Brown v. Memphis & C. R.

7 F. 51, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2189
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 25, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 F. 51 (Brown v. Memphis & C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Memphis & C. R., 7 F. 51, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2189 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Hammond, D. J.

This case is again before me on a motion

for a new trial, and I have been aided by lengthy oral arguments, and an elaborate printed brief for defendant of unusual earnestness and exhaustive research. It is conceded by the learned counsel for defendant that “in all cases of exclusion for any reason we have not found a single case of a woman, but that on account of color, in Railroad Co. v. Williams, 55 Ill. 185, and Railroad Co. v. Miles, 55 Pa. St. 209,” to which may be added Railroad Co. v. Brown, 17 Wall. 445, and other cases not necessary to cite. This statement accords with my own researches, for when this case was before me on demurrer I endeavored diligently to discover if the defence set up in the special plea in this case had ever before been made. The reason is plain. Thieves, rioters, gamblers, drunkards, or otherwise disorderly persons are not generally women,- nor while traveling do women often misbehave, our own sex being substantially monopolists of these vices; nor are they generally engaged in any calling which can be used to the detriment of the carrier’s business, by using his means of transportation to solicit patronage for a rival line, as in Jencks v, Coleman, 2 Sumn. 221, the leading case on this subject ; and it is for this reason that carriers, acting upon the notions of chivalry that, with all its vices, characterize our sex, seek to protect women from the rude conduct of the disorderly by providing for them a special “ladies’ car, ” in which, while traveling alone, they may be somewhat secluded. And, in my judgment, this case of Jencks v. Coleman has been often misapplied, as it has been in argument here, during which its language was repeatedly quoted with constant reiteration of emphasis. In delivering his opinion in the case, Mr. Justice Story uses language which, interpreted in the light of the facts he was considering, and of the facts of subsequent cases that have followed it properly in judgment, contains the enunciation of- a principle that has become established law. But when he speaks of the character and conduct of passengers “who are guilty of gross and vulgar habits of conduct, or [57]*57who make disturbances on board, or whose characters are doubtful or dissolute or suspicious, and, a fortiori, whose characters are unequivocally bad,” he means character, habits, and conduct that are injurious to the other passengers in the sense that it subjects them to loss at the hands of the thief or gambler, to discomfort by reason of personal trespass and insult, or to annoyance by the exhibition of gross and vulgar habits. He does not mean that the common carrier, in the interest of the public, or its own supposed interest, shall become a censor of individual morals by assuming to classify his passengers according to his own idea, more or less fastidious, of their character or conduct, as established by their private lives. The carrier has nothing whatever to do with private character or conduct, except so far as it furnishes him with evidence of a probable injury about to be inflicted on his other passengers or his business. He must carry all who come properly dressed, and who behave genteelly, and cannot classify them according to their general moral reputations, though he may exclude those who are at the time inflicting injury and annoyance, or who have so unequivocally bad reputations for some vice that tends to injure and annoy the passengers, that he has reasonable grounds to assume that they will, if permitted to remain, put the vice in practice ; nor need he wait for an overt act. It is easy enough to imagine the case of a dissolute man or woman so abandoned to habits of unchastity that either would, in a railroad car, give just oifenco by lascivious solicitations, the exhibition of indelicate manners, or the use of improper language; and a reputation for such conduct would justify exclusion. This is the issue made by the special plea here, and the one submitted to the jury, and found against the defendant corporation under a charge almost identical with the language of this opinion on that point.

The difficulty in this case arises from the fact that the defendant was not willing to confine the issue to that of tho special plea, which alleged that the plaintiff was a notorious courtesan, addicted to the use of profane and indecent language in public places, and of gross and vulgar [58]*58habits qf conduct, (vide 4 Federal Reporter 88,) and which, if the jury had found to be true, would have been a good defence; but insists that, on the facts as proved, and under the general issue, it was entitled to a verdict, and should now have a new trial, because the court did not adopt that view. I cannot better present the principle upon which we were asked to try the case than by extracting it from the. brief of defendant’s counsel. “We submit,” say they, “that nothing could be more repulsive and annoying to ladies, and their fathers, husbands, and brothers, than to know that whores will be entitled to be seated by them in railroad cars;” and again, “Why establish or maintain a ‘ladies’ car’ at all, if whores, and all other classes of improper characters, can get admittance there, and their exclusion therefrom can only be justified from bad conduct at the time ?” This position was defended and illustrated by the argument ad hominem before the jury, and to the court, with great vehemence, and is not without some force. Passing the question whether the jury on 'the facts would so designate this plaintiff, the argument, in my opinion, is as wholly unsound as if applied to prevent the characters described from walking on the same street with “ladies.” Nor do I see why it should not be applied to men as well as women, so as to exclude whoremongers, not only from the “ladies’ ” car, but from that in which' “gentlemen” ride. But the experience of every man who travels demonstrates that, as a fact, no such classification is attempted; and the proof was satisfactory that this company does not adopt it, and no regulation was proved that especially authorized it. The conductor testified that he was instructed to keep out improper characters, which he considered would exclude prostitutes; but defendant was challenged by plaintiff’s counsel to prove a single instance in which a woman had ever been excluded from their ladies’ car for want of a reputation for virtue at home, and no such instance was offered, except the exclusion of this plaintiff twice before by this same conductor. On the other hand, the plaintiff proved that she had frequently traveled in the “ladies’ car” on- this road with other conductors, and had never been excluded [59]*59except by this one; and that women known to be prostitutes had traveled in such cars without objection, and that this conductor had been seen talking familiarly in the ladies’ car with white women known in the town where plaintiff lived, and all along the road, as belonging to the denounced class. The conductor denied all knowledge of this, and it may be that he did not know it; but it is strange that more exclusions, by himself or other conductors, were not shown, if it was the habit of the company to so classify the passengers. It was proved that the car in which this plaintiff was ordered to ride was filled with “virtuous ladies, wives, mothers, and daughters, and their husbands and fathers;” and yet this woman, notwithstanding the pretended regulation, was to be placed “in contact” with them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. 51, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-memphis-c-r-uscirct-1881.