63 Fla. 248 | Fla. | 1912
— Padgett brought an action of tort against the railroad company for “carelessly,, negligently and wilfully withholding from him without any excuse or reason” a ticket from Jacksonville, Florida, to Arcadia, Florida, which ticket had been paid for at Arcadia, by A. J. Dozier and whfch the agent of the railroad company at Arcadia undertook to have delivered to Padgett at Jacksonville by the agent of the railroad company there. The elements of damage to the plaintiff! Padgett as alleged are that he was forced to remain in Jacksonville and do without lodging, food and various necessities of life,. commensurate with his standing; that he was shadowed by the police of Jacksonville as a hobo and tramp thereby wounding his feelings and humiliating him; that he had no money and was forced to walk out of Jacksonville till he could find work or shelter; that he ivas forced to walk to Palatka, Florida; • that his feet were sore and he suffered great pain; that he was forced to sleep out in the cold and suffered great pain therefrom ; that he was out of work for a long time endeavoring to get cured, to get to Arcadia, and to get work.
A demurrer to the declaration was overruled.
On motion the court struck out the element of damage that the plaintiff was shadowed by the police of Jacksonville as a hobo and tramp thereby wounding his feelings and humiliating him. At the trial a verdict for the defendant was directed by the court. A judgnlent for de
The defendant suggests here tha!t the declaration wholly fails to state a cause of action. If this is so the court may properly so adjudge and thus end the case. But as this is an action in tort and not on contract, it is not clear that a careless, negligent and wilful failure of the defendant without reason or excuse to deliver to the plaintiff a ticket which he had a right to expect and to receive, where such negligence proximately caused a substantial injury to the plaintiff that reasonably should have been contemplated by defendant in undertaking to deliver the ticket, does not give a right of action for the recovery of such damages as should have been contemplated and as are not conjectural and may be capable of reasonably certain ascex’tainment. This is the correct rule as to recoverable damages in this class of cases where liability appears even where the action is ex clelicto and not ex contractu. See Hildreth v. Western Union Tel. Co., 56 Fla. 387, 47 South. Rep. 820; McMillan v. Western Union Tel. Co., 60 Fla. 131, 53 South. Rep. 329. In Ogles v. Nashville C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 130 Ga. 430, 60 S. E. Rep. 1048, 124 Am. St. Rep. 175, where it was held no liability existed, the action was ex contractu. See also Canada v. Yazoo M. V. R. Co., - Miss. -, 57 South. Rep. 913.
In failing to deliver the ticket which the plaintiff had a right to expect and to receive, the defendant reasonably should have contemplated that the plaintiff would, because of such failure, remain in Jacksonville, and any substantial damages proximately x’esulting therefrom may be recoverably. But there is nothing in the record to indicate that the agents of the defendant should have contemplated that a failure to deliver the ticket would probably or naturally or ordinarily 'cause the plaintiff to do
The judgment is affirmed.