149 Va. 882 | Va. Ct. App. | 1928
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a final judgment enteredjfby
There are a number of conflicts in the record upon some of the facts in this case but these were for the determination of the jury — and having been solved in favor of the plaintiff by the verdict of the jury, the facts proven by the evidence for the plaintiff will have to be accepted by us as established.
Formerly there were several independent street car .lines, operated under independent franchises, doing business in the city of Richmond. Now all of the street ear lines, or certainly most all of them, are operated, owned and controlled by the defendant.
Upon May 15,1908, an ordinance of the city council of Richmond was approved, known as the general transfer ordinance, which is still in full force and effect. Section 22, chapter 43, Richmond City Code, 1924. That ordinance required the various street railway companies to issue and receive transfers at intersecting points with other lines.
Subsection 16 of section 23, chapter 43 of the Richmond City Code, 1924, provides: “At the intersection of Fourteenth and Main streets ***** the Richmond Passenger and Power Company shall issue transfers to passengers coming from the south on Fourteenth street * * * * to the Richmond Traction Company going west on Main street” (approved September 16, 1901). From that time until
On account of the congestion at Main and Fourteenth streets, after conference in March, 1924, between the officials of the police department of the city of Richmond and the superintendent of transportation of the defendant, it was determined to abolish Main and Fourteenth street as a transfer point for passengers traveling on the Hull and Fourteenth street car going west from South Richmond. This was to be accomplished by the Fourteenth street car instead of stopping at the intersection with Main street as formerly and transferring its passengers, it was to go up Main to Ninth street, where the ear diverged going to Broad street, and at its point of divergence passengers from South Richmond going west on Main street were required to transfer under the new regulation of the defendant. This car then went up Ninth to Broad— west upon Broad to Seventh — and thence down Seventh to Main — to the intersection at Fourteenth, where it turned to South Richmond over Fourteenth and Hull streets.
This change of the transfer point, it is claimed by the defendant, was authorized by the ordinance approved December 23, 1899, for the construction of a street railway by the Richmond Passenger and Power Company in the city of Richmond, whereby it was given power to make and enforce any reasonable regulations as to transfer tickets or systems of transfer to prevent fraud. This new regulation was posted by the defend
About 7:30 A. M. on February 6, 192.5, the plaintiff, a resident of the city of Richmond, boarded a north bound Hull street car, paid his fare, and requested and received a transfer from “south to west.” When the ear reached Fourteenth and Main streets the plaintiff, as was his custom, alighted, boarded the next west bound car along Main street, and tendered his transfer in payment of his fare which was refused by the" conductor.
The conductor then told the plaintiff that he would have to pay another fare or get off the car. This the plaintiff refused to do. There was no loud talking or angry words used by either the plaintiff or conductor. The plaintiff remained upon the back platform of the car, and when it arrived at Tenth or Eleventh and Main streets, the conductor who was a conservator of the peace with power to arrest, arrested the plaintiff and delivered him into the custody of a policeman of the city of Richmond upon the charge of disorderly conduct. The policeman thereupon sent the plaintiff in a patrol wagon to the police station where the plaintiff was locked up for approximately thirty minutes, when he was released on bail.
After the plaintiff was bailed he went to the claim office of the defendant to ascertain why he had been arrested, and none of its employees would discuss the matter, but told him that he would be seen next morning at the police court. Next morning he appeared in
It appears from the record in this case that the ordinances of the city of Richmond in reference to the transfers (which are matters of evidence to be produced before the court) were unknown to either counsel for the plaintiff or defendant at the time' of the trial in the police eourt, nor did counsel for the plaintiff know of said ordinances until the trial in the Law and Equity Court, part two, of the city of Richmond where he took a non-suit in a former action.
In its petition for this writ of error, the defendant sets out its assignment of error as follows: “The defendant maintains that the judgment of the trial court is contrary to the law and the evidence and without evidence to support it, and that the trial court erred to the prejudice of the defendant in its instructions to the jury; in submitting to the jury the question of the defendant’s liability, without any evidence of a lack of probable cause or malice appearing in the record, and in allowing the award of punitive damages.”
The defendant then cites the law with reference to the allegations and proof necessary to sustain an action for malicious prosecution, and cites numerous cases in Virginia that have approved and applied the principles of the quotation. There is no question of its
In order to simplify the questions before the court, ■ the defendant “admits (1) that the prosecution was set on foot by the now defendant, and that it has terminated in a manner not unfavorable to the now plaintiff; and (2) that it was instituted, or procured by the cooperation of the now defendant: but the defendant denies (3) that it was- without probable cause, and (4) that it was malicious.”
It is a concession in the case that the conductor was by virtue of the statute a conservator of the peace, while upon the car of the defendant in discharge of his duties, and if the plaintiff unlawfully refused to pay his fare, or leave the car when requested so to do by the conductor, then and in that event he was guilty of a breach of the peace, and liable to arrest for disorderly conduct. Virginia Railway and Power Company v. O’Flaherty, 118 Va. 749, 88 S. E. 312, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 471. So that the failure or refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury to that effect, as requested by the defendant, if error was harmless and any discussion of the instructions or their correctness would be a work of supererogation.
From the record in this case upon the trial thereof the defendant’s defense was based largely upon its legal right by virtue of the franchise ordinance approved December 23, 1899, to change the transfer point for passengers on the Hull street car going west on Main street from Fourteenth and Main streets to the point of divergence at Main and Ninth streets, as set forth in the defendant’s notice to its conductors and motormen dated the 23rd day of November, 1924. The plaintiff’s entire case depended upon his claim that the defendant had no legal right to alter said transfer
After the evidence was concluded the plaintiff presented to the court three instructions embodying his view of the law on this crucial point in the case, and the defendant tendered two instructions to the court of its view of the law. There is no objection to the form of the instructions, but merely the controverted proposition of law, so that it is unnecessary to copy said instructions herein or discuss them in detail upon this point. But the plaintiff’s instructions as to the measure of damages therein contained will be considered in another part of this opinion. The learned judge of the trial court adopted the plaintiff’s view of the law, and held that the defendant could not change the transfer point fixed by the city ordinances in its discretion or upon the suggestion or solicitation of the police department of the city. The right to establish rules and regulations to prevent fraud upon it in the use of transfers, does not confer any authority upon it to amend, change or abrogate the ordinances of the city council.
A regulation of a street car company requiring a passenger to produce a transfer ticket to his destination or pay his fare, under penalty of expulsion from the car, is a reasonable regulation and within the power of the carrier to make; but while a carrier may enforce this rule, it has no right to inflict wrongs and injuries upon a passenger in ejecting him from the car. As between the conductor of the street car and a passenger, the face of the passenger’s, transfer ticket is conclusive evidence as to the extent of his right to ride, and it is the duty of a passenger on a street car, if he has not
In the case at bar the transfer ticket, by its terms upon its face, gave the plaintiff the right to transfer from the south at the intersection of the western line, and ride west. The conductor had no right acting upon secret instructions of the defendant to require him to pay an extra fare or leave the car.
The chief ground of defense under the facts and circumstances of this case was “did the defendant act with probable cause, and without malice?” What is probable cause is thus stated in Burks PI. and Prac. (2nd ed.), page 198, as deduced from the various decisions of the Supreme Court of Virginia: “No accurate definition can be given of probable cause, but belief in the charge, on facts, based on sufficient circumstances to reasonably induce such belief in a person of ordinary prudence will suffice. The prosecutor must believe in the guilt of the accused, and there must be reasonable grounds on which to base the belief. Both must concur, at least many of the cases so hold, but upon this point there is some conflict.
“What constitutes probable cause is a question for the court, but where there is any conflict in the evidence it is for the jury to determine whether in the particular case such probable cause existed. The test of probable cause is to be applied as of the time when the action complained of was taken.”
Ours is a system of philosophical jurisprudence, and in order for a general rule to be applicable to a particular state of facts, the facts and circumstances
Nor does the rule that the defendant was bound to know the law, without any qualification apply — in this case as laid down in Virginia—Tennessee Motor Truck Corporation v. Wilson, 140 Va. 260, 124 S. E. 231. The law which the defendant was held bound to know was not the general law of the State, but the ■ordinances of the council of the city of Richmond under and by virtue of which the defendant exercised its franchise rights to operate its cars over and upon the .streets of the city. The defendant is conclusively presumed to know said ordinances.
Advice of counsel is recognized everywhere as a good defense to the action for malicious prosecution. But in this ease the advice of counsel was never requested or sought prior to the arrest and imprisonment •of the plaintiff, but the ease was reported to the attorneys for the defendant afterwards in order that counsel might appear and prosecute the plaintiff as had been done in other cases. It was a ratification of the defendant of the conductor’s tortious conduct rather than •seeking advice about setting on foot the prosecution.
“In a legal sense any unlawful act done wilfully or purposely to the injury of another is as against that person malicious. Malice and want of probable cause must concur. Malice may be inferred from the want of probable cause, but the latter will not be inferred from the former.” The arrest and prosecution of the plaintiff for so trivial cause was so harsh and out of proportion to the offense of which he was charged to be guilty, that the jury were fully warranted in its finding and assessing punitive damages against the defendant, and from the facts in this case the learned judge was right in instructing the jury that the plaintiff was entitled not only to compensatory damages, but as a matter of law it could find punitive-damages against the defendant. \
Instructions numbers six,. seven and eight and nine given for the plaintiff correctly stated the law of want of probable cause and malice, and that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to establish both facts by evidence before he could recover punitive damages. The only exception to the said instructions was that there was no evidence to warrant giving them. Prom the evidence set out in the opinion, the evidence was. ample to justify said instructions.
The instructions asked by the defendant other than.
The trial court was right in refusing the defendant’s instructions, as the evidence fully established the claim of the plaintiff. The effect of its instructions in the form tendered to the court was practically a demurrer to the evidence and the court properly refused them.
The verdict of the jury being fully sustained by the evidence, and there being no errors of law shown by the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.