they came to Elaine, Arkansas, and remained for awhile, before undertaking to return home just before Christmas of that year. They say that when they left Arkansas for Memphis *762 on December 22, 1932, via Lula, Mississippi, it had been sleeting' and snowing, and that along in Mississippi the timber was bending over with ice, and the tops were breaking out; also, that the ground was slick, on account of the rain on the ground which had frozen over.

They boarded the freight train at Memphis, near two o’clock A. M., at about the fourth box car from the engine. The train contained fifty-two box cars, and later picked up two more at Middletown, Tennessee, en route to Corinth, Mississippi. At first they rode on top of the box car "as long as we could stand it without freezing to death.” Then, they say that, while the train was traveling in an easterly direction, they climbed down between the box cars on the iron rods of the ladder, with one foot on a rod on the east side of the west car, and the other foot on a rod on the west end of the east car, until they were on a level with the coupling. Thereupon, Rowell warned the appellee of the danger of putting his foot on the coupling, as they rode along in that position, each one carrying a suitcase, the appellee riding on the south side and Rowell on the north side of the train. That some person then came from toward the caboose over the east end of the west car, above where the appellee was stationed, carrying' a lantern in one hand, as testified to by Rowell, but, according to the testimony of the appellee, he was carrying a lantern in one hand and a stick in the other. That this person ordered them to get off the train. That he was then coming down the ladders from above the appellee with one foot stepping on the rods of the ladder on the east end of the west car, and the other foot stepping on the rods of the ladder on the west end of the east car — just as the appellee and Rowell were riding. That immediately upon such command being given for them to "fall off there” or to "get off,” Rowell disembarked from the train which he said "was then going* as fast as I could run handy, and I had to give a shove to keep from going under.” Thereupon, appellee undertook to get off when he was within seven *763 or eight car lengths from the station, and when he attempted to do so he stepped on the draw-head- of the coupling and got his foot mashed as the engineer placed the brakes in reverse to stop for the station. Appellee claims that he asked this unknown person who ordered them off the train to permit him to wait until it stopped, but that the man then commanded that he “get off now or I will knock yon off.” He later testified on cross-examination, as he continued to enlarge upon the incident as related by his companion Bowell and as testified to by himself on direct examination, and in an effort to establish agency by the declarations of the alleged agent made out of court, that this man “told us to get off that train, and said that he had the railroad orders and would knock us off if we didn’t get off.” As above suggested, Bowell does not claim to have heard this statement, which appellee says was addressed to “us,” nor any threats alleged to have been subsequently addressed to the appellee; and, as heretofore stated, he does not claim to have seen a stick in the hand of this unknown person. He did testify that he later saw “this man or another man on the ground about one and one-half car lengths from him,” and that he “had a lantern and I wouldn’t say it was a brake stick, iron rod, or it could have been a flag rolled up; it was rolled up if it was a flag, or either was a stick, it looked like about as long as a flag or brake stick. ’ ’

There is no testimony in the record showing that when this unknown person gave the command for these trespassers to get off the train that he drew the stick or attempted to raise it in any manner in ah effort to strike either of -the trespassers. It does appear from the appellee’s testimony that the train was then so near the station that “they were then going though a little town and the lights were on that side,” meaning the north side, and he gave as his reason for attempting to cross from the south side of the train to the north side the fact that the light could be seen there just before the *764 train stopped, which was within seven or eight car lengths ahead from where he attempted to get off as heretofore stated. In other words, it was clearly shown that the train was not moving at a dangerous rate of speed at the time the command to get off was given. Wherefore, it is not contended that any right of the trespassers was violated by the mere command to get off the train at that time, in the absence of the alleged threatened assault, since the criminal law of Tennessee, which they were then violating in stealing the ride, was commanding them at all times to get off while the train was not running at a dangerous rate of speed.

The testimony identifying this unknown person as a member of the train crew, if there was any such person, is not satisfactory. The appellee said: “Best I could tell he had on overalls, jumper and cap;” that “he had a lantern in one hand and a stick in the other; ’ ’ that he was “about a middle-aged man;” that he “didn’t have time to look and see” as to his size; and further testified that he wouldn’t know him again if he should see him. He was then asked what side of the train he was riding on and he said: ‘ ‘ South side. ’ ’

“Q. What could you see? A. Not anything in the dark over there, couldn’t see.”

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 918, 187 Miss. 752, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-buse-miss-1940.