97 Mo. App. 515 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
— This suit was brought in the court of a justice of the peace, appealed to the circuit court where plaintiff obtained judgment from which defendant appealed here.
The evidence showed that the plaintiff, a boy about four years of age, with his sister, about twelve years old, was put upon defendant’s train by his father at Columbia, Missouri, to go to More’s station about one mile distant. The sister had a full fare ticket but plaintiff had none. The train was behind time and Bessie, plaintiff’s said sister, testified that just before she got to More’s station she gave the conductor her ticket. The train passed the station to a point about 250 yards when it was stopped and plaintiff put off without being injured. Bessie retraced her steps with the plaintiff to the station, passing over the cattle guards. She describes the route as muddy and slippery. It was late in the evening when they got back to the station where they met their mother who, in her testimony, says it was so dark she could not recognize them at a short distance. She states that when the plaintiff got home he was wet; that he had fallen down in the mud, was very muddy, and was “almost scared to death;” and that they had to go to the doctor and get some medicine for him, and that by eight o ’clock that night he was in bed with a high fever.
The defendant insists that plaintiff was not entitled to recover for two reasons, viz.: first, because the relation of carrier and passenger did not exist; second, because plaintiff was allowed to recover on account of subsequent sickness, whereas it was shown that no aggravating circumstances attended the act of. the defendant’s servant in putting him off the train.
Fetter, in his definition of passenger (Fetter on Carriers of Passengers, sec. 210) states: ‘ ‘It. is not easy to construct a definition of the. term ‘passenger’ which, on the one hand, will accurately include all persons entitled to the rights-of passengers, and, on the other, exclude all those who are not. ... In the great majority of cases,“there can be no question on this score, because a person riding in a passenger coach, who. has prepaid his fare is necessarily a passenger.” A much better idea of 'the term is gained from its definition in Railway v. Price, 96 Pa. St. 256, viz.: “In its legal sense a passenger is one who travels in some public conveyance by virtue of a contract, express or implied, with the carrier, as the payment of fare, or that which is accepted .as equivalent therefor.”- In section 221 pf Fetter, supra, it is said: ‘ ‘ The purchase of a ticket or the prepayment of fare is not necessary to constitute the relation of passenger and carrier.” In Railway v. Huggins, 89 Ga. 494, the court adopted the following definition from Hutchinson on Carriers: “It is universally agreed that the payment of the fare or the price of the carriage is not necessary to give rise to the liability. The carrier may demand his payment if he chooses to do so, but if
In view of all the authorities referred to, and we find none to the contrary, it is evident that the plaintiff was within the meaning of the law a passenger on defendant’s train at the time in question. He was put upon the train by his father with his sister for whom he purchased a ticket for. the purpose of securing a ride to More’s station where* his journey was to terminate. In view of the general custom of railroad carriers to permit small children like the plaintiff to ride on their cars free of charge when accompanied by some older person who pays fare, it is reasonable to presume that plaintiff was a passenger in good faith, especially so as no objection was made to him as a passenger for want of prepayment of such fare, and no demand and refusal to make such payment was shown. This entering the car under the circumstances constituted him a passenger with all the rights as such.
The question is raised, was the plaintiff entitled to recoyer for subsequent sickness caused by his being put off at the point 250 yards beyond the station? It will be observed that the court eliminated from its findings
In Trigg v. Railway, 74 Mo. 147, it was. held that a female passenger who was carried beyond her station by the negligence of the company, but without any circumstances of aggravation and without receiving any personal injury “may recover compensation for the inconvenience, loss of time, labor and expense of traveling back, but not for anxiety and suspense of mind suffered in consequence of the delay,' nor the effects upon her health, nor the danger to which she was exposed in consequence of the train being stopped at her station an insufficient length of time to enable her to get off.” The same rule was applied in Strange v. Railway, 61 Mo. App. 587, Deming v. Railway, 80 Mo. App. 152, and in Snyder v. Railway, 85 Mo. App. 495. But we are cited to the case of Spry v. Railway, 73 Mo. App. 203, as holding differently. Our examination of that case satisfies us that it comes within the foregoing rule.' The facts were that a woman — plaintiff in the case — was requested by defendant “to leave its passenger train about a half mile from the union depot in the city of Sedalia and far from any depot or shelter, and the servants of defendant when requiring plaintiff to leave its car failed to give her any directions as to where she should go for shelter from the violence of a rain storm (then prevailing). She being unacquainted in the vicinity, whereby she was compelled in the midst of such storm to walk to said union depot, and in consequence of such exposure” she became sick. She was allowed to recover on the ground that the act of defendant’s servants in requiring her to leave the train amidst a rain storm in the night without directing her where to go, was an act of inhumanity. On this question the authorities seem to be uniform.
It follows, therefore, that the action of the court in allowing plaintiff damages, under the circumstances of the case, for subsequent sickness, was error, for which the cause is reversed.