Illinois Central Railroad v. McCalip

Mississippi Supreme Court
Illinois Central Railroad v. McCalip, 76 Miss. 360 (Miss. 1898)
Woods

Illinois Central Railroad v. McCalip

Opinion of the Court

Woods, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The evidence before us satisfies us that the appellee has made a case within the letter and spirit of § 3549. There is no other statute governjng injuries inflicted by backing trains, and we cannot conceive how persons—intending passenger, idler or tramp —lounging about the depot grounds, and within fifty feet of a passenger depot, might recover for an injury suffered by the railroad’s failure to comply with the requirements of this statute, if he had merely negligently wandered into the street where this accident occurred, and yet a citizen engaged in his ordinary and lawful business, may not recover under identically the same circumstances. The statute was designed to compel the railroads to observe a new rule of care and watchfulness in backing trains within fifty feet of a passenger depot, and to afford protection to all persons within the prescribed limits.

Affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Fielding McCalip
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Railroads. Passenger depots. Baching trains. Code 1893, § 3549. Code 1893, $ 3549, making railroads violating its provisions liable to a party injured within prescribed limits of a passenger depot by a backing train, without regard to mere contributory negligence, was designed to afford protection to all persons within such limits. 3. Same. Street crossing. Driver of team. Code 1893, § 3549. One who is injured by a backing train, within the prescribed limits of a passenger depot, while driving a team along a street crossing a railroad track, is entitled to invoke the protection of code 1893, l 3549, making railroads violating its provisions liable to persons so injured without regard to mere contributory negligence.