36 Wis. 450 | Wis. | 1874
The learned judge of the court below charged the jury that the appellant’s regulation, setting apart a car in each passenger train primarily for the separate use of women and men traveling with them, is a reasonable one. He did not submit the question to the jury, and both parties appear to have assented to the instruction.
The general rule to be found in the books is, that the reasonableness of such regulations is a mixed question of law and fact, to be submitted to the jury under proper directions. 1 Redfield on Railways, 88. And at least one court, pointing the distinction between by-laws of a corporation, affecting the corporators only, and regulations affecting third persons, has held that the reasonableness of such by-laws rests in their law
In this case, regarding it in the light of a question of law, we entirely concur with the court below in the opinion that the regulation in question is an eminently reasonable and proper one.
In Jencks v. Coleman, Mr. Justice StORY likens the duties of carriers of passengers by steamboat to those of innkeepers. And in Commonwealth v. Power, Shaw, C. J., after saying that the owners of steamboats and railroads are in this respect on the same footing, adds: “ An owner of a steamboat or railroad, in this respect, is in a condition somewhat similar to that of an innkeeper, whose premises are open to all guests. Yet he is not only empowered, but he is bound, so to regulate his house, as well with regard to the peace and comfort of his
This authoritative comparison of the duties of railroad companies to their passengers, to those of innkeepers to their guests, is very suggestive of the scope of the former. See Day v. Owen and Jencks v. Coleman, supra; Chamberlain v. Chandler, 3 Mason, 242; Nieto v. Clark, 1 Clifford, 145
And of course the power to regulate must be commensurate with the duty to care for and protect. 1 Redfield, 88-92.
The use of railroads for the common carriage of passengers has not only vastly increased travel generally, but has also specially led women to travel without male companions. To such, the protection which is a natural instinct of manhood towards their sex, is specially due by common carriers. Chamberlain v. Chandler and Nieto v. Clark, supra. And, in view of the crowds of men of all sorts and conditions and habits constantly traveling by railroad, it appears to us to be not only a reasonable regulation, but almost if not quite a humane duty, for railroad companies to appropriate a car of each passenger train primarily for women and men accompanying them ; from"which men unaccompanied by women should be excluded, and even women or men accompanying women of offensive character or habits; so as to group women of good character on the train together, sheltered as far as practicable from annoyance and insult. It is a severe comment on our civilization that such a regulation should be necessary; but the necessity is patent to ail experience and intelligence. And the regulation not only comes within the principle established in all the cases we have examined, but has judicial sanction. State v. Overton, supra; Pittsburgh, F. W. & Ch. R. R. Co. v. Hinds, 53 Pa. St., 512.
“ When carriers undertake to convey passengers by the powerful but dangerous agency of steam, public policy and safety require that they be held to the greatest possible care and diligence. The personal safety of passengers should not be left to the sport of chance or the negligence of careless agents. Any negligence, in such cases, may well deserve the epithet of gross." P. & R. R. R. Co. v. Derby, 14 How., 468. “The right and duty of the defendant in running the road, to establish and enforce reasonable regulations for the government of the line, has been frequently recognized by the courts in this country. The safety and security of the traveling public, as well as the interest of the railroad itself, require that the right and duty exist and be enforced. Upon that ground it has been held that the defendants and their servants may not only exclude those who refuse to pay their fare or to comply with such reasonable regulations as are made for their government, but they may also rightfully inquire into the habits or motives of those who claim the right of passage. While the law requires of the company the adoption of such regulations as are necessary for the safety and convenience of passengers in their trains, they have also the right to adopt such reasonable regulations as are necessary for their own security ; and those regulations are to be mutually observed. If they are not complied with by passengers, the company may not only refuse them admission within their cars, but, if they are within, they may remove them.” Stephen v. Smith, 29 Vt., 160.
On the trial in the court below, there was evidence tending to show that the respondent, being a passenger on the appellant’s train, to which a ladies’ car was attached, was, with other male passengers, kept by the officers of the train without a seat, there being no unoccupied seats, except in the ladies’ car; that he had been in the smoking car, in which he was not bound to remain ; and that he and others stood for some time in one of the ordinary passenger cars, without attention from the officers of the train. If these were the facts, without some special excuse for the neglect, it is plain that the officers of the train weré guilty of breach of duty to the passengers so left standing. There was evidence tending to show that the respondent then went to the ladies’ car for a seat; that he found the door at first locked ; but that, on its being unlocked by a brakeman, ,he entered or attempted to enter the car. Whether he entered the car peaceably and without being forbidden to enter it, or whether he was forbidden and attempted to enter the car forcibly, were questions on which the evidence was conflicting; and, under the instructions given to the jury, the verdict does not determine the fact. In either case, it. does appear that he was forcibly driven upon the platform of the car, while the train was crossing a river, when a fall from the platform would probably have proved fatal to him.
In the circumstances stated, if such were the truth, we cannot think that the respondent was bound to wait the slow pleasure of the officials of the train to give him a seat, if the ladies’ car was open to his peaceable entrance. If so open, we think that he might well enter it for a seat; for, as we have said, the regulation for convenience should give way to the
The questions of fact as to the entrance of the respondent into the car, and the manner of it, as we have stated them, and on which the respondent’s right to recover largely depends, do not appear to us to have been properly submitted to the jury, with proper instructions to guide them in their finding.
On the contrary, the learned judge refused the appellant’s request to charge the jury that, if the respondent attempted to enter the ladies’ car, after being refused admittance to it, he was a wrongdoer in it, and the appellant’s servant had a right to use sufficient force to prevent him from entering the car. And he did charge the jury that, if there was no room for the respondent to sit in any of the cars except the smoking and ladies’ cars, he had a right to enter the ladies’ car, although there was a regulation to the contrary.
The instruction refused and the instruction given make it manifest that the learned judge was of opinion that, being without a seat in the other cars, the respondent had a right to
With the views which we have already expressed, we have no choice but to hold this charge to have been erroneous, and to reverse the judgment of the court below and remand the cause for a new trial.
By the Court. — It is so ordered.