Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Blocher

27 Md. 277, 1867 Md. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 27 Md. 277 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Blocher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Blocher, 27 Md. 277, 1867 Md. LEXIS 49 (Md. 1867).

Opinion

Bowie, C. <T.,

delivered the opinion of this Court.

This appeal presents an action for damages, brought by the appellee against the appellants for injuries sustained by him as a passenger. The nar. avers, in substance, that the appellants, being a corporation owning a railroad between Cumberland and Baltimore for the transportation of passengers, the appellee was received as a passenger, to be conveyed from Cumberland to Baltimore, and paid the regular compensation established therefor by the appellants ; by reason whereof the appellants were hound to convey the appellee safely, etc., and to treat him civilly and properly, but the appellants had rude and incompetent [282]*282servants on the train, who abused and injured the appellee, dragged him from his seat and extorted from him money beyond the established compensation, and other wrongs.

The defendants pleaded not guilty, on which issue was joined. Three exceptions were taken by the appellants, the first of which was abandoned at the argument in this Court. The second was taken to the exclusion of evidence offered by the appellants ; and the third, to the granting of the appellee’s prayer, and the rejection of certain enumerated prayers of the appellants.

At the trial, among other things, the appellee proved the purchase of a ticket from Cumberland to Baltimore, at the office of the appellants in the former place. That after travelling five or ten miles on the way, the conductor asked for his ticket, which was then delivered to him. After passing Martinsburg, it was again demanded by the conductor, and on being told he had delivered it to him, a difficulty ensued, when, under threat of expulsion, he was compelled to pay the additional fare from Martinsburg to Baltimore; the conductor giving him a certificate of such payment.

The appellee further proved that the attention of those in the car and around, was called to the dispute, and some of them got up on their feet and stood around.

The appellants proved by the conductor, that on that evening, he went through the train, and took up all tickets to Martinsburg inclusive. There were very-few on the express train, not more than half a dozen. After leaving Martinsburg, he went through the train to take up the tickets to Harpers Ferry; he came to the appellee, who said his ticket was to Baltimore, and that he, the conductor, had taken it up. A controversy then ensued, the result of which was the payment of the additional sum, upon the conductor’s, giving a certificate of its payment. The appellants then proved the mode of keeping and distributing the tickets at the Cumberland office.

[283]*283• It was proposed by the appellants to ask the witness what was the system adopted at all other stations on the road, and whether, in the working of this system, mistakes had or had not frequently occurred by giving the wrong ticket, but the appellee objected, and the Court refused to permit the, question to be answered, to which the appellants excepted. This constituted their second bill of exceptions.

The ruling of the Court in this bill of exceptions, seems entirely correct, bio objection is made to it in the appellants’ brief; it appears to have been tacitly, if not expressly conceded to be right. It was not competent for the defendants to exonerate themselves in whole, or in part, by proving mistakes on the part of their own agents.

The appellee’s prayer affirms, that if he paid the usual fare for a seat in the cars from Cumberland to Baltimore, and took his seat, and was interrupted by any of the agents of the appellants without any fault on his part, and was required, and under threat of expulsion, compelled to pay extra compensation, he was entitled to recover such damages as were reasonable and proper under all the circumstances of the case ; in estimating which, the jury were not limited by the actual amount of pecuniary damages sustained by him, but might give damages for the injured feelings, and degradation of character, which might have resulted from his exposure, to the observation of the persons around him, or from his treatment by the agents of the defendants.

The propositions of the appellants’ prayers were substantially as follows : 1st. If the appellee had not a ticket for Baltimore, but only to Martinsburg, he was not entitled to recover. 2d. If owing to his own mistake or negligence, or the mistake or negligence of the ticket agent at Cumberland, the appellee accepted a ticket to Martinsburg only, he was not entitled to recover, unless the jury believed the agent was an incompetent officer, or designedly and wil[284]*284fully gave the ticket to Martinsbúrg, with intent to injure and defraud the appellee.

3d. That’if the conductor did not hehave wantonly or violently towards the appellee, and was neither rude nor incompetent, and the ticket presented hy the appellee to the conductor, was a ticket lor' Martinsbúrg,’ and not to Baltimore, and the conductor used no more force than was necessary to compel or induce the appellee to pay the fare or leave the cars, the appellee was not entitled to recover, unless the jury believe that the ticket agent at Cumberland acted fraudulently, knowingly and designedly, in selling the ticket, and the appellants sanctioned it at the time or since.

4th. If the jury believe the appellee had not a ticket from Cumberland to Baltimore, but only to Martinsbúrg^ the conductor had a right to require him to pay the regular fare from Martinsbúrg to Baltimore, or to leave the cars, and to use whatever force was necessary to compel him to leave the cars in case he refused to pay the regular fare.

5th. If the jury believe the appellants charged and received from the appellee more than a reasonable reward and established compensation for passenger fare from Baltimore to Cumberland, there being no proof in the cause to show what was the fare from Baltimore to Cumberland, the appellee was not entitled to recover the said sum of three dollars and seventy cents in that form of action, unless the jury shall also believe that unnecessary force was used by the conductor in exacting the fare from the appellee.

6th. That under the pleadings in the cause, the appellee was only entitled to recover damages for the unnecessary force used or injury suffered hy the appellee personally, in compelling him to pay the additional fare; unless they believe that the appellee had and delivered to the conductor a passenger ticket from Cumberland to Baltimore, and not a ticket from Cumberland to Martinsbúrg.

[285]*2857th. If the jury believe the conductor caught the appellee violently, etc., by the collar, and dragged him from his seat while a passenger in the train, the appellee is not entitled to recover for the same in this action against the appellants, unless they believe the appellants authorized the act or adopted and justified it, since its committal.

8th. That if the jury believe, that the conductor wrongfully extorted from the appellee the fare from Martinsburg to Baltimore, after the appellee had surrendered his ticket, etc., the appellee was not entitled to recover vindictive or punitive damages from the appellants, unless they expressly or impliedly participated in the tortious act, authorizing it before, or approving it after it was committed.

Although there was no averment in the nar.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Md. 277, 1867 Md. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-blocher-md-1867.