14 Pa. Super. 282 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The plaintiff had purchased, at the office of the Pennsylvania company at Wellsville, Ohio, an interchangeable 1,000 jnile rebate exchange ticket, issued by the Central Passenger
The plaintiff on January 11, 1898, being at Collier station, on the line of the defendant company, presented his Central Passenger Association interchangeable mileage ticket to the ticket agent, surrendered the necessary number of coupons and obtained an exchange ticket westward to New Cumberland junction, intending to take an express train eastward from that point which did not stop at Collier station. The train upon which the plaintiff arrived at New Cumberland junction was due there one minute after the express train going eastward, which plaintiff intended to take, would have arrived if it had been on time, but the express train was behind time and did not arrive until a few minutes later. The plaintiff testified that he immediately went to the ticket office and found the ticket window open but no person inside the office. He there presented his mileage book, but there was no person to furnish him with an exchange ticket. He then went to the door and saw a number of men on the platform and again returned to the window of the ticket office. After he had thus been waiting some time, the ticket agent came in and thereupon the plaintiff tendered his mileage book and demanded an exchange ticket, whereupon the ticket agent said: “ I can’t give you a ticket off that now; I haven’t got time. There is the train has whistled.” The plaintiff replied, “ I have been here time enough to get half a dozen tickets and nobody here to give me a ticket and the window open for doing business.” The ticket agent repeated, “ I can’t help .that; I haven’t got time; I can’t give you a ticket.” The plaintiff then said : “ I am going on that train anyway.” Plaintiff did get onto the train without a ticket. After the train was under way, when the conductor in making his rounds, reached the plaintiff the latter presented his interchangeable mileage book. The conductor informed him that he could not accept this mileage book on
The learned court below was of opinion that the whole case depended upon whether there was, after the moment when the plaintiff first presented his mileage book at .the ticket office, a sufficient time to have made out an exchange ticket prior to the actual arrival of the train, if the ticket agent had been actually at his window. The language of the learned judge was: “ So the question for you to determine is whether there was a sufficient time for the agent to give Mr. Robb this new ticket, after he presented the interchangeable ticket at the window; whether there was a reasonably sufficient length of time for him to make out the new ticket to enable him to go to Burgettstown; if there was, then it was the duty of the company to have the agent there for the purpose of making the ticket out, and if he was not there, and did not come until it was too late to make out the ticket, then the company is liable in this action.” This portion of the charge and the refusal of the court to grant the prayer of the defendant for a binding instruction, cover
The question is, therefore, simply upon a breach of the contract for carriage, and depends upon its terms. If the contract upon which the plaintiff relies was not in itself a contract for carriage, then he is not entitled to recover in the present action, nor for the injury of which he complains. Stress is laid on the fact testified to by plaintiff that he had been permitted to ride from the outer station at Steubenville, where there was no ticket office to Collier station without first obtaining an exchange ticket. This is directly in the teeth of the written agreement and could not operate to extend and free from all restrictions the rights of the plaintiff thereunder. If one conductor violated his duty by permitting the plaintiff to ride upon the faith of his mileage book alone, that clearly could not bind all the conductors upon the other trains of the road: Beebe v. Ayres, 28 Barb. 278; Dietrich v. Railroad Company, supra. If the plaintiff had shown a regulation of the company authorizing the use of his mileage book in the manner in which he attempted to use it, under the circumstances in which he was placed, he would have had a right to board the train, and would have had standing to maintain his action. In the absence of such evidence he is thrown upon his contract, and the terms it imports or recognizes as the evidence of his right of transit over the defendant’s road. The contract upon its face denies him the right to transportation unless accompanied by other and further evidence. It was not a contract for carriage in any sense of the word, although it was a contract concerning transportation. The agreement of the railroad company
We are of opinion that the request of the defendant for a binding instruction ought to have been affirmed, and the judgment is reversed.