46 W. Va. 538 | W. Va. | 1899
This is a writ of error from a judgment of the circuit court of Fayette County in an action of trespass on the case by William M. Price against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company, which writ of error was obtained by said company. In July, 1895, Price came to Charleston from some point below that city, and, being utterly without any means, and «Desiring to get to Virginia, he applied to the county court of Kanawha for transportation to Hinton. The sheriff, under the direction of the court, procured for Price a ticket from Charleston to Hinton, ninety miles.
Upon the trial, the court gave for the plaintiff an instruction (No. 2), saying to the jury that “if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, on 25th day of July, 1895, had a ticket on defendant’s road from Charleston to
I remark that Price’s evidence showed that he knew what was the purpose of the check. The Vermont court says that it was the passenger’s duty to keep the check safely, and, if lost, the loss was his, and he was situated
Now, if this conductor had not forgotten that he had given this check, but well remembered it, the law gave him the right to call on Price to see it; but, in such case, there would be some pretense to say the conductor was in the wrong. But, in fact, the conductor had forgotten it, and did not identify Price. No human being on an accommodation train, stopping at every station, the passengers changing all along the route, can remember all of them, or recollect about their tickets. He need not remember them, as the law gives him right to call upon the passengers to show their tickets whenever he becomes uncertain, and it is a small burden upon the passenger to show his ticket or check. The conductor had dozens of tickets to remember; Price, only one. It was the duty of Price to remember his check, rather than of the conductor. How can he say that the company is responsible for the conductor’s bad memory, when his own was bad, especially as the law cast upon him the duty to remember his check, and present it when asked for, or, if forgotten or lost by him, then to pay
Instruction No. 1, asserting the general duty of a railroad to carry its passengers safely and land them at their places of destination, and that any failure of the employes to do so renders the railroad liable, as a general proposition, may be unobjectionable. If it were a binding instruction, it would be bad for reasons given against instruction No. 2; but it is very abstract, as applied to this case, or, rather, too restrictive, and may be objectionable, because, as applied to the case, misleading to the jury. Fisher v. Railroad Co. 42 W. Va. 183, (24 S. E. 570). For these reasons we reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict, and grant a new trial.
Reversed.