Pennington v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad

62 Md. 95 | Md. | 1884

Bryan, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant purchased from a ticket agent of the appellee a ticket of which the following is a copy:

In consideration of the reduced rate at which the ticket is sold, it is agreed that it shall he used within three days, including the day of sale, for a continuous trip only, and hy such trains as stop regularly at the station, and by its acceptance the purchaser becomes a party to and'binds himself to a compliance with these conditions.

(1,723) Geo. A. Dadmun,

General Ticket Agent.

On the back of the above ticket is the following stamp, to wit:

{ Phila. Wilm. and Balto. R. R. Dec. 13, 1882. Baltimore.}

*98He proceeded in appellee’s cars to Perryman’s on the thirteenth day of December, 1881, and while attempting to return on the sixteenth day of December, the conductor refused to receive the ticket for his passage and required him to leave the cars. The controversy depends upon the rights acquired by the purchase of the ticket. The plaintiff, at the trial below, offered to prove that before he purchased the ticket, he was informed by the agent, upoú inquiry from him, that it was “good until used.”

We think that the plaintiff’s rights in this regard are limited by the ticket. There is no evidence in the record that the ticket agent was authorized to make any contracts for the railroad company, or that he had any duties beyond the sale and delivery of the tickets. The ticket, purchased by the appellant clearly informed him that he would have no right to use it after the fifteenth, and the agent had no authority to vary its terms.

A passenger has a right to he conveyed in the cars of a railroad company without making any special contract for transportation. Upon payment of the usual fare, the company is hound to convey him, and is under all the obligations imposed by law on common carriers, so far as they relate to the transportation of him as a passenger. It is competent to vary these obligations by a special agreement, on valuable consideration, between the passenger and the company. But if the passenger chooses to do so, he may stand on his legal rights, and elect to he carried to his destination without making any special contract. The mere purchase of a ticket does not constitute a contract. Before the ordinary liability of the. railroad company can he varied, there must be a consent of the passenger, founded on valuable consideration. The ticket ordinarily is only a token, showing that the passenger has paid his fare. But where the ticket is sold at less than the usual rates, on the condition that it shall not he *99used after a limited time, if the passenger accepts and uses the ticket, he makes a contract with the company according to the terms stated, and the reduction in the fare is the consideration for his contract. It is true, he pays his fare before he receives the ticket, but if he has been misled or misinformed by the seller of the ticket, as to its terms, he has a right to return the ticket and receive hack his money. The railroad company agrees to carry him at the reduced rate, upon the conditions stated on the face of his ticket; if he agrees to those terms the contract is consummated; hut he cannot take advantage of the reduction of the rate and reject the terms on which alone the reduction was made.

In this case the plaintiff made the journey to Perry-man’s, under the terms mentioned in the ticket. -There was evidence that he did not read the ticket. He used it and thereby availed himself of the advantage conferred by the diminished rates. He had an ample opportunity to read it if he had chosen to do so. He could not, on any principle, hold the railroad company to any terms except those stated. If there was a contract, these terms were embraced in it, if there was no contract, he had no right to the reduction in the fare. After aváiling himself of this reduction, it was too late for him to allege that he did not know on what terms the reduction was made ; when he had an ample opportunity of learning them from the ticket in his possession.

The plaintiff was required to leave the cars at Back River Station, on his journey hack to Baltimore from Perryman’s. After he had left the cars and while on the platform he offered to pay the conductor his fare from that station to Baltimore, hut the conductor refused to give him admission to the cars. The plaintiff had already -accomplished a portion of the return journey to Baltimore without paying his fare. He clearly was not entitled to be conveyed from Perryman’s to Baltimore without pay*100iug fare for the -whole distance. If he had been carried from Back River Station to Baltimore, on payment of the fare only from that piece, he would have escaped payment of a portion of the fare; and so, in fact, he would have accomplished the return trip at a reduced rate. The company was under no obligation' to carry him for less than the full rate for the whole distance, and so he was properly excluded from the cars. The judgment must be affirmed.

(Decided 27th March, 1884.)

Judgment affirmed.