22 F. 843 | D. Maryland | 1885
This suit (with three others of like character by other female libelants) has been instituted to recover damages on the
There are two issues raised: The first one of law, the libelants denying the legal right of the owners of the steam-boat to separate passengers for any purpose, because of race or color. The second is an issue of fact, the libelants denying that the forward cabin assigned to them was, in fact, equal in comfort and convenience to the after cabin assigfied to white women.
In determining the question of law, it is to be observed that the steamer Sue is employed on public navigable waters, and plys between the port of Baltimore and ports in the state of Virginia, and that the regulations made by her owners and enforced on board of her, by which colored passengers are assigned to a different sleeping cabin from white passengers, is a matter affecting interstate commerce. It is, therefore, a matter which cannot be regulated by state law, and congress having refrained from legislation on the subject, the owners of the boat afe left at liberty to adopt in reference thereto such reasonable regulations as the common law allows. Hall v. De Cuir, 95 U. S. 490. One of the restrictions which the common law imposes is that such regulations must be reasonable, and tend to the comfort and safety of the passengers generally, and that accommodations equal in comfort and safety must be afforded to all alike who pay the same price. The law of carriers of passengers in this respect is well stated in Hutch. Carr. § 542. He states the result of the decisions to be that, if the conveyance employed be adapted to the carriage of passengers separated into different classes according to the fare which may be charged, the character of the accommodations afforded, or of the persons to be carried, the carrier may so divide them, and any regulation confining those of one class to one part of the conveyance will not be regarded as unreasonable if made in good faith for the better accommodation and convenience of the passengers.
The precise question raised in this case, viz., whether a separ
It has been urged by respondent’s counsel that the evidence shows that explicit notice was given to the libelants when they bought tlieir tickets, before going on board, that they would not be allowed to use the white women’s sleeping cabin. As to this there is conflict of testimony; but the conflict is immaterial, for it is admitted by libelants that they well knew of the regulations from having, on previous trips on tlio same steam-boat, been denied access to the after cabin, and, of course, knowledge was equivalent to notice. But I think the whole issue is immaterial. The libelants paid full first-class price, and did not consent to any such regulation; and if the regulation was unlawful, they could not be held bound by it, even if specially indorsed on tlieir tickets, and read to them. As to the reasonableness of this regulation I must decide upon the evidence in this case.
The steam-boat men called as witnesses testify that it is a regulation which has always existed on all the numerous night lines of steamers on the Chesapeake and adjacent waters. They give various facts' to justify it, and declare that they are obliged to make it, in compliance with the demand of the great majority of their passengers. It must be admitted that a regulation, which a carrier may lawfully make, if reasonable, has strong argument in favor of its j'eas-onableness if it is demanded by a great majority of the traveling public who use his conveyance. There was a time when every man on a railroad train who wanted to smoke assumed the right to do so in
This proposition of law, I am informed, was applied by my learned predecessor, Judge Giles, in a suit brought by a colored man'who had been excluded from a street car. The street car company had arranged that every third or fourth car, and none other, should be exclusively for colored people, but Judge Giles held that this did not afford equal convenience to this class of citizens. And this leads to the important question of fact in the present case. The libelants testify that the forward cabin, which was assigned to their use, was offensively dirty; that the mattresses in the berths were defaced; that sheets were wanting or soiled, and that there were hardly any berths which had pillows; that there were no blankets and no conveniences for’ washing. They testify that from their own knowledge the white women’s cabin was clean, pleasant, and inviting, and had none of these defects. They declare that on former trips they had found the forward cabin so intolerable that they sat up qll night, and, finding it in the same condition this trip, they refused to remain in it, and being refused admission into the after cabin, again sat up all night. In these assertions they are supported by five other persons, all colored persons, to be sute, but respectable, and all having had similar opportunities of experience. They claim also that the ap-
Whatever the general orders of the agents and officers of the boat may have been in this respect, and however fair their general intentions, a s declared by them, may have been, I am quite convinced that no disinterested person would have gone into the forward cabin in its actual condition in August, 1884, who had the option of the other one, quite irrespective of all questions of color or race. I think it was considered by the persons who actually attended to the forward cabin that less attention to it would suffice. It appears, too, that there was a stewardess to attend to the after cabin, and that she did not attend the forward one. The evidence of the ship’s officers admit that there was a different system, in respect to this cabin, in giving out the bed-coverings. The reasons given by the officers for this different system, they justify by showing that the much greater number of second-class colored passengers who used this cabin, as compared with the smaller and more self-respecting second-class white persons who used the after cabin, made a different system necessary, and also made it much more expensive and difficult to keep the forward cabin clean. T have no doubt of the truth of this; hut it is no legal justification for not giving as clean and convenient a sleeping place to a first-class colored passenger as is given on the same ship to a first-class white passenger. If a different system was necessary, for any reason, the first-class colored passenger should not he made to experience any difference in comfort on account of that system. It seems to me only reasonable that some proper attendant should offer to supply the things that were not in the cabin, and which were always placed ready for use in the after cabin, and not that the passenger, on discovering the differences, should be obliged to hunt for,
I pronounce in favor of the libelants, and will sign a decree for $100 in each case.