Bucher v. Cheshire Railroad

125 U.S. 555, 8 S. Ct. 974, 31 L. Ed. 795, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1946
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 19, 1888
Docket132
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 125 U.S. 555 (Bucher v. Cheshire Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bucher v. Cheshire Railroad, 125 U.S. 555, 8 S. Ct. 974, 31 L. Ed. 795, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1946 (1888).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts.

The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in that court, and sought to recover of the defendants for injuries which he sustained by reason of their negligence while travelling upon their roads. •The court on the trial substantially instructed the jury that the [577]*577plaintiff could not recover because the injury complained of occurred while he was travelling upon the Sabbath day, in violation of the law of the State of Massachusetts.

A suit between the same parties in regard to the same transaction had been brought in the Supreme Court of that State, in which, on a trial before a jury, the plaintiff obtained a verdict. This was carried to the court in bank, and was there reversed and sent back for a new trial.- The plaintiff then became nonsuit in the state court and brought the present action in the Circuit Court of the United States.

It is important to inquire what was at issue upon the trial in the state court. There the defendant set up the law of the State found in the General Statutes, c. 84, § 2, which is as follows: “ Whoever travels on the Lord’s Day, except for necessity or charity, shall be punished- by a fine not exceeding ten dollars; ” and insisted that the plaintiff, being in the act of violating that law at the time the injury occurred, coul(l not recover. On the 15th of May, 1877, after the plaintiff was injured, the legislature of Massachusetts passed a statute declaring that this prohibition against travelling on the Lord’s Day should not' constitute a defence to an action against a common carrier of passengers for any tort or injury suffered by the person so travelling. Mass. Stat. 1877, c. 232.

The Supreme Court of that State had decided previous to this, in Stanton v. Metropolitan Railway Co., 14 Allen, 485, a similar case, that the plaintiff, being engaged in a violation of law, without which he would not have received the injury sued for, could not obtain redress in a court of justice. Also in Bosworth v. Swansey, 10 Met. 363, and in Jones v. Andover, 10 Allen, 18. In the trial of the case now under cohsideration, before the jury in the state court, the plaintiff does not seem to have controverted the general doctrine thus declared, but insisted that the present case did not come within the statute, because, first, the act of May 15, 1877, had declared that travelling on Sunday should no longer be a defence to actions for injuries suffered by reason of the negligence of carriers of passengers, although this statute was passed after the accident occurred upon which the right of action was founded; and, [578]*578second, that' at the -time he. was injured he was, within the meaning of the statute, travelling upon an errand of charity or necessity, specially excepted from its provisions.

■ The court below sustained both of these propositions of the plaintiff, and the court in bank reversed 'the frial court upon both of them. It held 'that the act of May 15, 1877, did not govern a case where the inju-fy had occurred before its passage; that it was not retroactive, and also held that the facts set out in the bill of exceptions did not show that the plaintiff was travelling at the time of the accident either from necessity or for charity. It may be as well to state here that the facts found in the bill of exceptions relating to this latter qúestion, as it was presented before the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, were identical- with those appearing in the bill of exceptions of the case now before us, being in both cases the plaintiff’s own statement of his reasons for- travelling on that day.

Upon the trial in the Circuit Court of the United States the judge was requested by the plaintiff to charge the jury that, the circumstances detailed in the testimony of plaintiff and found in the bill of exceptions concerning the illness of his sister in Minnesota, of which he had received knowledge by letter, and had replied that he -would meet her in Chicago at a certain time, and that,-having been delayed by accidental circumstances, the travel on Sunday, when he was injured, became necessary to enable him to fulfil that promise, were sufficient to be submitted to the jury in order that they might pass upon the question of whether orwt this act of travelling on the Lord’s Day was a work of necessity or charity. This the court declined to do, saying that the same question having been submitted to the jury in the trial in the state court, and having been passed upon by the Supreme Court of the State, he did not consider that there was evidence sufficient to go to the jury upon that subject.

This is one of- the assignments of error now before us, and upon this point we are of opinion that the. court below ruled correctly. It is not a matter of' estoppel which bound the parties in the court below, because there was no judgment entered in the case in which the ruling of the state court was [579]*579made, and we do not place tlie correctness of the determination of the Circuit Court in refusing to permit this question to go to the jury upon the ground that it was a point decided between.the parties, and therefore res judicata, as between them in the present action, but upon the ground that the Supreme Court of the State in its decision had given such a construction to the meaning of the words “ charity ” and “ necessity ” in the statute, as to clearly show that the evidence offered' upon that subject was not sufficient to prove that the plaintiff was travelling for either of. those purposes. The court in its opinion, which is reported in Bucher v. Fitchburg Railroad, 131 Mass. 156, said:

“ The act of plaintiff in thus travelling on the Lord’s Day was not an act of necessity within the meaning of the statute. .. . . In order to constitute an act of. charity, such as is exempted from the Lord’s Day act, the act which is done must be itself a charitable act. The act of ascertaining whether a charity is needful, is not the charity; but, so far as the statute is concerned, the only question in that case would be, is this act a necessary act ? That involves the question, whether the act is one which it is necessary to do on the Lord’s Day ,- and no previous neglect to obtain the requisite information on a previous day creates a necessity for obtaining it on the Lord’s Day.” p. 159.

After citing other cases which had been decided in that court, it was further said:

“It is apparent that the plaintiff’s duty to his sister was made subservient to his secular business. ¥e are, therefore, of opinion that the ruling should' have been given that there was no evidence which would justify the jury in finding that the plaintiff was travelling from necessity or charity, within the meaning of the statute.” p. 160.

Taking, therefore, this construction of the language of the statute, as well as prior decisions to the same purport in which Ave think we are bound to follow the Supreme Court of the State, Ave agree that the record in this case as in that does not furnish evidence which should have gone to the jury upon that branch of the subject. .

[580]

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Bluebook (online)
125 U.S. 555, 8 S. Ct. 974, 31 L. Ed. 795, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bucher-v-cheshire-railroad-scotus-1888.