47 Mich. 277 | Mich. | 1882
Pierce obtained judgment against the plaintiff in error for expulsion from a train on which he was * riding, under a disputed claim of right. The facts which
The case presents some different questions, depending partly on the liability of the company for not taking Pierce to Batavia on the train in question, and partly on the duty of Pierce, whether such liability existed or not, to leave the train at Bronson and seek redress in some other way.
Upon the question whether the company is liable for the action of the agent at Batavia, it is insisted by the plaintiff
It appears from the agent’s testimony that he had once stopped the train in question by an order from the superintendent, which would indicate that he was the proper person from whom conductors might receive directions in special cases; but as he did not communicate with the conductor having charge of the train on which Pierce rode, that officer had no orders beyond his general instructions, and appears to have acted as he understood them.
If Pierce was not in fault in starting on the train, it is difficult to find any reason why the company should not
But this did not necessarily give him a right to remain on the train after he had been told it would not stop at Batavia. 'Whatever remedy he may have against the company for its breach of contract, he had no right to determine for himself on what train he would travel. The business of railroads can only be carried on safely by having regularity. If trains are arranged in a certain way,, and their time fixed with regard to limited stoppages, a conductor would never be safe, if he were bound at his peril to ascertain from any mere stranger the existence of an agreement by the company to change the arrangement and stop at an unusual place. A passenger cannot compel a conductor to deviate from his appointed scheme, and if truly informed concerning the rule as to stoppages, he is bound to conform his own movements to it, and seek redress in some other way. Every one is bound to know that the conductor is not invested with general power to run his train as he pleases, and that so far as he is concerned trains must conform to the schedule.
Pierce ought to have left the train at Bronson, and then if not furnished with passage to Batavia the expense of such passage would be a proper element of damages in addition to such — if any — as were occasioned by the failure to take him through on the train which he was told he could take, and the consequent delay. He ought to have known that if he persisted in remaining on the train the conductor would probably remove him, and such removal was not a distinct wrong in itself, because after leaving Bronson he was wrongfully on the train. He could recover no damages unless for some unlawful violence beyond the necessities of* the removal, because it was lawful to take such steps as were necessary to remove and keep him removed from the train. He cannot complain of an indignity which it was
Judgment must be reversed with costs, and a new trial granted.