Hagger v. Self, 43807
Decision Date | 14 February 1966 |
Docket Number | No. 43807,43807 |
Citation | 254 Miss. 508,183 So.2d 175 |
Parties | Fred P. HAGGER v. J. W. SELF et al. |
Court | Mississippi Supreme Court |
J. A. White, Durant, for appellant.
Calvin King, Durant, Sandy King, Jackson, for appellees.
This suit was filed by Fred Hagger, plaintiff below and appellant here against J. W. Self and others for the recovery of damages done plaintiff's truck in a collision between said truck and a bull owned by defendant, J. W. Self, on a state-designated, paved highway. The jury found for defendants. We affirm.
The principal question in this case is whether defendant met the burden of proving lack of negligence on their part.
Appellant offered proof that his truck was damages as a result of a collision between the truck and a bull belonging to defendants, and that the collision took place on a state-designated, paved highway.
The proof established a prima facie case of liability under the provisions of Mississippi Code Annotated section 4876-05 (1957), which provides that:
The owners of livestock which through their owner's negligence are found on federal or state designated paved highways or highway right-of-ways shall be subject to any damages as a result of wrecks, loss of life or bodily injury as a result of said livestock being on the above designated highways. The burden shall be on the owner of any such livestock to prove lack of negligence.
To meet the burden placed upon them by the foregoing statute, defendants offered testimony that the land immediately adjacent to the highway where the accident took place was leased by one of the defendants, and was planted in corn. There was no fence between the corn field and the highway. The bull was last seen within about an hour of the time of the accident in a feed lot, which was connected to a pasture by an open gate, so that the bull could go from the feed lot to the pasture. The fence surrounding the pasture, and particularly that between the pasture and the corn field, had been repaired about four months before the accident, by placement of some new white oak posts and some new wire. The proof showed that, as repaired, the fence consisted of four strands of barbed wire stretched tight, and was capable of holding cattle under normal conditions. At the place where the bull escaped from the pasture, the fence consisted of new white oak posts with four strands of barbed wire. The bull had put his head under the lower strand, and had pushed the...
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Hartford Ins. Group v. Massey, 44963
...of negligence. The rule regarding the essentials necessary for appellant to maintain his cause of action is set out in Hagger v. Self, 254 Miss. 508, 183 So.2d 175 (1966) and National Dairy Products Corporation v. Jamper, 241 Miss. 339, 130 So.2d 922 (1961) and is discussed in Hughes v. W. ......
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Carpenter v. Nobile
...maintaining the fence] proximately caused the damages to complainants' vehicle. 241 Miss. at 343, 130 So.2d at 923. In Hagger v. Self, 254 Miss. 508, 183 So.2d 175 (1966), the Court addressed a case factually similar to the case sub judice. Hagger involved a damage suit resulting from an ac......
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Harris v. Penn, No. 1999-CA-01427-COA.
...Penn's bull in accordance with the statute, a prima facie case of negligence on the part of Penn was raised. Hagger v. Self, 254 Miss. 508, 510-11, 183 So.2d 175, 176 (1966); Hartford Ins. Group v. Massey, 216 So.2d 415, 417 (Miss. 1968). This presumption then requires rebuttal on Penn's pa......