56 N.Y. 295 | NY | 1874
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for an assault upon and forcibly ejecting him from its car, at Staatsburg, a station on defendant's road between Poughkeepsie and Rhinebeck.
The jury by their verdict have found that the plaintiff purchased a ticket at the station at Sing Sing, for Rhinebeck; that with this ticket he went on board a train from New York, going no farther north than Poughkeepsie; that after this train passed Peekskill the conductor called for tickets and the plaintiff handed his to him, which he took and retained, giving to the plaintiff no check or other evidence showing any right to a passage upon any train of the defendant; nor did the plaintiff ask for a return of his ticket or for any such evidence. Upon the arrival of the train at Poughkeepsie, where it stopped, the plaintiff got out and waited at the station until another train arrived from New York, which was going to Albany, stopping at Rhinebeck. The plaintiff got into and seated himself in a car in this train; and after it started the conductor called upon him for his ticket; in reply to which the plaintiff told him that he had purchased a ticket from Sing Sing *298 to Rhinebeck, which the conductor of the other train had taken and had not given back to him; some of the passengers told the conductor that the plaintiff had had such a ticket. The conductor told the plaintiff that it was his duty in case he had no ticket to collect the fare, and that the other conductor would make it right with him. The plaintiff refused to pay fare, and the conductor told him he must leave the train. This the plaintiff refused to do, insisting upon his right to a passage to Rhinebeck upon the ticket which the conductor of the other train had taken. Upon the arrival of the train at Staatsburg, a regular station, the plaintiff still refusing to pay fare or to leave the train upon request, was taken hold of and such force used as was necessary to overcome his resistance, and ejected from the car. This was the injury for which the recovery was had.
The court, among other things, charged the jury that the conductor seemed to have done no more than his duty to the company as between him and the company; but at the same time that did not excuse the company for the wrongful act of the other conductor — for which act they were responsible. The defendant's counsel requested the court to charge the jury that this was not a case for punitive or exemplary damages. The court declined so to charge, and in reply said: "I am inclined to think it is a case where the jury are not restricted to actual injuries — in other words, to compensatory damages." To this the counsel for the defendant excepted. This exception was well taken. It must be kept in mind that the injury for which a recovery was sought was the forcible ejection of the plaintiff from the car by the conductor of the train, not the wrongful taking from the plaintiff of his ticket by the conductor of the other train. The latter was regarded as material, only as making the former act wrongful as against the plaintiff. The court, in substance, charged that in putting the plaintiff off the car the conductor acted in what he believed was the performance of his duty to the company. This being so, it is clear that no punitory damages could have been recovered against him *299
had he been sued instead of the company. In Hamilton v. TheThird Avenue Railroad Co. (
But there is another important question in the case which will necessarily arise upon a retrial, and which was raised by an exception taken upon the trial already had: that is whether the plaintiff had a right to go upon another train and use force to retain a seat there; refusing to pay fare, having no evidence of any right to a passage, by reason of the conductor of the other train having wrongfully taken and retained his ticket.
It is insisted by the counsel for the plaintiff that this question was decided in favor of the plaintiff in Hamilton v.Third Avenue Railroad Company (supra). This question was not involved or decided in that case. There the plaintiff testified that when the car upon which he had paid his fare to the City Hall stopped at an intermediate station, its conductor told the passengers to change cars; that before going on board the car from which he was ejected, he inquired of its conductor whether any transfer ticket was necessary; that the conductor told him it was not; that if he came from the other car he could go on board of the one from which he was ejected. This was equivalent to an assurance by that conductor that he could ride upon the car under his control, without further payment of fare or evidence of a right so to do. It was in reference to this testimony that it was said that the company would be liable for *300 his wrongful ejection from the car by the conductor who had given this assurance. But testimony was given by the defendant in direct conflict with this. The judge erroneously charged the jury that, assuming the truth of the latter testimony, and that the conductor acted in good faith in putting the plaintiff off the car, still he was entitled to recover of the company punitory damages if he had paid fare to the City Hall upon the other car. For this error the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered by this court.
In Hibbard v. The New York and Erie Railroad Co. (
The judgment appealed from must be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
All concur; FOLGER and ANDREWS, JJ., concurring on the first ground; CHURCH, Ch. J., concurring on last ground stated in opinion.
Judgment reversed.