83 Miss. 560 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Harper lived at Henderson, Ky.; had been living there about 18 months. Prior to that time she had lived at Water Valley, Miss. On the 24th of July, 1901, desiring to mate a visit to Water Valley, she bought a ticket from Henderson, Ky., to Water Valley, Miss., from the ticket 'agent at Henderson. She had lived at Grenada, Miss., before she lived at Water Valley, and her husband and herself desired that she should go by way of Grenada, because she had acquaintances there. She says that she preferred that route, because she did not know where she would be delayed on the direct route by way of Jackson, Tenn., in the night time, and her husband and herself desired that she should go by way of Memphis, and stop over at Grenada. The agent told her that there was no difference in the price of tickets, and she took the Memphis route. The defendant company had two routes: One from Henderson, via Jackson, Tenn., to Water Valley, called the direct route; but the local train ran over this route. The other route was from Henderson, Ky., via Princeton, Ky., to Memphis, Tenn., and Grenada, Miss. Over this the fast train ran. When Mrs. Harper got to Princeton, Ky., she interviewed the ticket agent of the defendant company there, and he told her to take the Memphis train — positively told her not to take the other train. She accordingly took the Memphis train at Princeton. When the conductor of the train came around for tickets, she asked him if she was all right —if she could go by way of Memphis. He told her that certainly. she could go that way, and honored her ticket, and carried her to Brighton, Tenn., within one-half hour’s run of Memphis. She was much nearer Water Valley, at Brighton, going via Memphis,
The chief contention on the part of the appellant is that it was incompetent to admit the declarations of the two ticket agents at Henderson and Princeton, and of the conductor on the train from Princeton, Ky., to Brighton, Tenn. This contention is unsound. The ticket, on its face, contained no information as to which route should be taken, nor did it advise appellee of the
Tbis is decisive of two propositions: First, that these declarations were competent; and, second, tbat tbis appellee was not bound by tbis alleged rule, of wbicb sbe bad no knowledge. It will be noted tbat tbis bolding of tbe United States Supreme Court is squarely to the effect tbat tbe appellee would not have been bound by tbe rule unless information of it bad been communicated to ber, in any event. It is not necessary, however, in this case, on its facts, to hold that tbe appellee should rely on this statement of the principle in its strictness, though we think tbe principle is just as stated by the United States Supreme Court. For here it is manifest that she did make inquiry of the ticket agent and of tbe conductor as to what route she should take, and tbe authorities cited by learned counsel for the appellant go no farther than to bold tbat, where there is a rule such as here involved, it is the duty of tbe intending passenger to find out what route be should take, by inquiry, and that it is not tbe duty of the railroad company to bring home notice of this rule to such intending passenger, otherwise than in answer to inquiry. In the case of Church v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (S. D.), 26 L. R. A., 616 — which, it should be noted, was decided without any counsel appearing for the appellee, the passenger — the court reviews several authorities upon this particular question, as to which the editor, in the footnote, says: “Very few precedents exist.” One of these authorities, relied on by appellant (Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Randolph, 5 Am. Rep., 60), distinctly says: “Tbe required information can always be bad from tbe agent where tbe ticket is
Reversed and remanded.