The plaintiff,, after paying his fare and passing through the turnstile at an elevated station, discovered that lie had lost a paper, and informed the defendant’s servant of his desire to go back and find it, but was told, that if he did so he would have to pay another fare to be admitted to the station platform. He found the paper on the stairs leading to the street, and, upon returning, demanded that he be allowed to go out upon the station platform without the payment of another fare, which was denied him, and for this refusal and the indignity to which "he claims to have been subjected he has recovered the judgment from which this appeal is taken.
It is undisputed that the defendant’s servants knew that he was the same person who had paid the fare and requested the privilege of being allowed to return to look for the paper. The printed rules of the company provided that no one should be allowed to. pass the ticket window unless a fare was paid, and the defendant’s evidence tended to show that its servants had been given oral instruction to the effect that no one leaving a station platform should be permitted to return to it without paying a fare, and while the respondent criticises the testimony upon this subject it is undisputed that the plaintiff was informed of the rule before leaving the station .platform.
The respondent does not question the reasonableness of the rule relied upon by the appellant, and in view of the number of persons daily entering these stations such a rule is both reasonable and necessary. But it is claimed that as the defendant’s servants knew that the plaintiff had paid a fare for which he had had no ride, it was unreasonable to enforce the rule. Ho case is cited to, sustain the proposition that the rule being reasonable the servant nevertheless has a discretion respecting its enforcement, and the case of Montgomery v. Buffalo Railway Co. (165 N. Y. 139) seems squarely to decide the converse of the proposition. The respondent • relies upon expressions in the concurring opinion of Judge Cullen in Monnier v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (175 N. Y. 281) to sustain his contention. Bút the point there under discussion related to the con
The judgment of ■ the Municipal Court should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, Hooker, Gaynor and Rich, JJ., concurred.
..Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costsdo abide "the event.
