85 Va. 217 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of trespass on the case to recover damages for the alleged wrongful refusal of the defendant company to check the plaintiff’s trunk from Wytheville to the town of Marion, after it had sold him a ticket as a passenger over its road from the former to the latter station.
A verdict was returned for the plaintiff for $500. In the progress of the trial the defendant twice excepted. .
The first exception is to the action of the court in refusing to give an instruction as asked by the defendant, and in giving the same instruction with a modification, and in also giving an instruction asked by the plaintiff.
As to the first of these instructions complained of, it is only necessary to say that it correctly propounds the law applicable to the facts of this case as viewed from the standpoint of the defendant. That instruction is in these words:
“The court instructs the jury that the defendant company has a right to inquire of any passenger who offers a trunk tb be transported over its road, whether such trunk contains his personal baggage; and where such a passenger has been in the habit of taking with him, in his trunk, and having carried in this way, articles of merchandise contrary to the uses and regulation of the defendant company, the carrier has a right to require him to furnish satisfactory proof of what his trunks contain, and upon his refusing or declining to furnish such proof,
As to the second instruction complained of, which it can serve no good purpose for us to set out at large, it is not only obscurely expressed, but misleading in this, that it leaves the matter in doubt whether the occasion alluded to therein as the time when “the plaintiff had not'endeavored to deceive the defendant company by having his merchandise carried as baggage, contrary to the rules and regulations of the company,” was the occasion mentioned in the plaintiff’s declaration, or some other and former occasion. It was, therefore, error on the part of the court not to have refused it altogether, or, if it desired to give it, not to have so amended it as to make it appear that the occasion alluded to in the instruction was some other occasion than that stated in the declaration as the time when the defendant company had refused to check the plaintiff’s trunk. Balt. & Ohio R. R. Co. v. Polly, Woods & Co., 14 Gratt. 447; Rosenbaum v. Weeden, Johnson & Co., 18 Id. 785; Boswell’s Case, 20 Id. 860. The regulation requiring an affidavit, whether reasonable or not, a point which we purposely decline now to decide, was necessitated in large measure by the habitual conduct of this plaintiff in evading its regulations by carrying merchandise as baggage, and the question, therefore, which ought to have been put to the jury was, not whether they believed from the evidence that the plaintiff-was attempting to evade the company’s regulation in regard to the carrying of merchandise at the date specified in the declaration, but whether they believed from the evidence that he had been guilty of such acts of evasion on some former occasion or occasions. For it was only in the event that he had been guilty of these offenses on previous days and times, that the regulation required that he should make affidavit that the trunks only contained his wearing apparel. But this is not the only error in this case, for the court also erred in refusing to set aside
It is sought to distinguish this case from that, and, indeed, in the mere mode by which the plaintiff seeks to entrap the defendant into furnishing him an excuse for bringing an action for damages, there is a difference between the cases, hut it is a difference neither to the credit nor advantage of the plaintiff. In the former case his object was to compel the defendant company to carry his merchandise as mere baggage on the passenger instead of the freight train, and, failing in that, to mulct it in damages. In this present case he has adopted another device for making money out of this company. Having first shown the company that his habit was to impose upon them, and to set at defiance their reasonable regulation in regard to the train by which merchandise freight should be carried, he then brings this same trunk, with nothing in it, so far as the evidence shows, but some old articles of dirty wearing apparel, and insists that it shall be checked, for the patent purpose of having the agent refuse to check it unless he shall sign an affidavit as to its contents, which he has already determined not to sign, and then to
In answer to this objection, it is sufficient to say that, whether such a regulation is reasonable or not, a question which we decline to decide in this case, the plaintiff is not in a. position to take advantage of that circumstance. For, as the evidence produced by himself abundantly proves, he was engaged in an unjust and iniquitous effort to make money out of this company by unlawful means; and in such an effort he can never receive the aid of a court of justice. As the record shows, he had at this very time no less than four suits against this company, of a character similar to one or the other of the cases mentioned herein, and his statement that he was on his way to Marion to bring away goods that he had there, is utterly disproved by the circumstance that, according to his own testimony, up to trial of this case he had never gone to Marion, or brought any goods away from there; nor has he ever shown that he had any goods there. He thus stands convicted of a glaring attempt to make money out of this company by anything but lawful means, and, as we have said before, in such an attempt he can never receive either the countenance or aid of any court of justice.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court is erroneous and must be reversed, and the suit of the plaintiff must be dismissed.
Judgment reversed.