10 Ga. App. 745 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Tbe plaintiff's petition alleges, that on March 26, 1910, she bought a ticket from the agent of the Southern Railway Company at Science Hill, Kentucky, entitling her to transportation to Jenkinsburg, Georgia, and, after purchasing the ticket, boarded one of the regular passenger-trains of the defendant company with her six children, for the purpose of going to Jenkinsburg, to which place the train was going. When she arrived at Atlanta, Georgia, she was for the first time informed by the conductor of the train
The defendant filed a demurrer, on general and special grounds. Some of the special grounds were sustained, with leave to ¿mend, and some were overruled. The general ■ demurrer was overruled,, and to the judgment overruling this general demurrer the defendant excepted.
■ Three questions are raised by the record: (1) as to the right of the railroad company to promulgate rules regulating the running and stopping of its trains at stations, requiring some trains to-run through without stopping, except at designated stations on its
1. In the absence of statutory regulation or prohibition, a railroad Compaq may adopt regulations that certain passenger-trains, running regularly on its road, shall stop only at designated stations. There can be no doubt that such rules and regulations are reasonable and are necessary in the proper conduct of the business of the railroad company. Civil Code (19-10), § 2729; Southern Ry. Co. v. Watson, 110 Ga. 681 (36 S. E. 209); Hart v. Southern Ry. Co., 119 Ga. 927 (47 S. E. 206, 100 Am. St. R. 212); Hutchinson on Carriers (3d ed.), § 1060. But a rule, however reasonable, should be enforced with due regard to the obligation of extraordinary diligence which the law imposes upon carriers of passengers.
2. It is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff in error that a passenger is bound to inquire and ascertain whether the train which he proposes to take stops at the station to which his ticket entitles him to ride; that if, without inquiry, he boards a train which, by the regulations of the carrier, does not stop at his destination, he can not require the train to be stopped at such destination; but that he may lawfully ride to the nearest point short of his destination where the train regularly stops; and it is said that there is no allegation in the petition that the plaintiff made any effort to have the train on which she had taken passage stop at the nearest point short of Jenkinsburg, the particular station' to which she had bought a ticket, nor in fact that Atlanta was not the nearest schedule stop of that train to Jenkinsburg. The rule as claimed by the plaintiff in error is unquestionably supported by great weight of authorities, both text-writers and decisions of courts. Hutch. Carr. (3d ed.) § 1060, and cases cited in the notes; 4 Elliott, -Eailroads, 1593; 3 Thomp. Neg. § 2562. Discussing this subject, Thompson, in his Commentaries on Negligence, supra, declares that “it is the duty of a person before taking passage upon a railroad train to use reasonable diligence, by inquiring of the station agent or the conductor of-the train, or by reading the published schedules of the train, or by
We can not fully subscribe to the soundness of the rule that one who proposes to become a passenger is bound to inquire, when he purchases his ticket, and before he boards the train, to ascertain whether the train which he proposes to take, according to its sched
3. But even if it be conceded that the rule is as claimed by the plaintiff in error, yet, under the allegations of the petition, or reasonable deductions therefrom, a cause of action was set out. If a passenger boards a train which, according to schedule, does not stop at the station called for by his ticket, in ignorance of that fact and without making anjr inquirjr in reference thereto, he does not thereby become a trespasser, but he has the right to remain on board the train and to exercise his election as to a station where the train does stop, at which he will get off. As expressed by Thompson in his Commentaries on Negligence (Yol. 3, § 2563) : “If the conductor has no authority to vary the rules of the company in regard
It is fair to assume, in the light of the general practice of conductors in taking up tickets or fares, that the conductor in the present case discovered, soon after the train left the initial point, that this passenger had a ticket which on its face entitled her to transportation to Jenkinsburg, Ga. He should then have told her that the train on which she was riding did not stop at Jenkins-burg, and have given her the opportunity of getting off at that time, or of making an election to get off 'at some other station where the train did stop. He could not, in the exercise of that extraordinary diligence which the law imposes upon carriers of passengers, take up the ticket, or any portion thereof, or punch it, thus indicating that the passenger was entitled to ride thereon, and with
It is conceded by learned counsel for the plaintiff in error that the plaintiff might lawfully have ridden on her ticket to the nearest point short of her destination, and it is stated that there is nothing in the allegations of the petition to negative the assumption that she was entitled to do this, since it is not alleged that Atlanta was not in fact the nearest schedule stop of the train upon which she was riding; but we think that if a person purchases a ticket to a particular station, and ignorantly boards a train which does not stop there, he is entitled at his option to ride as far as that station, and can not be treated as a trespasser and forced to leave the train until after the station is reached. The conductor must leave to the passenger the right to remain on the train until the place called for by his ticket is reached, if the passenger desires to do so; for the passenger would have that right even if the train did not stop there. The conductor would only have the right to eject the passenger after the station was reached where the train did not stop and the passenger remained thereon without paying fare. 3 Thomp. Neg. § 2568. The view, however, that we have announced in this