59 P. 1102 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Lena Price, one of the defendants in error, against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company, and the plaintiffs in error as receivers of that company, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful ejection of the plaintiff from a passenger-train of the defendants by the defendants’ agent, the conductor of the train, and the consequent impairment of the plaintiff’s health by reason of the shock and worry thereby occasioned. The petition alleged that on the 27th day of May, 1894, near the village of Derby, a station on the said
The defendants filed separate answers, each containing a general denial of the allegations of the petition. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against both the railroad company and the receivers for $1000. The railroad company’s motion for a new trial was granted and that of the receivers overruled. Judgment was thereupon rendered against the receivers in accordance with the verdict.
From the record it appears that in April, 1894, the plaintiff, a young woman about twenty years of age, was residing with her parents at Woodward, I. T. She was suffering from nervous and other troubles, and it was decided that, accompanied by her mother, she should go to Wichita, Kan., for medical treatment. The length of their stay in Wichita was necessarily uncertain. On April 25, the plaintiff’s brother, Frank Price, purchased tickets for the plaintiff and her mother from the agent of the receivers at Woodward, good for passage from that place to Wichita and return. The tickets were in two connected parts, one
“ Ques. State what occurred at the purchase, and manner of purchase. Ans. I asked the ticket agent at Woodward what two tickets would cost from there to Wichita and return.
“ Q. What did he say? A. He went and looked and came back and says, ‘ I could sell you a limited ticket for so much ’— I forget the amount. I told him I didn’t want a limited ticket, and he told me what an unlimited ticket would cost — first-class ticket. I told him I would take that, and paid the price asked for it — about all there was of it.
“ Q. You handed them to your mother and sister? A. Yes, sir.
“ Q. That is all you know about the matter. A. Yes, sir.”
He further testified that he did not notice the face of the tickets, except to see that one part read from Woodward to Wichita and the other part from Wichita to Woodward ; and that he did not see the agent punch the tickets nor observe the punch marks. The return portion of plaintiff’s ticket, which was the only part introduced in evidence, is shown on next page.
The plaintiff testified that because of her illness she was not able to read her ticket when it was delivered to her, and that she did not at any time read it or become acquainted with its provisions. She did not sign the contract thereon, nor was she asked to do so. Under the treatment of her physician the plaintiff’-s condition was much improved, and on the morning of May 27 she and her mother walked some seven or eight blocks to the depot of the defendants to take passage on an early train for their home in Woodward. On production of one of the tickets their trunk
“The S. K. Ry. Co.
Stamped, on back : Apr. 25,1894.
Woodward, I. T.”
The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error contends that the trial court erred in permitting the witness Frank Price to testify as to the conversation between himself and the ticket agent at Woodward at the time the tickets were purchased. Counsel says:
“The cause of action alleged in plaintiff’s petition is the unlawful ejectment from the cars of the defendant at the time when she was rightfully a passenger thereon and entitled to ride to her destination. There is not one word in the petition directly or indirectly tending to show any claim for damages on account of any breach of the company’s obligation to furnish unlimited tickets upon request, or for any breach of contract for carriage at the time the limited ticket upon which plaintiff was riding was purchased. Therefore, the testimony was not material to any issue raised by the pleadings in the case and should not have been admitted by the court.”
Attention is also called to the fact that at the time the plaintiff was required to leave the train at Derby she had no knowledge concerning the conversation between her brother and the ticket agent at Woodward respecting the ticket. It is also contended that the court erred in overruling the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, since nothing therein tended to show that the plaintiff was in such condition as to render it inadvisable or unsafe for her to leave the train at Derby and return to Wichita. Counsel says that the plaintiff’s evidence showed no negligence of any kind or description in connection with her leaving tlm
“While there is a conflict in the cases, the weight of authority is that time limitations, or conditions stamped or printed upon the back or face of a general ticket, are not binding upon a passenger unless his attention-is called to them when he purchases the ticket a id he assents thereto.”
Mere acceptance of the ticket in the present case did not create a contract limiting its time to run. Referring to the effect of the acceptance of a ticket containing conditions and limitations, the New York court of appeals, in Rawson v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 48 N. Y. 212, 217, said:
“The contract between these parties was made when the plaintiff bought her ticket, and the rights and duties of the parties were then detei'mined. Hence, even if the plaintiff had read what appears upon her ticket after she had entered upon her journey, it would have made no difference with her rights. She was not then obliged to submit to a contract which she never made, or leave the train and demand her baggage.”
To the same effect is the decision in the case of Kent v. Railroad Co., 45 Ohio St. 284, 12 N. E. 800, where it is said:
“It is well settled that the purchaser of a railroad ticket does not, by its mere acceptance, acquiesce in, and bind himself to, all the terms and conditions printed thereon in the absence of actual knowledge of them” (citing numerous authorities). See, also, Boyd v. Spencer, 103 Ga. 828, 30 S. E. 841.
In keeping with the foregoing decisions, and a controlling authority in the present case, is the decision in K. C. St. J. & C. B. Rld. Co. v. Rodebaugh, 38 Kan. 45, 15 Pac. 902, where the ticket contained a special limiiaiion as to the liability of the railroad company
“In this case there was no contract on the part of the plaintiff, and no knowledge was conveyed to her of any intention on the part of the defendant to limit its liability save and except what the ticket itself contained, and this was not read or its contents made known to the plaintiff. Can this be called an implied contract? We think that, before the plaintiff can be bound by the declarations in the ticket for transportation on a passenger-train, the restrictions or limitations sought to be made must be known to her, and she must have accepted the ticket with .full knowledge of the restrictions contained therein. This ticket contained a blank for the signature of the purchaser, and that signature was to be witnessed by some one. This was not done in this case. The object of that blank space being left there was, doubtless, that the attention of a purchaser might be called to the conditions of the ticket, and when called to sign it he would then know its contents. This would constitute a contract between them, but without it there would be no contract and no restriction or limitation of the liability of the company.”
Counsel for plaintiff in error assumes as a premise that the act of the conductor in putting the plaintiff off the train was rightful and proper, in view of his duty to his employer and of the terms of the ticket itself. The case of A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Long, 46 Kan. 260, 26 Pac. 682, is cited as supporting the proposition that, as between the conductor and a passenger, the ticket produced by the latter is the only evidence which the conductor can regard in determining the right of the passenger to the seat he claims, and that it is conclusive evidence as to such right. We think it not in conflict with that decision to hold that in the present case the conductor went beyond the requirements of his position and the permission of the law in
It does not appear that the amount of damages