(after stating the facts). —
“The court instructs you that it is the duty of a passenger when he has tendered a transfer slip and’ the same has been for any reason refused, either to pay fare or quit the car peaceably, without offense or disturbance to other passengers, and then he can seek redress for whatever damage his rejection as a passenger may have caused him. In other words, the preservation of the public peace is of higher consideration in the eye of the law than the right of any citizen to so conduct himself as to cause the disturbance of other passengers upon the same car. And if in this case you find that the conductor afforded plaintiff an opportunity to leave the car quietly, and the plaintiff refused to go quietly and insisted on his right to remain notwithstanding the opportunity afforded him to get off quietly, then the court declares to you that plaintiff can not recover any sum whatever on account of the conductor taking hold of his arm in putting him off the car, nor on account of any supposed pain or suffering which the act of the conductor in taking hold of his arm may have caused him. ’ ’
The testimony failed to disclose any proper cause inducing the conductor of the Cass avenue car to reject the transfer tickets and in reply to repeated questions of plaintiff for the reason of his refusal, he answered that that was his business and that he ran that car, and as the transfers were received by plaintiff in response to request for proper tokens of transfer and in due course from the first conductor, defendant’s representative, the presumption, in absence of any opposite proof, must be indulged that they were regular and proper evidence of transfer entitling plaintiff and his sister to passage upon the second car, and that the conduct of the second conductor in refusing to receive them as substitutes for or in lieu of cash fares was improper and unwarranted.
The court gave the following instruction at plaintiff’s instance:
‘ ‘ The court further instructs the' jury that in assessing the plaintiff’s damages under the first instruction given you, you may take into consideration in fixing the amount of damages, either actual or punitive, the manner and demeanor of the said conductor in ejecting said plaintiff and his sister from said car, if you find that he did so eject them, and the inconvenience and humiliation to which the plaintiff was subjected thereby.”
Under the terms of this instruction the jury were permitted in estimating the award to be accorded plaintiff, both compensatory and punitive, to weigh the conduct and manner of the defendant’s agent, its conductor, in enforcing the unlawful exclusion from the ■ car, employed and directed toward, not only the plaintiff, but also toward his copassenger and companion as well, and both compensate and punish on such joint ac
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that by the use of the word ‘malice’ in these instructions is meant ill-will or a desire to be revenged, and in passing upon the questions you should take into consideration all the facts and circumstances, as detailed by the witnesses on the witness stand and permitted to go to the jury in the evidence.”
The stricture levelled at this portion of the charge, that there was no evidence of malice, is not tenable. Express or actual malice can but rarely be proven directly, but malice may be and commonly is inferred from the willful doing of a wrongful act and the state of facts disclosed in the present case justified the trial court in submitting such feature to the jury.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.