9 Ga. App. 260 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Perry bparded a night train on the Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad at Brinson, Ga., a station where the ticket office was not kept open at night. He offered for transportation what is known as “Form Z” mileage, which is a mileage book based on a special contract, the terms of which will be more fully- set forth hereinafter. He wished to go to Boston, Ga., a point on the de
The “Form Z” mileage book is based upon 'a special contract, signed by the holder, one .of the terms of which is as follows: “ Coupons from this ticket will not be honored on trains or boats, nor in checking baggage, except from non-agency stations, and agency stations not open for sale of tickets, but must be presented at ticket office and there exchanged for continuous passage tickets, which ■continuous passage will be honored in checking baggage and for passage, when presented in connection with this mileage ticket.” It also contains a direction to conductors, as follows: “You will honor coupons from this ticket only when presented by passengers boarding train at a non-agency station, or agency station not open for sale of tickets. When so presented, you require passenger to sign his or her name on the back of the mileage strip which you detach for the trip, and to otherwise identify himself or herself as the ■original purchaser to your entire satisfaction.” The book, it ■appears, was sold at a reduced rate. Upon these facts appearing at the trial of the suit, brought on account of the ejecting of the passenger, the court awarded a nonsuit, and the plaintiff excepts.
There is no law or railroad-commission rule in this State regulating the use of mileage books. They constitute special contracts, and are therefore within the purview of the Civil Code (1910), § 2726, to the effect that while a common carrier can not limit his legal liabili+y by any notice given, either by publication or by entry
Now,, if the plaintiff, when he boarded the train at Brinson, had asked the conductor to honor his mileage through to Boston, it would have been the duty of the conductor to do so, notwithstanding that Thomasville may have been an intermediate junction point, and notwithstanding a new conductor may have taken charge of the train at that place. As was held by the Supreme Court in Central Railroad Co. v. Strickland, 90 Ga. 562 (16 S. E. 352). “Wh®11 a passenger, for want of a reasonable opportunity to purchase a ticket, has boarded a railroad train, and in consequence has
However, the fact that the passenger may exercise this right gives to the carrier the privilege of taking advantage of the converse of the proposition, so that if the passenger gets on at a non-agency station, with the intention in his own mind of making a continuous journey throughout, for all of’which the carrier would be obliged to accept coupons from his mileage book, yet voluntarily breaks his journey into parts, and the station to which he first gives the mileage coupons for his transportation turns out to be an agency station open for the sale of tickets, and he then continues his journey from that point, he must obtain a ticket there, or else stand in the same' situation as if he had originally boarded the train at that point. We think this is true irrespective of whether the conductor knew the state of his mind as to his final destination. Therefore, in this case, although the plaintiff might originally have required the conductor to accept his mileage all the way from Brinson to Boston, yet since, instead of doing this, he asked the conductor to accept it for transportation only to Thomasville, a station at which he could have obtained a ticket, and there declined to get a ticket, the conductor was within his lawful rights when he refused the mileage, and, upon the plaintiff’s refusal to pay the custom
With, the inconvenience which results from passengers being required to exchange mileage coupons for tickets, we, as judges, have no right to concern ourselves. That is a matter which addresses itself initially to the transportation companies, and finally to the legislature or to the railroad commission. So long as the law and the railroad-commission’s rules remain as they are, it is our duty to enforce these contracts as they are made; and decisions from other States, where they have different laws or different regulations adopted by the railroad commission, are neither persuasive nor controlling.
Judgment affirmed.