39 Minn. 3 | Minn. | 1888
Defendant was a common carrier of passengers for hire, maintaining and operating, for that purpose, a line of railway from Minneapolis to Wayzata, on Lake Minnetonka. The plaintiff, for the purpose of going from Minneapolis to Wayzata, entered, at the former place, one of defendant’s regular passenger trains for the latter place, which immediately started, and, before plaintiff could look_ through the cars in the train to find a seat, it was going at a high rate of speed. ; Upon looking through the train, he could find no seat vacant. At the first opportunity he applied to the conductor to furnish him a seat, and the conductor (as we assume, because the seats
In the case of a trespasser on a train, — that is, a person wrongfully upon it, as where he enters it intending not to pay the fare, or where.he wrongfully refuses to pay the fare when properly demanded, —the conductor is not required to put him off at one place rather than another, provided he do not wantonly expose him to peril of serious personal injury. With that qualification, he may put him off at a place other than a station, and is not required to consider his mere convenience. Wyman v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 34 Minn. 210, (25 N. W. Rep. 349.)
This plaintiff, however, was not wrongfully on the train. It is, in general, the duty of a railroad company to provide sufficient cars to carry all who have occasion to travel on its line of road. As the law does not require unreasonable things, a single instance, or occasional instances, of insufficiency in the amount of means to travel, caused by a rush of travel not reasonably to be expected by the company, would probablybe excused; and the railroad company, like all other common carriers of passengers, must provide those whom it carries with the usual, reasonable accommodations for comfort in travelling, including seats. This is too well established to need citation of authorities. When this plaintiff, desiring to take passage to Wayzata, found one of defendant’s regular passenger trains about to start for that place, he had a right to enter it, assuming that the defendant had done its duty in providing sufficient and suitable accommodations for all having occasion to become passengers on the train.
The case differs from the Wyman Case, for in that case the refusal to pay fare was wrongful; in this, the refusal, unless a seat was provided him, was rightful. In that case the plaintiff, by the refusal, became a trespasser; in this, he did not. This case is somewhat analogous to Maples v. New York, etc., R. Co., 38 Conn. 557, in which it was laid down that a railroad company, having a right to eject from its train one not a trespasser, must do so at some regular station on its road. That is a reasonable rule, and that the decision was in accordance with the general rule was recognized by this court in the Wyman Case. See, also, Gallena v. Hot Springs R. Co., 13 Fed. Rep. 116.
Order reversed.