34 S.W. 180 | Tex. App. | 1896
Suit to recover damages accruing from failure to furnish equal accommodations on a train, under the provisions of the separate coach act. It was alleged that appellant had purchased for 35 cents a first class ticket to enable him to go from Gonzales to Harwood; that appellee failed to furnish him with a coach "equal in all points of comfort and convenience" to the one provided for white passengers on the same train; that there was no water closet nor vessel for drinking water, nor fire stove, in the negro compartment, as there were in the white compartment, and that appellant was sick and needed these articles. Special damages resulting from a failure to furnish the articles in question was fully pleaded. There was a verdict and judgment for appellee.
We are of the opinion that appellant's right of recovery was dependent upon proof showing that he had sustained damages from a failure to comply with the law on the part of appellee. The law does not provide for, nor seem to contemplate, the right of a passenger to sue in case he is not furnished with a coach in which to ride "equal in all points of comfort and convenience to those furnished passengers of another race," and appellant's right to sue cannot be based upon a mere infraction of the law, unless there should be some damage resulting to him from such infraction. The enforcement of the law is left solely in the hands of the State, and an adequate penalty is prescribed that can be invoked by and through the State alone. The position assumed by appellant is, that although he may have failed to show that he was damaged by the infraction of the law, he was entitled to recover nominal *561
damages. We think not. The authorities cited by appellant do not sustain his contention. In the Mackie case,
The separate coach act is a public statute which commands the doing of certain things, and prohibits the doing of others, and the State reserves to itself the right to punish any infraction of the law so far as it merely concerns the public. Unless special damages have resulted from its infraction to an individual, the infraction can only concern the public. To quote from Blackstone, "the law gives no private remedy for anything but a private wrong. . . . Where a statute prohibits the doing of a particular action affecting the public, no person has a right of action against another merely because he has done the prohibited act. It is incumbent on the part of the complainant to allege and prove that the doing of the act prohibited has caused him some special damage, some particular injury beyond that which he may be supposed to have sustained in common with the rest of the Queen's subjects by an infringement of the law." The above language is taken from an opinion of the Court of Exchequer in England, and is copied into and approved by Sedgewick in his work on Damages, vol. 2, chap. 23, p. 564. It must be the true doctrine. A contrary holding would permit not only punishment at the hands of the State for a violation of a statute affecting the public, but also at the hands of any number of individuals, whether injured by the violation or not.
The charge of the court and the charge asked by appellant and given, recognize the principle that appellant's right of recovery was dependent on proof of actual damage sustained by him, and submitted the issue fully to the jury. The jury decided that no actual injury was sustained by appellant, and there is testimony that supports the finding.
None of the assignments of error are well taken and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed. *562