114 Ga. 159 | Ga. | 1901
Mrs. Wood sued the railway company for damages which she had sustained on account of certain alleged tortious acts committed by the defendant. Her petition made, in brief, the following case: Desiring to go from Dalton, her home, to a certain point in Texas, she opened negotiations with the agent of the defendant at Dalton for the purchase of through tickets for herself and her three minor children to the point in Texas to which she desired to go. In consideration of the purchase by plaintiff of tickets over the defendant’s line, its agent agreed to send to petitioner’s house and transport her baggage to the depot, and bring to her house the tickets and checks for her baggage. The agent did send a dray and have the baggage transported, but did not send the tickets and checks. When petitioner arrived at the depot, she was handed the tickets, for which she paid the sum of $78.23, and also the checks for her baggage. Subsequently, however, the agent refused to transport as baggage one of her boxes, and demanded the return of the check for this box, and petitioner, being ignorant of her rights, surrendered the check upon the agent’s agreeing to forward it by next freight-train to her point of destination. Petitioner charges that all of her baggage did not weigh more than the number of pounds allowed to.her tickets, but that, if it did,the defendant company had no right to rescind the contract which it had made to transport her baggage on these tickets. After receiving her tickets and checks, petitioner learned for the first time that her train was behind time, which fact was well known to the agent before he sold the tickets, and the information was wrongfully and fraudulently withheld' from petitioner. Upon petitioner’s complaining to the agent and offering to surrender her tickets, he agreed that he would wire the defendant’s connection at Chattanooga to hold the train for her, and that the train would be held. Petitioner charges that the agent willfully and fraudulently represented his willingness and ability to do something which he could not do, and which it is alleged he never attempted to do. It is alleged that the box which the agent agreed to send by freight to her was not sent promptly, but was allowed to remain exposed to the weather and get wet, from which the contents of the box were damaged. It is further alleged that petitioner was damaged by reason of being deprived of the bedding which was contained in this box, the weather being very cold, and the petitioner being unable to buy more.
' In reference to the baggage the defendant denies making any contract to carry all of it, but avers that the box left weighed a number of pounds in excess of the amount which could be transported on the tickets bought by plaintiff, who requested the agent to keep the box until she could forward the money to pay for its transportation. The defendant denies that its agent made any agreement to hold the train at Chattanooga, and denies that he knew the Dalton train was behind time when he sold the tickets. In reference to the character of tickets, it is averred that the plaintiff requested the cheapest tickets that could be sold to her destination, and that she was carried safely and comfortably in the car in which these tickets entitled her to ride. It denied that it or its agents were-guilty of any conduct which conduced to the sickness of petitioner and her child or to the death of the latter. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the petitioner for $250, and defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, it excepted.
The main issue in the case as it was tried below seems to have been whether the plaintiff had contracted for second-class tickets. It seems from the evidence that during the negotiations for the tickets nothing was said either by the plaintiff or the agent about
Upon the question of damage to baggage, the evidence, while ■conflicting, tended to establish the plaintiff’s theory that her baggage had been negligently exposed to the weather and had been damaged in consequence thereof, that the agent agreed to send the box by freight the next morning and let the plaintiff pay the freight upon its arrival at her destination, and that he did not do .so. We think, therefore, that the jury were authorized to award some damages on account of detention of and damage to the baggage. The judge in his charge eliminated from the case all the allegations of damage growing out of the sickness and death of the plaintiff’s son; and we are of opinion that a recovery was warranted for whatever damage the plaintiff reasonably and naturally sustained as a result of the failure of the company to provide her with proper accommodations on the train from Chattanooga, and also for the damages sustained by reason of the detention of and dam.age to her baggage. The motion for a new trial complains of a number of extracts from the judge’s charge, to the effect that if the .agent gratuitously and on his own motion furnished plaintiff with .second-class tickets, without any request from the plaintiff, and without knowledge on her part that she was receiving this class of tickets, she would be entitled to ride in a first-class coach and receive first-class accommodations. It is complained that these charges were not authorized by the evidence; but we do not think they are subject to this criticism. It was shown that the plaintiff did not ask for second-class tickets, and that she did not know •she had received such tickets until informed by the conductor of this fact after she left Chattanooga. So that the objection to the ■charges is not well taken, and we are not called on to decide whether they stated correct propositions of law in the abstract or not. Further complaint was made that the judge charged the jury to consider whether the agent at Dalton “guaranteed” that there would be a- connection in Chattanooga. It is contended that there
Judgment affirmed.