St. Louis & S. F. Railway Co. v. Nichols

138 So. 364, 161 Miss. 795, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 317
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1931
DocketNo. 29505.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 138 So. 364 (St. Louis & S. F. Railway Co. v. Nichols) 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
St. Louis & S. F. Railway Co. v. Nichols, 138 So. 364, 161 Miss. 795, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 317 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, Barry Nichols, a minor, suing by his father and next friend, George J. Nichols, instituted this suit in the circuit court of Marshall county against the appellant railroad company, seeking to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained as a result of the negligence of the appellant in the operation of one of its passenger trains; and, from a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for two thousand dollars, this appeal was prosecuted.

The negligence charged in the declaration as a basis upon which recovery was sought was that the employees •of the appellant company operated the said passenger train at an excessive and unlawful rate of speed over and across a grade crossing on a public highway near Columbus, Miss., on which the appellee was traveling in an automobile driven by his brother, and that said employees negligently failed to give the required statutory signals as the train approached the said public crossing. To the declaration the appellant interposed a plea of the general issue, and gave notice thereunder that it would offer evidence to prove that the appellee and his brother, George A. Nichols, the driver of the car in which the appellee was riding at the time of his injury, were engaged in a common purpose or joint enterprise at the time of the said injury, and that they were both guilty of gross negligence which was the direct and proximate cause of the appellee’s injuries, in that they failed to stop, look, or listen for an approaching train as the automobile in which they were riding approached the railroad crossing.

The appellee was traveling in an old model T Ford automobile on a public highway leading from Eutaw, *802 Ala., to Amory, Miss. The automobile was being driven by George Nichols, appellee’s brother, and at a point near Columbus, Miss., at a grade crossing over the railroad of the appellant company, it was struck by a passenger train, resulting in the death of the driver and the serious injury of the appellee. At the point where the collision occurred, the public highway approaches the railroad at an angle of about forty-five degrees. Both the train and the automobile approached the crossing from a southerly direction, and for several hundred yards south from the crossing there is nothing to materially obstruct the view from one to the other. The appellee testified that, as the automobile approached this crossing, he was looking to his right at a bank of clouds; that he did not know they were approaching a railroad crossing; that he heard no signals of an approaching train; and that he did not realize that they were on the railroad crossing or that a train was approaching until the moment of the impact.

The proof establishes the fact that the statutory stop signboards, or warning boards, were properly placed on each side of the railroad track about fifty feet therefrom, and that there was also nearer the track a large sign having painted thereon the words “railroad crossing.”

The court properly instructed the jury that the evidence failed to support the charge of the second count of the declaration, that the servants of the appellant in charge of the train “wantonly or wilfully or intentionally ran the said engine over and against the said automobile.” The proof failed to show that the train, which was being operated in the open country ■ outside of any restricted area, was running at an excessive or negligent rate of speed. As to the remaining ground of negligence charged in the declaration, that is, the alleged failure to continuously ring the bell of blow the whistle for a distance of three hundred yards before the engine crossed *803 'the highway, the appellant contends that the negative testimony of witnesses that they did not hear such signals, as opposed to the positive testimony of a number of witnesses, including the employees in charge of the train, that the signals were given, did not create an issue of fact to be submitted to the jury, and that consequently the court below erred in refusing the peremptory instruction requested by it.

In support of this contention the appellant relies upon the case of Mobile & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Johnson, 157 Miss. 266, 126 So. 827, 828, in which the court discussed, but did not apply, the rule that “the testimony of witnesses that they did not hear the ringing of the bell on a locomotive as it approached a crossing, without proof that the witnesses listened for the bell, or that their attention was in any way directed to it, or that they probably must have heard the bell if it did ring, cannot prevail against the positive testimony of other credible witnesses that the bell did ring at the time in question;” and also the case of Mobile & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Bennett, 127 Miss. 413, 90 So. 113, wherein the court held that the testimony of appellee that he did not hear any train signals or warnings shouted to him by the crossing flagman and bystanders was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence appearing in the record.

In the case at bar, the appellee testified that he did not hear the whistle blow or the bell ring. There was nothing to prevent him from hearing the signals unless it was the noise of the car in which he was riding; and there is no evidence bearing upon that point. Mrs. Nail, a witness for the appellee, testified that she was sitting by an open window on the train; that her attention was not distracted; that she had previously heard the whistle and bell at other points ‘ ‘ a long ways up the road, ’ ’ but did not hear a signal near the crossing. Another witness for the appellee testified that he heard one blast of *804 the whistle before the train reached the crossing, but did not hear any further blast of the whistle or the bell ringing. Joe Jordan, a witness for the appellant, who lived about two hundred feet from the crossing, testified that he was inside his house when he heard one long-blast of the whistle, and that he then walked to the door to observe the approach of the train, that after the first long blast of the whistle it stopped, “and then came a little further and two little short blows, and when he hit the car he was blowing then.” He further testified that he heard the bell ringing after the train hit the car, but not before. A number of witnesses for the appellant testified that the statutory signals were given. Upon this evidence we think this case comes within the rule announced in the case of Columbus & G. R. R. Co. v. Lee, 149 Miss. 543, 115 So. 782, and applied in the case of Yazoo & M. V. Railroad Co. v. Beasley, 158 Miss. 370, 130 So. 499, 501, that “Testimony that a fact did not occur, given by a witness ‘so situated that in the ordinary course of events he would have heard or seen the fact had it occurred,’ is sufficient to warrant a jury in finding that the fact did not occur,” and that the question of whether or not the statutory signals were given was properly submitted to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 364, 161 Miss. 795, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-railway-co-v-nichols-miss-1931.