110 Tenn. 232 | Tenn. | 1903
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.
This is an action for the alleged unlawful, ejection of tbe plaintiff from the car of tbe defendant company by one of its conductors. Tbe action was commenced before a justice of tbe peace. On appeal it was tried before tbe court and a jury, and there was a verdict and judgment for $50, and tbe street railway company has appealed and assigned errors.
Tbe facts necessary to be stated are that the plaintiff boarded a car of tbe defendant company on its subur
In that case the court said: “To require a passenger, who has made a valid contract for transportation and paid the requisite fare, to retire from the car and suspend his journey because of an original defect in the ticket furnished him by the company’s agent, is to visit the wrong of the offender upon the offended. It is to make the rightful passenger suffer for the fault of the carrier, and that, too, in the latter’s interest. This court
The plaintiff had a right to believe the transfer ticket all that- it should be. With it he diligently sought and promptly entered the first transfer car, and, upon being challenged by the conductor of that car as too late to use the ticket, he made a fair and reasonable statement, showing that he had just left the first car, and that the first conductor must have wrongfully indicated the hour of issuance on the face of the ticket. He owed the company no other duty, and his expulsion under such circumstances was a tortious breach of contract, for which he became entitled to recover all approximately resulting damages, including those for humiliation and mortification, if such were in fact sustained.” O’Rourke v. Street Ry. Co., 103 Tenn., 135, 52 S. W., 874, 46 L. R. A., 614, 76 Am. St. Rep., 639.
This court said again in the O’Rourke Case: “The passenger is not required in law, nor allowed in fact, to print or write or stamp the ticket. The carrier alone has that right, and the passenger is authorized to believe and presume it will be properly exercised, and that the ticket, when delivered, is a faithful expression of the contract as made.” O’Rourke v. Street Ry. Co., 103 Tenn., 133, 52 S. W., 874, 46 L. R. A., 614, 76 Am. St. Rep., 639.
There was in the O’Rourke Case a printed statement on the back of the transfer ticket to the effect that the passenger would “examine date, time, and direction,
The argument of counsel for the street car company is that passengers should be required to examine transfer tickets when handed to them, and verify the action of the conductor, and, if there is any defect in the ticket or any deviation from the request, to have it at once corrected, and, if he does not do so, he is guilty of such negligence as must bar his recovery. We think this contention not sound. The ticket is a mere token, to be used for the convenience of the road. It is not the contract between the road and the passenger. It is a statement by the initial conductor to the subsequent conductor what the contract is, and what the passenger is entitled to, and, if it is not correct, the fault is that of the road. Nor can passengers he required to verify the acts of the conductor, but they may presume that he acts correctly. The tickets or tokens are prepared by the company. They contain more or less of printed and other directions. Some passengers cannot read. Others are children. None of them have the time or opportunity in the rush of travel to scrutinize the ticket, and in many instances, if they did, they could not under
We are of opinion that there is no error in the judgment of the court below, and it is affirmed with costs..