Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Steinheil

80 S.W.2d 921, 190 Ark. 470, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1935
Docket4-3662
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 921 (Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Steinheil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Steinheil, 80 S.W.2d 921, 190 Ark. 470, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 97 (Ark. 1935).

Opinions

Smith, J.

This suit was brought by Mrs. O. B. Steinheil, the mother and legal guardian of Louise Steinheil, an adult incompetent, to recover damages to compensate an assault committed upon her daughter while she was a passenger on one of appellant’s street cars by a fellow-passenger, and from a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor in the sum of $5,000 is this appeal.

On Sunday night, August 17, 1930, Louise Steinheil, a white girl, then 18 years of age, after attending church with her another, left her mother and boarded an outbound Pulaski Heights street car at Markham and Main streets in the city of Little Kock. The car was operated by only one man, who was both conductor and motorman. The car was one of the largest in use by the appellant street car company. It was forty feet long, and its inside measurements are about thirty-eight and one-half feet. It has seven cross seats on each side separated by a passageway between them, or fourteen cross seats altogether. It has four long seats running lengthwise, two at the front end, two at the rear. The long seats commence about four feet behind the motorman and are five and one-half feet long*. The cross seats are about thirty inches apart.

When Miss Steinheil entered the car, she found it crowded with passengers, hut she made her way towards the rear end, where she found a seat, the only vacant seat in the car. Ellis Wage was occupying this seat, sitting next to the Avindów, when Miss Steinheil sat down. This window and other windows in the car were open. The car proceeded west on Markham Street, until it reached Chester Street, where it made a right-hand turn off Markham Street, before Wage noticed Miss Steinheil. Wage was a World War veteran, who had been gassed during the war, and whose vision was somewhat impaired when he was not wearing glasses. He was not then wearing them. Miss Steinheil is of dark complexion, and, as ivas shown, when six years old she was severely burned over the anterior surface of the chest and abdomen, and also her chin and neck, leaving much scarred tissue. When Wage first observed Miss Steinheil, he thought she was a negro, and told her so and ordered her to go to the rear end of the car where other negroes were riding. She replied that she was not a negro, that she was as white as he was, that she had paid her fare and intended to occupy that seat.

This suit is predicated upon the theory that the motorman did not afford the passenger the protection to which she was entitled from the insult and subsequent assault of her fellow-passenger, and, as we are of the opinion that this is the controlling question in the case, we recite the testimony upon that issue of fact somewhat extensively.

Mrs. J. C. McFarland testified that she boarded the car after attending a baud concert, and that she was seated “on the right-hand side facing towards White City” (in which direction the car was traveling). “I judge five or six seats from the front, about in the center,” and that Wage and Miss Steinheil were seated “.just one seat in back of me across the aisle.” The witness heard the controversy between Wage and Miss Steinheil. “It attracted attention. They wrangled quite awhile.” The controversy began about when the car turned at Chester Street. Wage finally forced Miss Steinheil out of the seat; “he just pushed her, both hands, forced her to shove out of the seat. The girl took hold of the seat in front of her and kind of stumbled, you know, and then she went up to the motorman and tried to tell him.” Her clothes had been disarranged and she was crying. Some ladies in the front of the car arranged Miss SteinheiPs clothes and gave her a seat. They gave her a seat and tried to console her. “This man” (Wage), “as soon as he found out she was not a negro, he was awfully sorry. He apologized and said how sorry he was. Two or three times he talked to the girl and tried to apologize.”

When asked about the tone of Wage’s voice, when he told Miss Steinheil that she was a negro, the witness answered: ‘ ‘ El e talked real loud. He was very repulsive and excited. Everybody could hear it. People in the front of the car could hear. It attracted everybody’s attention. It really disturbed everybody in the car.” When asked about what the motorman did, she answered: “He kept running the car. He did not pay her any mind.” The motorman was standing, and just above him was a mirror, into which, had he looked, he could have seen every one to his rear. The motorman wras standing, “perhaps I should judge, maybe six seats from the girl,” and when asked if she could hear what Miss Steinheil said to the motorman when she went to him, the 'witness answered that she could not. The witness also testified that, “when she” (Miss Steinheil) “went up there” (to the motorman), “the thing was all over;” that Miss Steinheil, “wdio w-as crying, evidently asked for protection, but the motorman did not stop the car. The car was well loaded.”

P. M. Werling testified that he sat in the seat with Mrs. McFarland. He was seated next to the aisle about five or six feet from the front, and that Miss Steinheil and Wage were on the opposite side of the aisle one seat nearer the rear. He heard the controversy between Miss Steinheil and Wage, which Mrs. McFarland had related. Speaking of Wage’s tone of voice, he said: “Well, looks to me like everybody heard it in the car,” but that Miss Steinheil “did not talk back to him in a loud tone of voice.” The controversy “continued five minutes, or maybe more,” but had ceased before the car reached the Union Station, which wras six or seven blocks from the point wdiere the controversy began. This witness was a little hard of hearing, but he heard the controversy distinctly. The motorman did not stop the car or try to protect the girl. The car w-as crowded and continued to be until the Union Station was reached. The witness knew Miss Steinheil wTas a ivhite woman, he had seen her earlier in the evening riding in the front of a car with oilier white women, and he later told Wage that he had made a mistake. No one testified that the car made any stop after turning at Chester Street, where the controversy began, before reaching the Union Station, prior to which time “the thing was all over,” as Mrs. McFarland expressed it.

Two other white women — one of them a teacher in the public schools of Little Bock — were passengers on the ear. They occupied a seat together on the left side of the car near its center. Wage and Miss Steinheil were seated behind them. They, too, like a number of other passengers, were returning from church, and stated that the car was crowded. They heard Wage tell Miss Steinheil to go to the rear of the car with the other negroes. He spoke in an ordinary conversational tone of voice, and the transaction was of very short duration. After the commotion Miss Steinheil went to the front of the car and spoke to the motorman, who found her a seat, and nothing thereafter occurred, except that one of these young ladies told Wage, whom she knew, that he was mistaken, and that Wage went to where Miss Steinheil was then seated and attempted to apologize.

The testimony of Wage was to the same effect substantially as that of the two young ladies.

The motorman testified that he had been standing, but that he was seated when Miss Steinheil reported the incident herein detailed to him, and that this was the first intimation he had that anything out of the ordinary had occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 921, 190 Ark. 470, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-power-light-co-v-steinheil-ark-1935.