after -stating the case- as above reported,-delivered the opinion of the court..
*644 We will not extend this opinion by a recital.of all the facts and circumstances established by the proof. It is sufficient to say that there was evidence tending to sustain both the allegations of the complaint and the averments in the answer. In view of the serious conflict in the statements of witnesses, the case'was one peculiarly for the determination of a jury, under appropriate instructions as to the law. The court, therefore, rightfully refused to direct a verdict for the company, unless, as claimed, the plaintiff, according to his complaint and the evidence, had no cause of action.
It appears from the complaint that the company'had á reg:' ulation restricting deck passengers to a particular part, of thé boat; but of the existence of that rule, the plaintiff averred,' he did not, at the time, have notice. It also .appears by uricontradicted evidence that, upon the ticket purchased by the plaintiff, were printed the words “ deck passengers not allowed abaft the shaft,” and that placards, in different parts of the’ boat, indicated the place.on it which such passengers were prohibited from occupying. As the plaintiff was “abaft the shaft ” when injured, no case, it is insisted, was made that would sustain an action upon the contract of transportation; consequently, it is contended, the request to instruct the jury to find for the defendant should have been granted. This argument assumes that the plaintiff could not claim protection under the contract for safe transportation in respect to an injury done him by the company’s servants while he was upon a part of the boat other than that to which he was restricted by the rule or regulation printed on his ticket. This position cannot be sustained. We shall not stop to inquire whether the regulation in question is shown to be a part of the contract for transportation; and we assume, for the purposes of this case, that the plaintiff stipulated that, during the voyage, he would remain upon the part of the boat to which deck passengers were assigned; still,- it would not follow that his violation of that stipulation deprived him of the benefit of his contract. Such violation • only gave the carrier the right to compel him to conform to its regulation, or, upon his refusing to do so, to require him to leave the boat, using, *645 in either ease, only such force as the circumstances reasonably justified. If the injuries necessarily arose from his violation of the regulation established for deck .passengers, the carrier would not be responsible therefor. But if they were not the .necessary result of his being, at the time, on a part of the boat where he had no right to be, and were directly caused by the improper conduct of the carrier’s servants, either while acting within the scope of their general employment, or when in the discharge of special duties imposed upon them, he is not precluded from claiming the benefit of thecontract for safe transportation.
The plaintiff was entitled, in virtue of that contract, to protection against the misconduct or negligence of the carrier’s servants. Their misconduct or negligence whilst transacting the company’s business, and when acting within; the general scope :of their employment, is, of necessity to. be imputed to the corporation, which constituted them agents for the performance of its contract with the passenger. "Whether the act of the servant be one of omission or commission, whether negligent or fraudulent, “if,” as was adjudged in
Philadelphia & Reading Railroad
v.
Derby,
"What -will be misconduct on the part of its servants towards a passenger cannot be defined by a general rule applicable to every case, but must depend upon the particular circumstances in which they are required to act. In the enforcement of reasonable regulations established by the carrier for the conduct o"f its business, the servant may be obliged to use force. But the law will not protect the carrier if the servant uses excessive or unnecessary force. This doctrine is well illustrated in
Sanford
v.
Eighth Avenue
Railroad,
In the present case the jury were instructed, in substance, that the. plaintiff had no right to be in any part of the boat except that' assigned to deck passengers, and that’the carrier’s servants had the right — using no more force than was necessary- — to remove him from the place where he was found by the watchman. Referring to the testimony of the plaintiff, the court observed: “He says that he went upon the bales of hops, remained there a short time, went to sleep, and was awakened by the watchman, Thiel, striking him with a cane; that -he struck him first on the feet, afterwards in the face, and told him to get down. He asked Thiel if he was doing any harm there, and asked to be allowed to stay. Part of the answer was, £ Get down, come down.’ The assault upon him continuing, he then put up his satchel for protection, and was thereupon caught by the collar of his coat and pulled headlong from the freight, his shoulder striking one of the barrels standing near, dislocating it or causing the injury which bas been described. He says that upon regaining his feet he was again struck by the watchman. Soon after another officer of the boat came and he was pushed towards the shaft and told that was- the part of the boat for him to remain in; that he went to the barber shop, and there for the first time read his ticket and saw the requirement in reference to deck passengers. That very briefly is the statement of the plaintiff.” The court proceeded: “If you believe that statement to be true, then I say, as a matter of law, that there was more force than was necessary to accomplish the result, , and the plain *648 tiff is entitled to a verdict.” To this last part of the charge the defendant took an exception. But we perceive no ground upon which the exception can properly rest. If the statements of the plaintiff were true, then neither argument nor citation of authorities is necessary to show that undue force was used by the company’s servants. And it was the right of the court to so instruct the jury.
. But that the jury might, also, have in mind the case as made by the defendant, the court said: “ On the other hand, you have the testimony of the witness Thiel, who says he came to the freight two or three times before the transaction and told plaintiff to get down; that the other passengers all got down; that on the third occasion he stepped on a box and told him to come down; that the plaintiff, instead of doing so, endeavored to climb higher or get away from him; that the plaintiff- Mcked him in the breast, and in the excitement he. caught hold of him, and in the struggle which ensued, the boxes, the plaintiff, and the witness came down together in a crash upon the floor. If you believe that statement, then the plaintiff brought this assault upon himself; it was an unavoidable accident, and the ■ plaintiff is not entitled to recover. Other Avitnesses have been called, who in part corroborate the story of the Avatchman, and in some particulars corroborate the story of the plaintiff.” '
The whole case Avas thus fairly placed before the jury upon the issue, as to whether the defendant’s servants, in executing its regulation as to deck passengers, used unwarrantable force and thereby caused the injuries of which the plaintiff complains.
One objection made by the defendant to the admission of evidence deserves to be noticed. The plaintiff in his evidence described the manner in which, as is contended, he Avas dragged by the watchman from the boxes. After stating that he was thrown to the floor, and was being roughly pushed by the Avatchman, he proceeded: “ Then I saw another man coming Avith the uniform of the boat on, and the cap, and he said: ‘All such men as you ought' to be killed.’ I -says, ‘What do you want to kill me for?’ he says, ‘You farmers are so stingy, *649 you are too stingy to buy a state-room, and you ought to be killed.’ I said, ‘You ought not to call me stingy;’ then he said, ‘Have you looked at your ticket?’ I think he had ‘ third assistant mate ’ on his cap, the cap had a yellow cord, the same as the officers of the boat wore.” It appeared, in proof, that the person here referred to was one of the mates of the Richmond.
The defendant objected, at the trial, to. the competency of the statements of • the mate. The objection was overruled and an exception taken. It is now insisted that* the defendant is not responsible for the brutal language of its servants,- and that the declarations of the mate to the plaintiff were not competent as evidence against the carrier.
We
are of opinion that these declarations constituted a part of the
res gestee.
They were made by one servant of the defendant while assisting another servant in enforcing its- regulation as to deck passengers. They were made when the watchman and the mate, according to the evidence of the plaintiff, were both in the very act-of violently “pushing” him, while in a helpless condition, to that part of the boat assigned to deck passengers. Plainly, therefore, they had some relation to the inquiry, whether the enforcement of that regulation was attended with unnecessary or cruel severity. They accompanied and explained the acts of the defendant's servants out of which directly arose the injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff.
Vicksburg & Meridian Railroad
v. O’Brien,
Other questions arise upon the admission of evidence against the objection of the defendant; upon the refusal of the court to grant requests for instructions in its behalf; and upon cer *650 tain parts of the charge, to which it excepted. In our opinion none of these questions require consideration; and the action of the court, in respect to them, constitutes no ground for the reversal of the judgment. The-charge of the court embodied all that need have been said. It correctly stated the propositions of law arising in the case. No substantial error having been committed, the judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
S. C. 80 Am. Dec.' 2S6.
