177 Mass. 65 | Mass. | 1900
This was an action of trespass quare clausumfor entering the premises surrounding the plaintiff’s railroad station at Westborough. The defendant Brown was the owner of a livery stable, and for a long time he had been accustomed to carry passengers back and forth between the passenger station and the Whitney House, a hotel with whose proprietor he had a contract to carry guests of the hotel who might desire transportation to or from the station at the proprietor’s expense. The defendant Russell was employed by Brown, and drove his carriage during the period referred to in the declaration. The judge who tried the case without a jury found that the defendants, on the days mentioned in the declaration, had a carriage at the plaintiff’s station on the arrival of each train that stopped there, and that they usually carried passengers to the train from the Whitney House and other places. Fre
Previously, in October, 1898, the plaintiff made a contract with one Newton, in which it granted him the exclusive privilege of soliciting passengers to take carriages on the plaintiff’s premises at Westborough. The defendant Brown was at once notified of this contract, and was informed by the plaintiff that he must not solicit passengers on the plaintiff’s premises. Some months afterwards a written notice to the same effect was given him by the plaintiff. ,
The law applicable to cases of this kind was stated by this court in Old Colony Railroad v. Tripp, 147 Mass. 35. The findings and rulings of the judge in regard to the carrying of passengers from the hotel to the station, and in regard to the waiting at the station for the passengers from whom the defend- ' ants had received orders to meet them, were in accordance with the law laid down in that case, and with the request of the defendants in the case now before us. After the notice given them the defendants had no right to enter the plaintiff’s premises or to remain there for the purpose of soliciting passengers to enter their carriages. Each entry of the premises for that purpose was unlawful, and subjected them to liability as trespassers. Their implied license to enter for a lawful purpose was violated when they entered for an unlawful purpose, and they were left without protection from the consequences
The defendants, under the contract with the proprietor of the Whitney House, had no greater rights than if they had been acting solely on their own account. So far as they were originally representing this proprietor and acting in his right, the notice to Brown was equivalent to a notice to him.
Exceptions overruled.