130 Tenn. 197 | Tenn. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought before a justice of the peace of Knox county by Dr. Chas. P. McNabb, against the Southern Eailway Company, for damages. The cause of action is stated in the warrant of the justice of the peace as follows, to wit:
“On, to wit, the 29th day of March, 1912, the defendant failed and refused as a common carrier, to sell the plaintiff a railroad passenger ticket from Clinton to Knoxville, Tennessee, and further refused to trans
The justice of the peace rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $499.99 and all costs, whereupon defendant appealed to the circuit court.
In the circuit court the cause was heard by the circuit judge, without the intervention of a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $10 (as nominal damages) and the costs of the cause.
The defendant railway company appealed to the court of civil appeals, and later the plaintiff below filed the record for a writ of error in the court of civil appeals, and the case was there heard upon the assignments of error by both parties.
Upon" the trial of the case in the circuit court, the trial judge made and filed a special written finding of facts, upon request of the railway company, which finding of facts was made a part of the record, and, so far as necessary to be quoted in order to present the questions before this court, is as follows:
‘ ‘ The plaintiff was a physician of high professional standing and reputation, and had been practicing his profession in Knoxville, Tennessee, for the past twen
“The proof fails to show that plaintiff sustained any loss or damage, either financially or to his professional character and standing, by reason of the matters complained of, and that the proof further fails to show a proper case for exemplary damages.”
The opinion of the circuit judge upon the facts found was, in effect, that, although the railway company had a right to make and enforce a rule forbidding local passengers to travel on such detoured trains as that involved in this case, the enforcement of such rule should be modified to meet conditions and circumstances which might arise in the course of the performance of the duty which the railway company, as a common carrier, owed to the traveling public, and that, inasmuch as the local passenger train between Clinton and Knoxville was two hours late, it was the duty of the railway company, if reasonably possible to do so, to carry plaintiff on any other of its. passenger trains, stopping at both Clinton and Knoxville, and that although the rule forbidding local passengers to travel on detoured trains was ordinarily reasonable, it became
“Plaintiff could and should have been carried as a passenger on said train, and he having boarded same without a ticket, said depot agent having advised him that tickets could not be sold for said train, and, after, boarding same, having offered to pay cash fare, or showing his willingness and readiness to do só, he thereby became a passenger on said train, and entitled' to be carried as such, and was wrongfully ejected therefrom. ’ ’
The court of civil appeals agreed with the trial judge that:
(1) The railway company was not liable in damages to plaintiff below on account of the delay of two hours in the local passenger train from Clinton to Knoxville; it not appearing that the delay was caused by negligence of the railway company.
(2) The rule of the railway company that it would, not carry any local passengers on detoured trains (and. incidentally its rule forbidding the depot agent at Clinton to sell tickets for such trains) was a reasonable rule, and one which the railway company had a right to make and enforce.
But in the majority opinion of the court of civil appeals, it is said, viz.:
; The judgment of the.circuit court was therefore reversed, and the plaintiff’s suit dismissed.
The minority of the court of civil appeals held to the opinion that under the facts the relation of passenger and carrier was established, and could not be severed by the conductor without subjecting the railway company to liability. However, they were of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to .recover only nominal damages, and that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed.
We think the conclusion of the majority of the court of civil appeals is .correct.
The general principles to be applied in determining whether-or not the relation of passenger and carrier existed are stated in Webster v. Fitchburg R. R. Co., 161 Mass., 298, 37 N. E., 165, 24 L. R. A., 521, and repeated in the case of Hogner v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co., 198 Mass., 260, 269, 84 N. E., 464, 465, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.), 960, 962, as follows, to wit:
“One becomes a passenger on a railroad when he puts himself into the care of the railroad company to be transported under a contract, and is received and accepted as a passenger, by the company. There is hardly ever any formal act of delivery of one’s person into the care of the carrier, or of acceptance by the carrier of one who presents himself for transportation, and so the existence of the relation of passenger and carrier is commonly to be implied from circumstances. These circumstances must be such as to warrant an implication that the one has offered himself to be carried on a trip about to be made, and that the other has accepted his offer, and has received him to be properly cared for. ... A railroad company holds itself out as ready to receive as passengers all persons who present themselves in a proper condition, and in a
It is a necessary corollary to the rule that a railway company may make and enforce reasonable rules and regulations with reference to the reception of persons as passengers; that the railway company may decline to receive or accept as a passenger a person who refuses or fails to comply with such reasonable rules and regulations of the railroad company.
It is well established that one who procures a ticket and procures passage upon a railroad train by means of fraudulent misrepresentations does not occupy the status of a passenger, hut is a trespasser. Fitzmaurice v. N. Y. & N. H. & Hartford R. R. Co., 192 Mass., 159, 78 N. E., 418, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1146, 116 Am. St. Rep., 236, 7 Ann. Cas., 586, and cases there cited.
In the present case, it appears that when the conductor told Dr. McNabb to “get aboard,” he, the conductor, was under the impression that Dr. McNabb had procured a ticket for passage on that train. This, however, was not the case, and Dr. McNabb not only knew that he had no ticket, but had been warned by the station agent that it was contrary to the rules of' the company for local passengers to ride on that particular
Although Dr. McNabb was not guilty of any fraudulent misrepresentation, it is manifest that the conductor, in the first instance, expressed a willingness to accept him as a passenger wider a mistake of fact, to wit,, that a ticket had been sold to McNabb for-passage- on that train; but before the train left the station, and before it moved from the place where McNabb boarded it, the conductor discovered his mistake, and thereupon politely requested McNabb to leave the train, which he-did without resistance.
We are of the opinion that, under the facts found, by the trial judge, the railway company had a right to decline to- accept Dr. McNabb as a passenger on the-train in question, and that the legal relations of the-parties were not changed by the conductor’s invitation to McNabb to “get aboard,” made as it was under a mistake of fact.
The judgment of the court of civil appeals will be-affirmed.