115 P. 401 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for a wrongful expulsion from one of defendant’s trains. The complaint alleges that on July 26, 1909, the plaintiff purchased from the-defendant at Butte, Montana, a ticket from that place to Missoula, Montana; that he entered one of defendant’s passenger-trains, delivered the ticket to the conductor in charge, and was. riding as a passenger on his way to Missoula; and that, before he reached his destination, the defendant, acting through its. conductor, at Warm Springs station, without right and with force and violence and against plaintiff’s will, with circumstances of indignity and by kicking or striking plaintiff with his knee, ejected him from the train, to his damage, etc. The-answer admits the purchase of the ticket by plaintiff; that he entered upon the train as alleged; that he offered the ticket to-the conductor; and that he was ejected from the train at Warm Springs, and denies all the other allegations of the complaint. It then alleges affirmatively that the expulsion of plaintiff was. due to his own fault; that he entered a train consisting wholly of Pullman cars; that in order to ride thereon, in addition to-the purchase of a regular first-class ticket, it was necessary to-pay Pullman car fare; that, upon being advised by the conductor that his ticket could not be accepted unless he paid the Pullman fare, he refused to pay it, and that because of such refusal the defendant was forced to stop its train and expel him therefrom. Upon these allegations' there was issue by reply. At the trial, the hearing of the evidence being completed,, the court sustained defendant’s motion for a verdict in its. favor. The appeal is from the judgment entered thereon.
The grounds of defendant’s motion are: that the complaint fails in several particulars to state a cause of action, and that the evidence is insufficient to make a case for the jury. For the purposes of this decision, we shall assume that the complaint states a cause of action, and consider only the question whether the action of the court in directing a verdict was cor
On July 26, 1909, the plaintiff and others purchased from defendant at Butte first-class tickets from that place to Missoula intending to take defendant’s train known as No. 15. This train was divided into two sections. The first was made up exclusively of Pullman sleeping-cars. The day coaches were in the second section. The two sections were scheduled as one train. The first section arrived at Butte about 6 o’clock, some two hours and a half after daylight, and left a few minutes later. The second section usually followed after an interval of twenty-five minutes. On this morning it followed thirty or forty minutes later. When the first section arrived, the plaintiff, with six or seven others bound to the same destination, sought to enter it. A porter employed on the train, standing at the entrance of the car, told them that there was room for five more passengers only, and would not permit more than five to enter, though others attempted to do so. Among the five was plaintiff. The other four were strangers to him, and it seems had not met each other before that morning. When the conductor came to collect their Pullman fares, the following took place:
Plaintiff testified: “The Pullman car conductor came along and says: ‘Do you gentlemen want this drawing-room?’ And one of the gentlemen spoke up and says: ‘How much is it?’ He says: ‘Six dollars.’ He says, ‘Haven’t you got some other place to sit besides here? That’s pretty steep.’ He says: ‘I can give you berths. A dollar and a half for two.’ He says:‘That will be six bits apiece?’ He says: ‘Yes.’ He went away and after awhile he came back, and says: ‘If you want berths, dig
Hoyt, the train conductor, called by defendant, testified: “I am familiar as train conductor with the rule of business as it was carried on as to when they exact seat fare and when they exact berth fare. After 7 o’clock in the morning it is seat fare. Anything before that it is berth rate. The berth rate is $1.50 between Butte and Missoula. When I got into this drawing-room, I learned who it was that wouldn’t pay the fare by the Pullman conductor showing him to me. I explained to him in regard to the way the fares was collected, and what we would have to do if he wouldn’t pay it. I would mark his ticket off at Warm Springs, and he could get the second section with day coaches, which would make a difference of about forty minutes to Missoula. It was between thirty and forty minutes behind us, and I told him that. This took place after we were out of Butte about fifteen minutes. * # # I told him before 7 o’clock in the morning it was berth rate; and, if there were two men together, the two could stay in the berth and pay the fare between them; but where there was only one, he had to pay full fare. He said he would pay but seventy-five cents; that is, what the rest of them paid. He said he had a first-class ticket, and he was going to ride on it. I told him he couldn’t ride on a first-class ticket without Pullman transportation. I told him I would mark his ticket, and I did. After so marking the ticket, I canceled it once and handed it back to him, and he accepted it. The train at this time was just coming into Warm Springs.”
The witness Baysoar, agent of the defendant at Butte, testified: “I was familiar with the method of selling seats and berths in Pullman cars as they prevailed in the regular course of business in July of last year. They ceased selling tickets at night to any point reached by the train after 10 o ’clock P. M. In the
It may be conceded, as counsel for plaintiff contend, that, having purchased a first-class ticket and entered a car apparently
The integrity of the judgment in this case, therefore, is to be determined by answer to the inquiry: Was the rule in question a reasonable one? The statements of the different witnesses agree in all essential particulars. The facts are not disputed.
Under the rule as interpreted by the Pullman conductor, half berths could not be sold, but one berth could be sold to two persons. His sale of berths to the four other passengers as he did, allowing each to pay one-half the price, was a compliance with the rule as he interpreted it. It was a question between him and his employer whether he correctly interpreted it. He was clearly within its reasonable requirements in demanding the berth rate from the plaintiff; and the plaintiff had no right to complain that he was not so situated that he could join with some one else in the purchase of his accommodations and obtain them at the same price as the others. But counsel say that defendant is chargeable with putting him in that position, because it is apparent that, if there were accommodations for five persons, there were for six, and but for the action of the porter in charge in excluding other passengers he would have obtained his accommodations at the same price as the others
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
The plaintiff claims that technically he has a cause of action against the Northern Pacific Railway Company, and the latter has interposed a purely technical defense. It invokes a rule of the Pullman company to the effect that no seat tickets shall be sold before a reasonable hour in the morning, and its employees have testified that such reasonable hour has been fixed at 7 o’clock — by whom it does not appear. Plaintiff and six other persons, all apparently strangers to each other, desiring to ride from Butte to Missoula, boarded a solid Pullman train at about five minutes after 6 o’clock on a bright morning in midsummer. He knew that he was boarding a Pullman car, and that he would be obliged to pay extra for the privilege of riding thereon. The porter at the step of the car allowed Mm and four other men to get aboard, turning others away, because, as he said, he had room for but five. "What reason is there for supposing that the porter was not acting within the scope of his duty and authority when he allowed five men to board the car? If he had room for five, he certainly had room for six. That there was ample seat room for six is not disputed.
But this plaintiff is entitled to very little sympathy. He may have a technical cause of action against the Northern Pacific Railway Company for purely nominal damages. He said on.the witness-stand: “I meant to ‘put it up to him’ to put me off the train if I was to be put off. That was my purpose.” When he found himself confronted with a rule of the Pullman company which the conductor had no authority to change or modify, or even to construe reasonably, without jeopardizing his position, or, as he himself said, “losing his job,” he might have paid the extra seventy-five cents under protest and recovered it later, if wrongfully paid. Or he could have left the train quietly at Warm Springs, taking the second section forty minutes later, without substantial loss. He did in faci ride to Missoula, on