53 Mo. 317 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
Oliver Davis brought suit in the Circuit Court of Buchanan county, against The Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Bail Boad Company, and his petition is substantially as follows :
The first count alleges, that defendant was an incorporated company, under the laws of this State, engaged in the transportation of passengers for hire, on the line of its road, from Kansas City through St. Joseph to Council Bluffs in the State of Iowa; that plaintiff’purchased of defendant on the 18th of October, 1870, a first-class ticket entitling him to a seat, in accordance with such ticket, in the cars of defendant, from the town of Winthrop to the town of Bigelow, on the line of defendant’s railroad; that defendant failed and refused to furnish sufficient accommodations, and its cars were so crowded, that plaintiff could not procure a seat; was compelled to stand to his great pain, danger, &c., by being jolted and thrown about by the rapid motion of the cars against the arms of seats, &c., although plaintiff was suffering at the time with great physical debility, and rheumatism; to his damage in the sum of five thousand dollars, for which judgment is asked.
The second count in its introductory matter is like the first, and charges that defendant, “after having carried plaintiff as such passenger in such cars ”, to a place about half way between Forest City and Bigelow, declined and refused to further carry or transport him, and ejected him without lawful excuse from its cars, in the night time, on an uninhabited prairie, while the night was dark, cold and rainy, whereby plaintiff was compelled to walk about five miles to the town of Bige
The chief portion of the answer of defendant is tantamount to a general denial; it admits that plaintiff was a passenger on its road, but denies that he had purchased a ticket, and then as a further defense, states that he went on board of the cars of defendant, and that while on said cars, between St. Joseph and Forest City, the conductor asked plaintiff for his ticket or his fare, which he wrongfully refused to deliver or pay to the conductor, who then informed him that he must get off at the next station, Forest City, and this plaintiff also failed to do, but remained on the cars, and upon being again called on for his ticket or his fare, wrongfully and without excuse refused to deliver the one, or to pay the other; and thereupon the conductor gently laid his hands upon him and put him off the train, after the same had been stopped near several dwelling houses, using no more force than was necessary, &e.
The reply traverses all the chief allegations of the answer, and alleges the production and exhibition of the plaintiff’s ticket to the conductor, and the offer by plaintiff' to pay his fare, &c.
The testimony, adduced at the trial of the cause, discloses the fact that the controversy, which gave rise to this suit, arose respecting a seat in the defendant’s cars; to which seat plaintiff claimed he was entitled, prior to surrendering his ticket, or paying his fare.
He ¡'ides from Winthrop to St. Joseph on his ticket, which is punched or cancelled in the usual way, for that portion of the trip, and that train proceeding no further, the journey is resumed in the morning; and between St. Joseph and Forest City, he is called upon for his ticket, but declines to surrender it until provided with a seat, stating that he would not pay fare and stand up. The plaintiff claims that he showed the conductor his ticket and told him, “ when you get me a seat, I will give you the ticket,” and that the conductor replied, “I
Yarious instructions were asked by the plaintiff, and refused by the court, and several instructions given at the instance of defendant; to which action of the court, plaintiff duly saved his exceptions. But in the view I take of this case, it is entirely unnecessary to examine into the correctness of the action of the court below in that particular, as I do not think that the plaintiff was, upon his own showing, entitled to a recovery.
There can be no doubt, that a passenger on a railroad, who exhibits his ticket and demands a seat, has a right to have that demand complied with, prior to the surrender of that which constitutes, in the very nature of the case, the best evidence of his contract with the company for safe and comfortable transportation. But it is equally true, that he must adhere to, and rely on that contract, or if there be a non-compliance with its terms in any reasonable and essential particu-. lar on the part of the company, he must abandon the contract and quit the train, so soon as suitable opportunity offers. Pie will not be permitted, as was attempted in this case, to grasp that contract’s benefits with one hand, while he shirks and repudiates its burdens and liabilities on the other. And had the plaintiff, upon presentation of his ticket, and the refusal of a seat until he surrendered that ticket, abandoned his contract,
For these reasons, without entirely sanctioning the action of th,e court below, as to giving or refusing instructions, I am of opinion that the judgment should be affirmed.