The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is: an action for damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence and wilful misconduct of the defendant in ejecting him from an. excursion train.
The complaint alleges: That on the 21st of August, 1903, he boarded one of the defendant’s passenger trains' at Varnville, to: go to Allendale, another station on defendant’s line, and was a passenger on said train; that after the train had passed Hampton and Brunson, the conductor demanded the fare; that he did not have a ticket, as the office at Vamville was not open a reasonable time before the train arrived; that he tendered .the conductor the legal fare from Varnville to Allendale, which was refused, and the conductor insisted that he pay $1.25, a sum greater than the legal fare, and this he refused to. do, whereupon he was wilfully, wantonly and maliciously ejected at Fairfax, and was' treated with indignity by the conductor and a crowd of drunken passengers, whom he called to his aid, though he mjade no resistance.
The defendant denied the allegations of. the complaint and alleged that 'the train which the plaintiff boarded at Varn *275 ville 'wias not one of defendant’s regular passenger trains, but a train which had been chartered by one R. U. Hughes, and which defendant had agreed with Hughes to run from Rabbins to Beaufort; that it sold no tickets and edleoted no fares for passage on said train, buit that this wa© done by Hughes-, who fixed his -own- prices- and sold- hisi awn tickets, land that it, the defendant, had no right to sell any tickets or collect any fares for passage on said train, and that it -did noit collect -any fares, except at the instance of Hughes, and 'then only as his agent; the conductor and other agents of the defendant upon said trains were there solely for the purpose af running and operating the train safely for Hughes, for the failure to do which the defendant alone would be responsible.
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,350 and the defendant -appealed.
The first question that will be -considered is-, whether hlis Honor, the presiding judge, erred in refusing a motion for a nonsuit.
There is, however, another reason -why his Honor, the presiding judge, could not have granted the motion. Under the decisions in this State, the parties who entered into the contract with the defendant relative to the excursion train were the agents of the defendant.
In the ease of
Harmon
v.
Ry.,
28 S. C., 401, 404,
The Court uses the following language in the case of
Reed
v.
R. R.,
75 S. C., 162, 170,
The defendant did not have the power to enter into' such a contract as would ’exempt it from liability for negligence *277 and wilful misconduct in 'ejecting a pa/ssenger from its train of cars.
When a person gets aboard a train for the purpose of traveling he has the right, generally, to presume that he will only be required to pay the usual fare, and if the railroad imposes conditions with which he is compelled to> comply before be can- become -a passenger, it is incumbent on the railroad to show that hie had notice of such conditions., 'by advertisement or otherwise, which conditions could be waived by the company.
McCarter
v.
Traction Co.,
72 S. C., 134,
The public Was invited to become passengers on the excursion. -train ulpon condition that each person who got on board purchased a round-trip ticket, and the question whether the plaintiff had notice of such requirement was properly submitted to the jury.
Judgment affirmed.
