46 Misc. 72 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1904
The complaint in this action alleges, in substance, that on June 17, 1904, the plaintiff was a passenger on one of the defendant’s cars, and gave the conductor a one dollar bill for the purpose of paying two fares;
The plaintiff boarded the car of the defendant at the comer of Charlton and Hudson streets, her destination being Fifty-second street and Eighth avenue. She gave the conductor a one dollar bill, requesting him to take out ten cents, the fare for herself and her daughter who accompanied her. She testifies that he failed to give her back any money, and after repeated requests therefor, she says: “ Still I kept asking him all along for the change until we got up to 50th Street, when I thought it was my duty to get out and go into the office and complain of him.” She further says that the car stopped at Fiftieth street and the conductor got off, as did also the plaintiff and her daughter. The conductor went into a small office and soon after came out, and got upon the car which continued upon its trip. The plaintiff then testified as follows: “ I said to him (the starter) * don’t let that man go on the car, he owes me ninety cents,’ and he didn’t pay me no attention; he went right along, and shoved him right along, and the car went to Harlem, he told me. I said: ‘ Why did you let that man get on the car without giving me my change ? ’ I said ‘ I will have to look to you for it.’ He said: ‘ In about an hour, the car will come back, and if you wait, you will get your change.’ I said: ‘ That’s a very long time for me to have to stand here.’ Still I did it, myself and my daughter. It was so long I asked the starter, was he fooling me ? He said: * Ho; it will be back directly.’ Sure enough it did come back. The minute it come back, he jumped from the car and went into the small office. Q. That is on the ground floor? A. Yes, sir. Q. You mean, the conductor went there? A. The conductor, the man that hit me; and I followed him right in, and I tapped him on the shoulder, and I said: ‘ When are you going to give me my ninety cents ? ’ He wouldn’t pay any attention to me. I
The conductor denied the assault, but as the court below found in favor of the plaintiff, her version of the occurrence must be taken as true.
This judgment is sought to be sustained upon the theory that the relation of carrier and passenger still existed between the plaintiff and the defendant at the time of the alleged assault, and that the passenger received the injuries from the misconduct of one of the servants of the defendant while engaged in performing a duty which a carrier owes to its passengers. We think that upon neither ground can it be upheld.
Possibly the case holding the carrier to the strictest accountability to its passengers, among all that line of cases, is that of Stewart v. Brooklyn & Crosstown R. R. Co., 90 N. Y. 588. In this and other similar cases the rule is laid down as said in Dwinelle v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 120 id. 117—126: “Ho matter what the motive is which incites the servant of the carrier to commit an unlawful or improper act toward the passenger * * * the carrier is liable for the act and its natural and legitimate consequences.”
The relation of carrier and passenger must, however, continue to exist. In the case at bar, the plaintiff of her own
That a passenger on a street car who voluntarily leaves it at any point before he arrives at his first intended destination does so without any existing right to be again taken up and carried forward unless he again pays a fare, and again resumes the relation of passenger and carrier, except one who is entitled to or receives a transfer, is a fact of common knowledge, and one of which the court may take judicial notice. It is said that the plaintiff remained upon the ground or property of the defendant, at the request of one of its employees. Such employee is not shown to have authority to extend such an invitation, and if such authority existed, it is clear that the plaintiff could not still he regarded as a passenger.
Here the plaintiff remained until the conductor returned from the end of his run, and the office into which she followed him was not a waiting-room or room for passengers. Hor was she while there engaged in making any complaint to any officer of the defendant whose duty it was to receive and investigate complaints made against the company’s employees. The plaintiff was merely continuing the controversy previ
The facts, assuming the plaintiff’s testimony to be true, show an unjustifiable assault committed upon the person of the plaintiff, for which the defendant cannot be held liable and for a cause of action of which the Municipal Court has no jurisdiction.
Gildersleeve and MacLean, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs.