Lead Opinion
Appellant brought this action to recover damages which he alleges he sustained by reason of having been wrongfully ejected from one of respondent’s passenger trains. At the trial, after both parties had rested, the district court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of respondent. Judgment was duly entered upon this verdict, and hence this appeal.
The principal error assigned relates to the ruling of thd court in directing a verdict for the respondent. As we view the matter, the question of whether the court erred depends upon the meaning to be given to certain provisions of a contract which was in force between the parties, and from which their respective rights and duties as carrier and passenger must be determined. It appears that respondent, for its own as well as for the convenience of its patrons, sold and issued certain seripbooks. The scrip contained in the books was exchangeable for passage tickets the same as money or cash would have been. The scrip was, however, not receivable by the conductors as fare on trains except
The provisions of the contract aforesaid which we deem material are as follows: “The person presenting this book is entitled to receive in exchange for the scrip’ in this book, at its full value, one way, continuous passage, first-class local and interline tickets . . . having both origin and destination upon the lines named in this book.” Then follows the names of the several railroad lines that will receive the scrip in exchange for passage tickets. Then the following condition is inserted: “The scrip in this book will not be honored for passage on trains except from stations where tickets are not obtainable.” And, further, “the scrip' must be detached by the agent and will not be valued or honored if otherwise detached.” It is conceded by both parties that the provisions aforesaid were in full force and effect, and the only contention between them is with respect to the meaning and legal effect of the foregoing provisions.
The material facts sufficiently appear from the testimony of appellant, which is as follows:
“I left Montpelier on defendant’s train No. 1, in tlie afternoon of October 31, 1902. Purchased a ticket to Soda Springs. That train went to Pocatello. On the train I made up my mind to go to Po-catello, a point heyond Soda Springs. On arriving at Soda Springs, having gone forward as far as I could, and almost before the train stopped, 1 ran up to the baggage car, where the agent and conductor were, and I handed the book out to the agent, and told him I wanted a ticket to Pocatello. The agent said: T haven’t got time to sell you any; you ought to come in before the train came in.’ I said, T came in on the train, and I could not get here any sooner.’ He said, T haven’t got time to sell you any.’ The conductor was right there, and I said to the conductor: T have a scripbook here, and I want a ticket to Pocatello. This agent says he won’t sell me one.’*457 The conductor said, ‘Well, we can’t take it on the train.’ So I turned to the agent and said: ‘Do you hear what this conductor says, that he can’t take this scrip on the train? I want a ticket.’ With that the conductor turned to the agent and said, ‘How long does it take to get one of these tickets out?’ The agent said, ‘Oh, three or four minutes. . . . The conductor said, ‘Can’t hold the train.’ I walked hack to the ticket office. It was closed, and when they were ready to pull out I got on the train. I think that train was at the station four or five minutes. It takes from one-half to one minute to purchase a ticket with scrip. This scrip is arranged in 5-cent pieces. A line of the scrip represents 5 cents. My baggage and grips were in a Pullman car. I remained there until we got to Bancroft. The conductor came in and asked me. for my fare. I handed him up the scripbook. He refused to take it, and said I would have to pay cash, and he said I would have to get off. I declined to pay cash. He went through the train, and we stopped at Bancroft, and immediately on leaving Bancroft he came into the car where I was and said, ‘Tickets?’ I handed him up the scripbook, and he said: T can’t take it. Will you pay cash?’ I said, ‘No, sir,’ and he stopped the train and put me off. . . . The scrip was 2 1-2 cents a mile, and I did not want to pay 4 cents for local fares. It is probably 70 miles from Soda Springs to Pocatello.”
From the foregoing it is reasonably certain tbat appellant attempted to obtain a ticket at Soda Springs; that he failed to obtain it for the sole reason that he applied for it at a time when respondent’s agent was unable to issue a ticket before the passenger train upon which respondent intended to' rich departed from Soda Springs; that respondent had tickets on sale at Soda Springs, and that tickets were obtainable there, and that appellant was ejected from the train for the sole reason that he had boarded it without procuring a ticket and had refused to pay the local cash fare from Soda Springs to Pocatello^ the point he intended to reach as a passenger on that train. The question therefore is, Was appellant wrongfully ejected from the train? Appellant does not contend that respondent did not have the legal right to eject him from the train, as was' done, if he had refused to pay fare, but contends that he did not refuse to pay fare, inasmuch as he tendered scrip to the conductor in payment of his fare; Respondent contends that the conditions contained in the contract under which the conductor was authorized to receive scrip instead of cash did not exist,
Appellant insists that by what he did he had demonstrated that a ticket was not obtainable at Soda Springs, and, this being so, he was authorized to tender scrip as payment of fare on the train, and that, it was the duty of the defendant, through its conductor, to receive scrip for that ■purpose under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence. Is this contention sound? This depends upon the meaning and effect that should be given to the provision of the contract which provides that scrip “will not be honored for passage on trains except from stations where tickets are not obtainable.” It is clear that in entering into the contract the parties intended that scrip should be receivable in payment for fare on trains upon one condition only, namely, if the purchaser of a scripboolc should desire to board a train at a station where a ticket was not obtainable; that is, where the purchaser could not procure a ticket in exchange for scrip. The word “obtainable,” abstractedly considered, perhaps has a much broader meaning than it was intended to be given in the contract. This is manifest
Appellant contends that the exception provided for was intended to apply to any' cause by which the purchaser was
As we have seen, in any view that may be taken, the natural and ordinary meaning of the word “obtainable” must be restricted in applying the conditions of the foregoing contract. It is therefore only reasonable that it be restricted to that sense which the parties evidently intended it to have in view of all the facts and circumstances. In construing provisions in contracts it is elementary that courts, in order to preserve the real intention of the parties, must frequently either enlarge or restrict the natural and ordinary meaning of words or phrases.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. I think by the word “obtainable” the parties intended- the meaning given it by lexicographers, and as generally understood, to “attain by effort;” to “procure especially by effort.” (Standard Dictionary.) So, reading the contract, it means that scrip will not be honored on trains except from stations where tickets are not procurable by effort. That does not mean any effort, but. a reasonable effort. It does not mean that if for any cause the holder of scrip was unable to procure a ticket at a station, the scrip should be honored. It does mean that at stations where a reasonable opportunity is afforded to procure a ticket by reasonable efforts, scrip will not be honored from such stations. If at such a station a ticket was obtainable, and the holder of the scrip, through no fault on the part of the carrier, placed himself in a situation where he: could not avail himself of the opportunity so afforded, such acts or conduct on his part, or inability, occasioned or created by himself, to obtain a ticket, do not, under the terms of the contract, give him the right to tender scrip. To hold otherwise leads to the conclusion that if a holder of scrip arrives late at a station, to there start upon his journey, and arrives in time only to board the train as it is departing, and not in time to exchange his scrip for a ticket at the station, he would have the right, under the terms of the contract, to tender the scrip on the train. Of course he could assert that a ticket was not obtainable by him at the station, not because a reasonable opportunity was not afforded by the carrier, but wholly because of the lateness of his arrival, and of an inability occasioned or created by himself. The appellant does not contend that upon the evidence adduced he was