93 So. 698 | Ala. | 1922
This is a suit by J. W. Hamby to recover damages of the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company for his alleged wrongful ejection from a passenger train of the defendant. There was a jury and verdict in favor of the plaintiff, judgment thereon by the court, and the defendant appeals.
The cause was submitted to the jury on count A. Demurrers to it were overruled by the court, and this ruling of the court is assigned as error. This count, among other things, avers that:
"The plaintiff, in company with his minor children, took passage on one of defendant's trains at Evansville, Ind., intending to come on said train to Birmingham, Ala., plaintiff then and there having in his possession tickets purchased by the plaintiff, and entitling plaintiff and his said minor children to passage on the defendant's said train from Evansville, Ind., to Birmingham, Ala.; that on said date, while plaintiff and his said minor children were such passengers on said train, and at a point on said line known as Henderson, Ky., the defendant's conductor in charge of said train, who was then *76 and there a servant, agent, or employé of the defendant, while acting within the line and scope of his employment by the defendant, did wrongfully eject the plaintiff and his said minor children from said train."
It avers plaintiff and his children entered the train with tickets purchased for passage, and such passengers were wrongfully ejected. The defendant owed plaintiff the duty to properly demand of him to produce and deliver the tickets or to pay the fare before ejecting him from the train, under the averments of this count. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Johnson,
Section 1172 of 10 Corpus Juris, p. 731, reads in part:
"A passenger who fails or refuses without a reasonable excuse to pay his fare or produce a ticket when properly demanded becomes a trespasser and may be ejected from the train or car."
This count states a good cause of action, and is not subject to the demurrers assigned to it. McGhee v. Reynolds,
The plaintiff purchased and paid for four tickets — two whole tickets and two half tickets — for himself and children from Chicago to Birmingham. These tickets entitled them to transportation over the Illinois Central Railroad from Chicago to Evansville, and from there to Birmingham over the lines of the defendant. He had with him six children, ranging in ages from 13 years to 18 months. When they reached Evansville they changed from the Illinois Central to the Louisville Nashville train. When they went on the Louisville Nashville train a flagman of the defendant, as was his duty, called out, "Show your tickets," so passengers would be sure to get on the right train. The plaintiff handed his four tickets to the flagman; there was evidence by the flagman that he returned them to the plaintiff; and a little later the flagman directed all passengers to move from that coach into another coach, which they did. There was evidence tending to show that the four tickets were lost or misplaced by plaintiff or stolen by some one, or never returned to plaintiff by the flagman. The plaintiff's pocketbook and money were lost or stolen. This car from which they moved remained in Evansville. The conductor called on plaintiff for the tickets; plaintiff could not find them, or his pocketbook, money, or checks; the flagman told the conductor he had seen the tickets, and knew plaintiff did have them when he got on the train. This was before plaintiff and his children were required to leave the train at Henderson by the conductor. The plaintiff and conductor were talking on the train. The conductor stated to plaintiff, as testified to by plaintiff:
"If you don't make a showing for the tickets you have to get off at the next station, and go back to Evansville and look for your tickets."
At this time some remarks were made by other men on the train. They said: "The conductor says you may get off at Henderson." Over objection of defendant this question was then asked plaintiff, and this answer given by him to it:
"What did the conductor say to the other men? A. The conductor says I haven't got time to fool with him here."
This was a spontaneous statement made by the conductor to others in the presence of plaintiff while in conversation with plaintiff on the res gestæ of the case. It shed light on the motive and attitude of the conductor on the subject of time to find the tickets or to make showing for the tickets. The question called for the statement of the conductor to the other men, and not their statement. Its admission was not error. Ala. City, G. A. Ry. Co. v. Sampley,
The plaintiff testified the conductor said:
"This is the stop I want him to get off; he can get off here and go back. I will give him a pass back to Henderson."
The plaintiff testified:
"I says to the conductor, 'If you give me a few minutes I think I can get up the money to pay my way on.' I says, 'I will give good security, as soon as I get to Birmingham, for the money, and send it to any one who will pay my fare from here on.' The conductor replied, 'I can't wait. You can make that arrangement at Evansville.' "
The evidence tended to show as plaintiff then walked from his seat to the door to get off between $9 and $10 were handed him by different men.
The conductor testified:
"I had the discretion of allowing whatever time I thought was necessary. He did not make any request for any extra time; absolutely no use. He did not ask me to let him have a few minutes in which to raise the money — there is not a bit of truth in that. Nothing like that occurred. He told me it was useless to look further."
The conductor on cross-examination was permitted by the court to be asked by the plaintiff whether or not he put the plaintiff and his children off the train after about one-fourth of his fare had been raised. Two of the questions were as follows:
"Is it a fact, Mr. Moody, that Mr. Hamby raised about $10 right then and there while he and the children were in the act of being put off the train?"
"Didn't you put the man off the train with *77 the little children when the passengers and Mr. Hamby were raising the fare, after he raised one-fourth of the fare to take him from there to Birmingham?"
The objections to these questions were the general grounds. There was no objection assigned because from "there to Birmingham" meant from Henderson to Birmingham, when it was plaintiff's duty to pay the fare from Evansville where he and the children boarded the train, to Birmingham. Then the words "to take him from there to Birmingham" could mean from Evansville to Birmingham. It was the duty of plaintiff to furnish ticket or pay the fare from Evansville to Birmingham. Manning v. L. N. R. R. Co.,
"I didn't know what he raised. He didn't tell me anything about raising money. No; I didn't see anybody give anything. I could not swear to it; no, sir; I could make a statement to that effect, though I had a suspicion of what was going on. I am not supposed to permit anything like that on the train."
No motion was made to exclude the answers.
This charge requested by the defendant was refused by the court:
"The court charges the jury that a rule of the defendant to the effect that a conductor shall not allow a collection to be taken up for the benefit of a passenger is a reasonable rule."
The only evidence we find in the record to support this charge is this statement of the conductor:
"I am not supposed to permit anything like that on the train."
This is not sufficient to show that defendant had a rule, that it was a reasonable one, that a conductor shall not allow a collection to be taken up for the benefit of a passenger. This charge is based partly on facts of which no evidence appears in the record. The charge is abstract. There is not sufficient evidence in the record on which it can rest. The court did not err in refusing it. Aiken v. State,
Was the defendant entitled to the general affirmative charge with hypothesis? In 10 Corpus Juris, p. 732, it is stated:
"It is a usual and reasonable requirement that the passenger not only shall have a ticket or other evidence of his right to transportation, but also shall present it when required by the conductor, or surrender it on demand, and for a refusal so to do he may be ejected, although the conductor has before seen the ticket or has had knowledge of its purchase. * * * A passenger may be ejected where he has disposed of, misplaced or lost his ticket and fails or refuses to pay fare." 10 C. J. 723, § 1172, note 26.
Section 1174, 10 Corpus Juris, p. 732, reads:
"A passenger is entitled to a reasonable time in which to present his ticket or check or pay his fare before being ejected, and if he is acting in good faith the conductor has no right to eject him from the train without affording him a reasonable opportunity to make payment or to find and present his ticket or check, if lost or mislaid. * * * What is a reasonable opportunity or time to allow a passenger to produce his ticket or pay his fare must depend largely on the facts and circumstances of each particular case."
These rules are approved by our Court of Appeals in L. N. R. R. Co. v. Mason,
The plaintiff, with six children, all under 13 years of age, one 18 months old, in his arms, without the mother, entered the train of defendant at Evansville with tickets from there to Birmingham. A servant of the defendant, a flagman, demanded the tickets of plaintiff to see if he was on the right train. They were delivered to him. By order of a servant of defendant passengers were required to move from this coach into another on the same train, as that coach was not going on the trip. Several minutes after the train left the conductor called on plaintiff for his tickets. Then plaintiff discovered that his pocketbook, money, checks, and tickets were lost, misplaced, or stolen, or that his tickets were not returned to him by the flagman of defendant. The conductor was informed of the full situation. He saw the plaintiff and his six children. The distance from Evansville, where plaintiff boarded the train, and Henderson, where plaintiff was ejected, the first stopping station of that train, was from 10 to 12 miles. After the conductor demanded the tickets, under the testimony, the time varied from 5 to 10 minutes, and from 35 to 40 miles, before Henderson was reached, and plaintiff ejected. The next stopping station for that train was about 38 miles away. While the plaintiff with his six children were walking through the car to get off, some men voluntarily gave him between $9 and $10. The fare from Evansville to Birmingham for him and his children was about $40. There was evidence that plaintiff requested the conductor to give him time to raise or pay his fare, and he declined to do so, and there was evidence to the contrary. Much of the evidence has been *78 quoted in this opinion on other questions. We will not repeat that or recite other evidence not mentioned herein, appearing in the record on the subject. The conductor testified:
"That possibly 35 or 40 minutes elapsed from the time I first asked Mr. Hamby for his tickets to the time he got off the train at Henderson."
The plaintiff testified:
"My best recollection is that it would be between 5 and 10 minutes from the time the conductor first asked me for the tickets and the time I was put off. The station was about 12 miles from Evansville."
Under the evidence of the plaintiff, 5 to 10 minutes were allowed him by the conductor to produce his tickets or pay his fare before he was ejected. This, in law, under the circumstances, plaintiff admitting he had no tickets to surrender and no money to pay the fare to the conductor, was ample time — more than a reasonable time — for him to have done so; and the court erred in refusing the general affirmative charge with hypothesis requested by the defendant. It should have been given, as the plaintiff under the circumstances and undisputed evidence had a reasonable time to produce his tickets or pay the fare, after demand was made on him for it, before he was ejected.
For this error, the judgment is reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.