38 F. 226 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Texas | 1888
Plaintiff claims damages in the sum of $7,500 against 'defendant railway company for .personal injury to Mrs. Houck. The undisputed evidence in the case shows that Mrs. Houck is a young married woman with spihe degree of negro blood in her veins; that casually looking at her or her husband it wduld be difficult to distinguish either of them from white’persons; that she is a graduate of one of the high schools in Texas, where colored persons are educated for school teaching, and she and her husband were known at their home, Victoria, Tex., as respectable colored people; that she was, at the time mentioned in her petition, to 'siime extent pregnant, but otherwise in good health; that,
The defendant contends that the evidence shows that the front car, which was set apart by the company for colored people^ was as safe, and was substantially equal in its conditions to' the rear car, to which she was denied entrance. These recitals make up the issues of law and fact. In accordance with the contention of defendant’s counsel, the court charged the jury that a common carrier — a railway company — may or might be, under a proper showing' of facts, justified and authorized in law, in the management of its complicated interests, in setting apart one or more coaches for the use exclusively of white people, and to set apart other cars for the use exclusively of colored people; but- when the management undertakes to carry out such a rule it is charged with the dut}' of giving or furnishing to the colored passenger who pays first-class fare over the line a car to ride in as safe, and substantially as inviting, to travel in, as it (the management) furnishes to white passengers. The defense having shown some facts in relation to the population along the railway, and as to the kind and character of persons who often become passengers on their trains, which were thought by the court to be sufficient to authorize the management to require by its rules that the rear car, or one of the cars in the train should be kept exclusively for white people, the jury were directed to consider', for the purpose of this case, that the defendant company was justified in law in the enforcement of such a rule, and the plaintiff cannot complain of any injury coming to her because she was denied entrance to the rear car, provided it was shown satisfactorily to them that the car into which Mrs. Houck was told to go by the conductor was as safe and substantially as comfortable in its conditions as the car to which she was denied admission. Hav
Counsel for plaintiff contended that the facts showed that the sickness, which confined Mrs. Houck to her bed for some weeks, was caused by the wrongful acts of the company’s officers on the train. The court directed the jurors’ attention to this contention of plaintiff’s counsel, and charged them that they should hold defendant liable only for such injuries sustained by Mrs. Houck as came to her in consequence of the rude and wrongful acts of the brakeman; and that they should not charge defendant with any injury or sickness which was caused by her riding or being exposed on the platform for so long a distance, because, if she remained on the platform in the rain, and became sick in consequence thereof, she, by her own negligence in not going to a better place for protection against the rain and weather, Avas at fault; that if the miscarriage and illness Avas caused, not by the mental irritation, humiliations; annoyances, and rude acts caused by the faults and wrongs of the brakeman, but by the physical discomforts and fatigue Avhieh her ride, unseated, on the platform, gave her, she could not recover for the injury inherent in the illness of the miscarriage.
This presentation of the case shows two issues of fact. The jury by their verdict are shoAAm to have decided both of these issues in favor of plaintiff. They gave plaintiff So,000 damages — $2,000 for punitive damages, and $3,000 for actual damages. The evidence in the case impressed me Avith the thought that the car in Avhieh Mrs. Houck was directed to ride AATas in itself nothing like as comfortable to ride in as the car kept exclusively for white people, and that the “.Jim Crow Car ” was occupied by boisterous passengers, both Avhite and colored, who were smoking and drinking, as is usually the case in such cars, and was in no way as inviting to travel in as the rear car, to Avhieh plaintiff was denied entrance, —■ notAvithstanding the ticket agent, knowing her to be a colored woman, had sold her a first-class ticket, — because she is a negro. I thought the evidence unquestionably showed that the brakeman treated plaintiff, Avho “acted all the time in a lady-like manner,” rudely, wrongfully, and, in some degree, maliciously. But I do not think the jury were Avarranted by the facts in allowing $3,000 for actual damages, because it was not at all clear that the miscarriage or illness was of a serious nature; nor Avas it made sufficiently clear that either the miscarriage or illness came to Mrs. Houck proximately in consequence of the acts of the brakeman, or of the conductor, in denying her admission to the rear car. Itwas shown by the defendant’s testimony that the brakeman was not discharged because of his rude treatment of plaintiff; but, on the contrary, he was promoted by the railway company to a higher place in the service. The company did not deny that the rear car was set apart exclusively for white passengers, and admitted that the brakeman Avas acting under orders when he