121 Ky. 415 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Reversing.
It is insisted for appellant that it was entitled to the peremptory instruction,, because the petition sought to recover for the alleged wrongful ejection of appellee from appellant’s train, whereas he was properly put off the train by the conductor because his right to ride thereon was limited by his ticket, through the mistake of the agent, who issued it, to September 14th, the day of its purchase, and did not entitle him to be carried on its train on the 15th, and that, as there was no violence or unnecessary force used by the conductor in ejecting him from the train, he should have sued appellant for breach of contract growing out of the negligence or mistake of the ticket agent, and not in tort for being put off the train.
We are aware it was held by this court in L. & E. Ry. Co. v. Lyons, 104 Ky., 23, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 516, 46 S. W., 209, that the “ticket of the passenger must usually be treated as conclusive evidence of the passenger’s rights as between him and the conductor, leaving the passenger to his action against the carrier if he has not been given such a ticket as the contract called for; otherwise, the conductor would be' compelled to accept the statements of the passenger in reference to and contradictory of the ticket presented to and relied on by him. ’ ’ But it was also held in the same case that, where the ticket does not purport to be, and is not, the complete agreement between the carrier and the passenger, supplementary evidence is competent to show what was the real contract indicated by the ticket. In the case at bar it must be taken as true, because so testified by appellee and not contradicted, that he ordered of appellant’s
Be that as it may, it is manifest that the conductor to whom it was presented by appellee after leaving Harrodsburg believed it to be his duty to reject it; and, as appellee failed to pay the fare demanded of him, his expulsion by the conductor from the train was not tortious, unless accompanied with unreasonable and unnecessary force or insult. We may say of this case, as was said in L. & E. Ry. Co. v. Lyons, supra: “Although it is alleged in the petition that the conductor wrongfully, maliciously and to the humiliation of the appellee ejected him from the train, the ac
We are further advised by the opinion of the case, supra, that for wrongful ejection from a train without force or violence the compensatory damages that may be recovered will embrace mortification and humiliation of feeling, as well as any inconvenience, loss of time, and such necessary expense, by way of additional railroad fare, as may result from the ejection; but, as neither loss of time nor expense was. alleged or proven in this ease, there can be no recovery as to either of these items. The instructions of the trial judge should have confined the recovery to compensatory damages.
Appellee, W. A. Hawkins, and his uncle, J. C. Bond, furnished all the testimony given in this case, and the latter testified only as to the condition of the former when he returned to his (Bond’s) home in Harrods-burg after being ejected from the train. According to appellee’s testimony he was expelled from the train about a mile from Harrodsburg, to which place-he immediately returned. When on the train he was approached by the conductor for his ticket. Appellee handed him his ticket, and thereupon the following conversation occurred between them-,- which we-give in appellee’s own words: “The conductor looked at it (the ticket) and said it was no good; that I could not ride on that. I asked him why, and he said the-ticket wasn’t any good. I told him I got it the evening before and paid full fare for it. He still said it "Was no account, and I would have to pay my fare or
The verdict of $1,000 returned by the jury was flagrantly excessive, because far beyond the maximum of just compensation. It can be explained only upon the ground that it resulted from passion or prejudice on the part of the jury. An examination of
We think the declarations of passengers in the car that appellee was a “beat and bum,” to which they, according to appellee’s testimony, gave voice as he walked out of the car behind the conductor, were clearly incompetent, and should therefore have been excluded from the jury. (L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Simpson, 111 Ky., 754, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 1044, 64 S. W., 733.)
Except to the extent that they authorized the jury to allow punitive damages, we think the instructions reasonably correct; but for the errors indicated the-judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with the opinion.