The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages for alleged unlawful and wilful expulsion of plaintiff from defendant’s passenger train, and resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $1,300. On September 13th, 1901, plaintiff bought a regular straight ticket for passage on defendant’s train from Easley to Seneca, for which he paid full fare. For some reason he did not use the ticket until April *112 13tli, 1903, when he presented it to the conductor for passage from Easley to Seneca. The conductor declined to receive it, claiming that it was out of date, and on plaintiff refusing to pay the fare, he was expelled from the train at Liberty, S. C., a station between Easley and Seneca. The ticket, in addition to other conditions, contained the following printed in full on its face: “Good for one passage if used on or before midnight of date canceled by ‘L’ punch in the margin below only on trains stopping at destination.” The date so punched was Sqhember 12, 1901.
In the second place, no harm arose to' appellant by the ruling, for immediately after the ruling the following questions and answers were made, substantially covering the point: “How many times have you traveled on tickets like that? Very few times: I can give you my reason. I have been living on a road where they give you a pasteboard ticket *113 good for all times. When you saw this one, you knew it was different from the other tickets? I didn’t know what kind of a ticket he was giving me: You knew the one he gave you was a different kind of a ticket? I know now that it was a different kind, at that time I didn’t know any. difference as to the limitation. I didn’t look at it.” Furthermore, the witness, at folio 15, testified that, at the time of the purchase of the ticket, the agent of defendant company did not call his attention to any limitation on the ticket, that witness did not read the ticket, and did not know what kind of a ticket it was. He also testified to the same effect at folio 60.
*114 In this, connection, the Court charged defendant’s.eleventh request to charge, as follows: “If a passenger knows of the regulations of the railroad company limiting the time within which his ticket is. to be used, and accepted, he is bound thereby.”
The specifications of error assigned to the charge first above quoted are: “(a) A common carried has the right to adopt and enforce reasonable regulations for the conduct of its business; the condition that a ticket can be used only upon the day of the purchase and date, is a reasonable regulation, by which the passenger is bound', whether he has actual notice thereof at the time of the purchase or not, and whether he has assented thereto or not. (b) Even if the plaintiff had no notice of the condition and was not bound thereby at the time of purchase, it should have been left to the jury to say whether he had not waived his right and acquiesced in said condition by retaining the same for eighteen months, and presenting it after he knew of the condition and after he knew that he could have redeemed the ticket not used, (c) It should have been left to the jury to say whether the plaintiff had not purposely made the trip' and procured his own ejectment for the purpose of a lawsuit, and if so, he could not maintain the action.”
The recent case'of Norman v. Southern Railway, 65 S. C., 517, holds that a passenger paying full fare for a general ticket is not bound by limitations printed thereon, unless his attention has been called to1 them and he has assented thereto. The charge was' in conformity with the law declared in that case. Appellant has requested that the decision in that case be reviewed. After careful consideration, we adhere to the rule therein announced.
With .reference to specification b, we need only say that whether the plaintiff is bound by the time limitation on the ticket, must depend upon whether he knew of the condition and assented to it at the time of its purchase.
With reference to specification c, we may say that it does not seem to have relevancy to the rule of law which the Court *115 was declaring to the jury. If there was anything in the testimony warranting instruction as to plaintiff’s right to maintain the action, because of his conduct or motive in procuring his ejectment, a proper request to charge should have been submitted on that contention.
4. The remaining exception not disposed of by what has been already ruled is the seventh, which alleges error in the following charge: “If the jury believe that the defendant wilfully, wantonly or recklessly ejected plaintiff from its train on the occasion alleged in the complaint, then plaintiff is entitled to recover vindictive or punitive damages in such sum as would, in the opinion of the jury, punish the defendant for its wilful, wanton or reckless conduct.” The error assigned is that it is solely a matter within the discretion of the jury whether punitive damages shall be allowed, and is not a matter of right in the plaintiff. The jury has a discretion in fixing the amount which shall be awarded by way of exemplary damages, but it is not within their discretion to refuse to award any exemplary damages when a case is made which in law justifies such damages.
The plaintiff’s right to recover exemplary damages follows when he has alleged a cause of action warranting such damages, has offered evidence in support thereof, and there is no defense defeating his cause of action. Thereupon a duty devolves upon the jury to render a verdict in accordance with plaintiff’s right. “Exemplary or punitive damages go to the plaintiff, not as a fine or penalty for a public wrong,
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but ill vindication of a private right which has been wilfully invaded; and, indeed, it may be said that such damages in a measure compensate or satisfy for the wilfulness with which the private right was invaded, but in addition thereto operates as a deterring punishment to the wrong doer, and as a warning to others.”
Watts
v.
Railroad Company,
60 S. C., 73,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
