114 Ga. 146 | Ga. | 1901
The plaintiff sued the railway company for damages alleged to have been sustained on account of having been wrongfully expelled from one of its trains. Upon the trial it appeared, from the testimony introduced in behalf of the plaintiff, that he desired to go as a passenger upon one of the trains of the defendant from the city of Rome to a station called Seney. When he went to the ticket-office of the defendant and informed the ticket-agent that he desired to go to Seney, the agent told him that the train to Seney had gone. Upon his asking the agent when there would be another train to Seney, he was told that in about two or three hours there would be a freight-train which carried passengers and upon which he could go. The agent then sold him a ticket to Seney, and stated that the ticket would be good on the freight-train which would arrive two or three hours later. Plaintiff then left the station and returned later in the day. Upon the arrival of the freight-train he again inquired of the ticket-agent if that was the train on which he could go to Seney, and the agent told him that it was. He then boarded the train and went into the caboose. When the train had moved forward from the station about a hundred and twenty-five or fifty yards the conductor asked plaintiff where he was going, and plaintiff replied, to Seney, stating that the agent had sold him a ticket to that point to be used on that train. The conductor then stated that he did not stop at Seney, that he
When a railroad company places an agent in charge of its business at a place where passengers are expected to board its trains, and authorizes such agent to sell tickets to passengers to be used when taking passage upon its trains, one who purchases from such an agent a ticket upon which there is no statement as to what trains it will or will not be good for passage upon has a right to presume that the agent is authorized by the company to give him information on this subject. When, therefore, the purchaser of such a ticket applies to the ticket-agent for information as to what train or trains the ticket will be good for passage upon, and the agent gives him
Judgment reversed.