64 Minn. 361 | Minn. | 1896
The only question in this case is whether the ticket agent in what is known as the “Union Depot” at Minneapolis was “an acting ticket agent” of the defendant, within the meaning of G-. S. 1894, § 5202, providing for the service of process in civil actions upon railroad companies.
The facts, as distinguished from mere legal inferences, are practically undisputed, and are quite fairly and fully stated in the memorandum of the trial judge. They may be summarized as follows : The Union Depot is owned and operated by the Minneapolis Union Railway Company. A number of lines of railway, including that of the defendant, use this depot for general depot purposes, and as a regular station on their respective roads, under contracts with the Union Railway Company, whereby, for a specified compensation to be paid to it by each of the other railroad companies, it is to furnish each of them trackage facilities into and through the Union Depot, transfer its cars, transfer and deliver baggage, furnish accommodations for passengers arriving or departing, and also sell tickets for each company; maintaining for that purpose
We are of opinion that under these facts the ticket agent in the Union Depot was “an acting ticket agent” of the defendant, within the meaning of the statute. The contention of defendant is that the word “agent” means “an agent in the eye of the law arising from a contract of employment; one responsible to his principal, and subject to be discharged by it,” — and that within this definition the “ticket agent” at this depot is not its agent, but the agent of the Union Railway Company. We do not concur in this view. While the ticket agent is hired by, and under the control of, the Union Railway Company, yet he is performing all the duties of a ticket agent of the defendant, and the defendant is availing itself of his services for that purpose. The word “acting” must have been used in the statute for a purpose, and it seems to us that the essential thing, under the statute, is not the existence of a contract of service, but the actual performance of the duties of ticket agent for the railroad company. As bearing more or less on this question, see Van Dresser v. Oregon R. & N. Co., 48 Fed. 202; Norton v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 61 Fed. 618; Union Pac. R. Co. v. Novak, 15 U. S. App. 400, 9 C. C. A. 629, 61 Fed. 573; Georgia S. R. Co. v. Bigelow, 68 Ga. 219; State v. Northwestern E. & L. Assn., 62 Wis. 174, 22 N. W. 135.
We do not wish to be understood as intimating that scalpers or ticket brokers to whom a railroad company may furnish its tickets for sale would be its “acting ticket agents,” within the meaning of the statute. The service in this case was made on the assistant ticket agent in the office, while performing its duties during the temporary absence of the head ticket agent, to whom, on his
Order affirmed.