127 Tenn. 571 | Tenn. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff below, W. N. Caviness, brought suit for personal injuries received while riding on a street car that collided with a wagon under circumstances showing, it is conceded by defendant company, negligence on the part of the motorman less in degree than gross and willful negligence. Plaintiff was a member of the city fire department, and, under customary grant of that courtesy by the company, was riding free, without a pass, “on his uniform.”
The company’s defense is based upon certain language used by Judge Wilkes in the opinion in Marshall v. Railway & Light Co., 118 Tenn., 254, 101 S. W., 419, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1246, 12 Ann. Cas., 675, which it is insisted holds or tends to hold that where, as here, no fare was paid for the passage, the relationship of common carrier and passenger is not to be deemed to have attached, and that the company would be liable only in event its gross or willful negligence were established.
As early as 1859, this court held against the contention of defendant company in the present case, in Washburn v. Railroad, 3 Head, 638, 75 Am. Dec., 784; and nothing said in the Marshall Case was meant to indicate a departure from the rule there laid down.
In that earlier case it appeared that an engineer of the defendant company, on a private errand of his own, while off duty, without previous grant of permission, got on a passenger train and was injured in a collision while sitting in the baggage car. After stating that he was not to have applied to him the rules applicable as between master and servant, but was substantially in the attitude of a stranger, and that he had been received on the train without objection on the part of the conductor, the court said that the case was not affected by. the fact that the plaintiff, at the time of the injury, was riding free, citing Philadelphia R. Co. v. Derby, 14 How. (U. S.), 468, 14 L. Ed., 502.
Negligence on the part of the carrier being admitted, as indicated, the judgment of the court of civil appeals is affirmed.