120 Ga. 284 | Ga. | 1904
B. H. Pearson sued the Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company in the City court of Macon. The allegations of his petition, so far as material to the question'presented for our decision, were as follows: The defendant “is a corporation operating its business in the State of Georgia and having its principal office and residence in said county of Bibb.” On May 24, 1902, plaintiff purchased a ticket from the agent of the defendant at Cordele, Ga., for transportation from that point to Charleston, S. C., and return, via the Georgia Southern and Florida Railway, the Georgia Railroad, and the Southern Railway. He used the ticket to Macon and there boarded a train, on the Georgia Railroad, for Augusta, and when he tendered his ticket to the conductor on that train, it was refused because the selling agent of the defendant at Cordele had failed to properly stamp it; at Milledgeville he was ejected from the train of the Georgia Railroad Company and had to purchase a ticket to Augusta, and at Augusta had to purchase one to Charleston, and at Charleston had to purchase one back to Cordele. He paid out for such tickets $8.97. ’He was ejected from the Georgia. Railroad train because of the negligence of the defendant’s agent at Cordele in failing to properly stamp his ticket. The ejection caused him great mortifi
Counsel for plaintiff in errror, both in their brief and in oral argument, stated that the second gropnd of demurrer was not relied on but was abandoned. The sole question for our decision, therefore, is one of jurisdiction, that is, whether the suit could be properly brought in the county of Bibb. The action was not for a breach of contract, but was for a tort by breach of duty. In the language of Chief Justice Bleckley, in Head v. Georgia Pacific Railway Co., 79 Ga. 360, “It was an action upon the case for a wrong, not an action of assumpsit for a breach of the contract. It went upon the theory that the contract established the relation of carrier and passenger, a relation attended with a duty from the former to the latter, and that the duty was wrongfully violated. Where the plaintiff has a contract with the defendant which generates a relation attended with a public duty, he has his option to' bring assumpsit for breach of the contract, or case for breach of the duty. Here the plaintiff brought a proper action, the contract being set out merely as inducement, with a view to raise the relation, the stress of the action being put upon Ms expulsion from the train, which, if wrongful, was not only a breach of the contract, but a violation of a public duty by a common carrier.” In such a case, as was there held, “punitive as well as actual dam
Counsel for the plaintiff in error recognize that if the case of Central Railroad, v. Combs, supra, does establish the principle that a railroad company selling a through ticket, over its own and connecting lines of road, is liable for the safe and secure transportation of the passenger to his destination, it stands in the way of their contention as to the want of jurisdiction of the city court of Macon in the present ease. Accordingly, they ask that if that case “is regarded as having decided that a railway company is liable for the safe and sure passage of a person over connecting lines, to whom it sells a ticket,” it shall be “ overruled or modified.” As above indicated, we do not see how this decision can be otherwise regarded; and it seems to have been uniformly so construed by courts and text-writers who have had occasion to mention or cite it. The effect of the request of counsel is that that case shall be reviewed and overruled. There is no request to review the case of Hawley v. Screven, 62 Ga. 347, which established, in this State, the principle followed in that case, and, in our opinion, it would be useless to review the case in question without reviewing the older case which, in principle, it followed. In Hawley v. Screven, it was held that “ A passenger who purchased a through ticket from Savannah, Georgia, to Jacksonville, Florida, of the agent of [one railroad company], and had his trunk checked accordingly, could recover of such [company] for its loss, although it showed that there were three connecting roads between the two places mentioned, that it was the first, and that it had safely delivered the trunk to the second.” In Wolff v. Central Railroad Company, 68 Ga. 653, it was held: “Where a passenger with a through ticket over a connecting line of railroads checks his baggage at the starting point through to his destination, and upon arriving it has been damaged or has been broken open and robbed, he may sue the road which issued the check, or he may sue the road delivering the baggage in bad order.” In i;hat case the suit was against the railroad company delivering the baggage at its destination. In the opinion in the case which we are asked to review, Judge Blandford, referring to
It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error that “ the duty of the carrier was to have given Pearson a ticket according to his contract, which would have been good for passage from Cordele to Charleston and return, and as it did not do so, there was a violation .of the carrier’s duty, which occurred in the county of Dooly, a tort growing out of contract, and, while the 'tort may not have been completed until Pearson reached the county of Baldwin, on the line of a connecting road, yet the courts of Dooly alone, have jurisdiction of this case.” This might be a sound argument if the tort growing out of the violation of the carrier’s duty consisted in the failure to stamp the ticket which the defendant company sold to the plaintiff, but as the duty of the defendant company, under the contract which it made with the plaintiff, was to safely transport him from Cordele to Charleston and back, notwithstanding its failure to stamp the ticket, it is obvious that no tort was committed until it violated this duty. It violated this duty in the county of Baldwin, and then and there the plaintiff’s cause of action, for-the tort thus committed, arose.
The trial court did not err in holding that the suit could be properly brought in Bibb county,
Judgment affirmed.