35 S.E. 259 | N.C. | 1900
The plaintiff purchased a ticket in South Carolina over defendant's railroad to Selma, N.C. and was seated in defendant's car, and, without fault or blame in his deportment, was arrested on arrival at Fayetteville by the sheriff of Cumberland County, and his armed posse, taken off the train and incarcerated for two days, when he was tried for an alleged crime, acquitted and discharged. Before the arrival of the train at Fayetteville, the sheriff was notified by telegram from the sheriff of Kingstree, S.C., that the plaintiff and two others were on that train, and that they were suspected of having committed a capital offense in South Carolina. The sheriff was directed in said telegram to "arrest them — conductor will point out." The plaintiff *83 testified: "The conductor was in the car, sheriff and policemen, seven or eight, came in at each end of the car. Conductor was approached by the sheriff, and the sheriff and he were talking. I heard the conductor say `there are the men I have reference to.' . . . When the sheriff arrested me the conductor was not in the car, after he and the sheriff finished talking the conductor went out on the platform. . . . The conductor did not tell the sheriff to arrest us." At the close (141) of the plaintiff's evidence the court expressed the opinion that he could not recover, and there was nonsuit and appeal.
The plaintiff's contention is that he was entitled, as a passenger, to protection from arrest by the defendant's employees. We are aware of no authority for his position, and we do not think the defendant's duty can be carried to such extent. That would make the defendant's train a sanctuary to which criminals could flee for protection.
It is well settled that a railroad is a common carrier, and that it has the right to establish reasonable rules and regulations for the government of its trains and passengers, and that it is its duty to do so and require its passengers to observe such regulations. The company must afford protection and safety to its passengers against assaults, insults, and ill treatment of their fellow passengers or strangers, and its own servants. Although held to the highest degree of care, the company is not an insurer of the safety and life of the passenger as it is for a package of goods committed to its care.
In the present case the defendant was wholly ignorant of the occurrence, and its conductor did not originate the cause or instigate or participate in the arrest. It would be vain and unreasonable to require him to resist an officer of the law, or the law itself. Whether the officer had authority or probable cause for making the arrest is not material. The conductor was confronted with a known officer of the law, with sufficient force to carry out his purpose.
Gillingham v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
Cited: Seawell v. R. R.,
(143)