72 N.Y.S. 1018 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The plaintiff complains and the defendant admits that the defendant was on June 7, 1899, and still is, a domestic railroad corporation. Beyond this, there is nothing in the record touching the corporate status of the defendant. Purdy v. Railroad Co., 162 N. Y. 42, 56 N. E. 508, 48 L. R. A. 669, holds that the so-called “Mileage Book Act” (chapter 1027,' Laws 1895) is constitutional, so far as it relates to railroad corporations thereafter incorporated in this state, and that the amendment of that statute by chapter 835 of the Laws of 1896 is constitutional in all cases where the original act could be sustained. As there was no contention that the corporation was not within the purview of the statute raised by the pleadings, and as the record is silent, we must assume that the statute applies. The statute provides that:
“The corporation shall issue mileage books having either five hundred or one thousand coupons attached thereto, entitling the holder thereof to travel either five hundred or one thousand miles on the line or lines of such railroad, for which the corporation may charge a sum not to exceed two cents per mile. * * * Such books shall be issued immediately upon application therefor. Upon presentation of such mileage book to a conductor on any train on any line of railroad owned or operated by said railroad corporation, the holder thereof or any member of his family * * * shall be entitled to travel for a number of miles equal to the number of coupons detached by*1019 the conductor. Such mileage book shall entitle the holder thereof to the same rights and privileges in respect to the transportation of person and property to which the highest class ticket issued by such corporation will entitle him. Such mileage books shall be good until all coupons thereto have been used.”
The plaintiff, who was a traveler on a regular passenger train of the defendant, which stopped at Narrowsburg, New York state, tendered to the conductor thereof a mileage book with sufficient coupons undetached in payment of his fare therefrom to Cocheton, N. Y.,' a regular station at which that train stopped, and which was distant nine miles from Narrowsburg. The territory between such stations was wholly within the state of New York. The conductor refused to accept such mileage book in payment of such fare, and, upon the refusal of the plaintiff to pay his fare for such trip, he ejected him from the train. The complaint in an action for damages due to such ejection was dismissed at trial term on the merits, and the plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered thereupon. The motion for dismissal was based upon the ground that the contract expressed in the mileage book, and entered into by the plaintiff when he bought it, states that the book is good for transportation only wholly within the state of New York, and will not be accepted for a journey which passes through any other state or road. This is the principal basis of the contention of the respondent upon this appeal. The mileage book, when issued, contained certain rules and regulations, as follows:
“This five hundred mile book is sold by Erie Eailroad Company and purchased and used under and in accordance with the following rules and regulations: (1) * * (2) It will be accepted for transportation only for journeys wholly within the state of New York, and will not be accepted for a journey which passes through any portion of another state en route. The undersigned purchases and aeceptsi this boob subject to the above rules and regulations, which he or she has read and fully understands, and hereby agrees to abide by in all respects.”
The plaintiff admitted that he subscribed this book when he purchased it. In effect, then, the defendant relies upon a contract which was required of the plaintiff when, under the authority of the statute, he applied for the mileage book. But I can find nothing in the statute which authorized the defendant to prescribe such a contract with the plaintiff, or to require the plaintiff to subscribe the same as a condition for its issue. Trolan v. Railroad Co., 31 App. Div. 320, 324, 52 N. Y. Supp. 257. The statute but provides that such books must be issued upon application, that the charges shall be two cents a mile, and that the holder shall be entitled to travel for a number of miles equal.to the number of coupons undetached. And the statute entitles the holder to the same rights and privileges in respect to transportation of person and property as the highest ■class ticket would entitle him. Thus the defendant by its contract would limit the statutory duty cast upon it. Not only, in my opinion, is such a contract in contravention of the statute, but, if there be any room for the discussion, I can find no sound reason for this regulation in this case, beyond the desire to avoid the statute. Con-ceding, as the respondent contends, that the legal definition of the
I have thus far discussed the case on the construction of the-contract made by the defendant. But there is room for a construction in harmony with the purview of the statute (based on the further proposition, which is not up for discussion here, that the statutes of this state, in the language of Allen, J., in Dyke v. Railroad Co., 45 N. Y. 113, 118, 6 Am. Rep. 43, 46, have “no intrinsic extraterritorial force”), as meaning that the mileage book is available-only for travel in the state of New York, and that therefore it cannot be used for that part of a trip which passes over the territory of another state. It will be assumed that the defendant did not kick against the statute, nor seek to evade it, but made the rules- and regulations in accord with it and in furtherance of it. This was-the reading of the plaintiff, who admittedly tendered his fare for that part of his route which lay without the state, and only insisted-upon his right to use his mileage book from regular station to regu
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event. All concur.