Bingemann v. International Railway Co.
This text of 135 N.Y.S. 743 (Bingemann v. International Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff boarded the Best street car and paid his fare, which entitled him to transportation from the initial point to ■destination, providing he conformed to the rules regulating transfers. The transfer point was corner of Main and Swan streets, and! the destination line was the Niagara street line. He applied for and was .given a Niagara transfer. He waited at Main and Swan streets con[744]*744siderably longer than required for the arrival of a Niagara street car, and was then informed unofficially that the Niagara street line was blocked.
It appears from defendant’s evidence that plaintiff was correctly informed, and that the Niagara street line was in fact blocked at about the time in question. Not knowing when the Niagara street car would come, and knowing that he could go to his destination by another route, i. e., up Main street to Utica street, thence to Niagara street, and there being no representative of the defendant at the transfer point to instruct him, he boarded an East Utica car, which went up Main street to Utica street, tendered his Niagara transfer, which was accepted and rung up by the conductor, and then demanded a transfer good across town on the West Utica line and thence on Niagara street to destination. Although the conductor accepted the Niagara transfer, he refused to transfer plaintiff beyond the corner of Utica and Main streets, and he was obliged to pay an additional fare tp reach his destination.
The primary object of the contract was simply to carry the plaintiff to his destination. The details of defendant’s system and regulations were matters of indifference to plaintiff so long as he was progressing towards home. The rule of the “most direct route” is in the interest of both parties, to complete the contract in the shortest time; but it is for the defendant primarily to select the route, and it may select one in the working out of its system which may, in fact, cover a greater distance but require less time than another, and still be within the rule.
The gist of the action is the undertaking on the part of the defendant to carry the plaintiff for five cents from one point on its lines to another, and the fact that, by reason of a temporary interruption of traffic, the defendant was unable to perform the service by the route it had itself selected, and the plaintiff was refused' a transfer by the available route, and was therefore compelled to pay an additional fare to reach his destination.
The conductor on the West Utica car, to whom the second fare was paid, collected it without incident; the plaintiff doubtless knowing that if he boarded the car without a transfer he would be obliged to pay a fare. The difficulty arose through the acceptance of the Niagara transfer on the East Utica car, the defendant, by its conductor, thus undertaking to complete the contract by an alternative route, and then after accepting and ringing up the Niagara transfer, refusing to give him the necessary transfer to complete the trip. This plaintiff had no right to select this alternative route, and the conductor of the East Utica line would have been within his rights and those of the company in refusing to accept a Niagara transfer on his car. But he did accept it, and plaintiff’s destination and the destination line could be reached by his route.
The proposition of the enforcement of reasonable rules is not involved here. It rather presents a condition that is not covered by any prescribed rule, and the parties are called upon to spell out a reasonable solution. There was no object in carrying this plaintiff out Main street and leaving him without transfer at the corner of Utica street. The conductor might better have refused his transfer in the first place, and left him at Main and Swan streets to await developments.
It has been held in this same case on a former appeal (73 Misc. Rep. 458, 131 N. Y. Supp. 4) that the penalty clause ot the statute is applicable here, and I think plaintiff has made out his cause of action.
Judgment appealed from is affirmed, with costs.
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135 N.Y.S. 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingemann-v-international-railway-co-nysupct-1912.