77 Ill. 354 | Ill. | 1875
delivered the opinion .of the Court:
Appellee’s declaration contains two counts. The substance of his cause of action, as therein stated, is, that, having purchased of appellant a ticket entitling him to be carried by it from- Quincy to Jacksonville, and while awaiting the departure of appellant’s train, at Quincy, in a room set apart- by it and used for passengers intending to de]iart by its trains, he was assaulted by the defendant’s servant, one E. E. Goodrich, by whom he was there insulted, beaten, etc.
The objection that appellant could not be sued for the injuries complained of, in Morgan county, if tenable at all, should have been raised before judgment. The same rule of construction must, in this respect, be applied to section 2 of the act in force July 1st, 1872, (Laws of 1872, p. 338,) as has been held to apply to the second section of the Practice act, in the revision of 1845. Since Kenney et ux. v. Greer, 13 Ill. 432, (decided at the December term, 1851,) that section has uniformly been construed as giving the defendant a privilege, merely, which he will be regarded as having waived, unless he makes his objection in apt time. Gillilan et al. v. Gray et al. 14 Ill. 416; Waterman v. Tuttle, 18 id. 292; Hamilton v. Dewey, 22 id. 490; Hardy et al. v. Adams et al. 48 id. 532. Nor do we consider the objection well taken, that the evidence should have shown that the injuries received were inflicted by the identical servant named in the declaration. We are of opinion that so much of the declaration as gives the name of such servant, is surplusage. The only fact material was, that the alleged wrong was done by some one occupying, as to the wrongful act, the relation of servant to appellant. If appellee received the injury complained of, from a person thus representing appellant, its liability was fixed, and could not be affected by the circumstance that the servant was known by some other name than Goodrich.
We are of opinion, however, on the evidence, appellee has no cause of action, and the judgment should have been against him. His own evidence is, after getting a ticket, he went into the ladies’ room to wait for a train. After he had been in there fifteen or twenty minutes, he saw the door leading into the little room open; that two or three little girls and a little boy were in there, and he went in to get some water. “Some one said, roughly: come out of there; said so twice; I looked around and saw a gentleman" whom I had seen around the building. I said to him I wanted a drink. He said it was no place for me, and wanted me to get out. I was not in the habit of being talked to in that way, and told him so. He said I must go out or he would put me out. I talked to him some, and he said I was a d-d loafer; took hold of my collar and pushed me'out of the door on to the platform.” He says he “ received no injuries whatever, no bruises, no bones broken and no clothes torn.” He had no lady with him, and his excuse for being in the ladies’ room was, the gentlemen’s room was too filthy. The little room into which he "had gone was the ladies’ water-closet, where there was also a water tank.
The occurrence was a little after dark. The evidence shows that, there was fire, seats and lights in the gentlemen’s room, and also water. There were signs plainly printed on the doors, showing which rooms were for gentlemen and which for ladies, and over the entrance to the little room, from which appellee was ejected, is printed the words: “Ladies’ Frítate Room.” The building ivas a union depot, used by-three other roads in common with appellant, for passengers arriving and departing by their trains, at Quincy, and the instructions of those in charge of the depot were, no gentleman, unless accompanied by a lady, was allowed to enter the ladies’ room, and no gentleman ivas allowed to enter the ladies’ private room. This was not only a reasonable regulation, but one which ivas absolutely necessary, to enable the companies using the depot to discharge a duty they owe to the public, of protecting females arriving and departing by their trains, while awaiting at the depot, from violence and insult, and it was the duty of those in charge to strictly and rigidly enforce it.
Appellee’s excuse for entering the ladies’ room is not at all admissible. The fact that it was the ladies’ room, ivas notice to him that it ivas no place for him. He had no claim to encroach upon conveniences provided exclusively for ladies, even if the gentlemen were not properly provided with accommodations.
If appellee, by the negligence of appellant, was denied accommodations to which he was entitled, his remedy was directly against appellant for that negligence, and not to intrude upon the privacy of ladies, and deny to them the rights to which they were entitled.
When appellee entered the ladies’ water closet, it is difficult to believe he did not comprehend the uses to which it was appropriated. Its location and appointments, alone, even if he was unable to read the sign above the door, it would seem, ought to have been abundantly sufficient for that purpose. But if this ivas not so, surely, when he ivas notified it was no place for him, and he was ordered out, he knew it; and if he had possessed ordinary sensibilities, he would, instead of refusing to retire, have explained his mistake, and retired at once.
The language applied to appellee may have been more peremptory than was necessary, but, then, appellee’s conduct, unexplained, was such as to arouse unfavorable suspicions, and, at a depot accommodating- the number of important, railroads this does, in a city having- the population of Quincy, it is reasonable to expect there may frequently be persons of reckless and vicious habits, against whom there is no safety except by prompt and energetic action; and, as between strangers, it may often be difficult to distinguish between those who mean well and those who mean evil, except by their conduct. Those who deal with the public must be held to respect the feelings as well as the rights of those with whom they deal, but we are not prepared to hold that the mere fact a servant shall use more peremptoriness of tone, in making a request, than he should, gives to the person to whom it is addressed the right to persist in transgressing a rule, the enforcement of which is essential to the comfort or safety of others, and especially where the rule is for the benefit of ladies or children, or helpless persons. The rights of those for whose benefit the rule is adopted, are, in such cases, of paramount consideration.
Objection was taken to a number of questions put by appellee’s counsel, in cross-examination, to a witness of the appellant. These objections should have been sustained. The questions were objectionable in form, irrelevant to the issue, and only tended to bully and degrade the witness. A witness can not be impeached in this way. A wide latitude is allowed in the cross-examination of a witness, but he. is entitled to be protected by the court from unnecessary insult and abusiveness by counsel.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.
Judgment reversed.