Chattanooga, Rome & Columbus Railroad v. Lyon

89 Ga. 16
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 23, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 89 Ga. 16 (Chattanooga, Rome & Columbus Railroad v. Lyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattanooga, Rome & Columbus Railroad v. Lyon, 89 Ga. 16 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

1. The testimony .of the plaintiff, formerly Miss Eincher, now Mrs. Lyon, was substantially as follows: On April 6, 1889, she walked a half mile to Holders station, on the O. R. & 0. railroad, part of the way being through the woods, and bought a ticket to Brookes station, about six miles distant. The ticket was exhibited to the jury. She took the train about half-past one o’clock in the afternoon, the conductor assisting her to get on. He did not ask her destination, [17]*17nor did she tell him, but after helping her on the train; he went on through the car, and no one came to take up her ticket. She was not accustomed to traveling on railroads. The train passed Brookes without stopping, and she did not know when it passed, but would have ' known that station had she been looking. The train stopped at Lake Creek, a mile and. a half beyond Brookes. She then went to the door, and while standing in the door, and the conductor was out on the steps, he told her in a loud tone of voice, and in the presence of other people, to get off. She replied she did not want to get off’ there, and he said she must do so. She told him she was alone and did not know the road, and he said it was only a mile and a half up the railroad to Brookes. He did not take hold of her, but when he told her to get off, she just got off and went on back to Brookes as he told her, up the railroad, walking. Some of the way was through the woods. She did not see any young lady at the station where she got off, and no lady offered to walk with her up the railroad.. Plaintiff was going to see her sister who resided a quarter of a mile from Brookes, and intended to walk from the station to her sister’s house. ■ She lived in the country, and was in the habit of walking a good deal; was in the habit of walking as far as a mile and a half; would not have considered that much of a walk if she had known the way and had not been alone. The day was pleasant, and she found her way back to the station easily, and reached her sister’s in safety. No one met her at the station, nor did she expect to be met there, as they did not know at her sister’s she was coming. The. conductor did not say anything about her stopping at Lake Creek and waiting for the next train, nor did he offer to take her to Cedartown and send her back on it, nor did she ask to be taken to Cedartown.

Two witnesses for the plaintiff (Smith and Wright) [18]*18testified to an occasion when they saw a conductor on this railroad treat a young lady rudely. One of them fixed the time of its occurrence as being in March or April, and the other in March. The former did not see the conductor take her by the arm; the latter did. Both stated his language and manner were discourteous, but neither positively identified the young lady of that occasion as the plaintiff in this case.. One said he saw a resemblance in the plaintiff to the young lady he saw put off the train, and added that his main reason for thinking the lady he saw on the train was the plaintiff was, that on reaching Cedartown he met a gentleman, not a resident of Cedartown, to whom he told the incident on the train, and this gentleman said he supposed it was a lady he was expecting. at his house that day.. The witnesses located the conversation between the lady and the conductor as beginning with both parties inside the car.

It is not at all certain, but on the contrary exceedingly doubtful, that the occasion referred to by these witnesses is the same as that to which the plaintiff’ testifies, especially so because she herself does not make the conduct of the conductor by any means so reprehensible as they do, nor does her testimony coincide with theirs as to where the conversation with the conductor began. The strong probability is, that what they saw and heard was at some other time and involving some other lady. The gentleman at Cedartown who said a lady was expected at his house the day the witness told him of the incident on the train could not probably have referred to plaintiff', because she states the visit she was making that day was unexpected.

The material parts of the testimony of the conductor were to the following effect:- Brookes is a flag station at which trains do not stop except to put off or take on passengers. When plaintiff got on the train, he under[19]*19stood from friends who accompanied her to the train that she was going to Brewer’s, a station below Lake Creek, and for this reason and the fact that he had no other passenger to get off before reaching Lake Creek, he did not call for her ticket before reaching Brookes. After discovering that she had passed her station, he politely offered to put her in charge of a lady agent of the company at Lake Creek until the next train going towards Brookes came along, or take her on to Cedartown, where he met that train, and send her back on it; or if she preferred, she could walk back to Brookes. She said she did not know the way back, and he told her to keep down the railroad, and the lady agent offered to show her the way or go back with her. She then voluntarily left the train. His treatment of the young lady was gentle and kind, and the tone of his voice perfectly mild. The porter on the train corroborated the conductor’s statement.

In view of the foregoing summary of the testimony, there can be no better way of dealing with the merits of this case than to treat it as if the testimony of the plaintiff presented the exact* truth of what occurred. The jury certainly did not accept the conductor’s version of the matter, and we have no authority to say they erred in this respect. They may have been influenced to some extent by the testimony of Smith and Wright, but we cannot be sure of this. Again, it is very doubtful, as has been seen, whether their testimony relates to the real transaction under investigation, and even if it does, it is more than probable that the plaintiff herself gives the most accurate and reliable account of it. There can certainly be no want of fairness or justice to this lady in accepting her statements as absolutely true. Thus viewed, can the verdict for $2,000.00 be sustained ? We think not. According to her own account, the inconvenience she actually sustained was not at all serious. [20]*20It seems that it was her habit to walk a great deal, and she says that a walk of a mile and a half on a pleasant day in April was not “much of a walk.” The fact that a part of her walk along the railroad was “through the woods” is offset by the fact that a part of her walk to the station where she took the train was also “through the woods.” Her difficulty in finding the way was inconsiderable; she had only to follow the railroad track, and she admits she did so easily. It does not appear that she was exposed to any real danger or harm, and there was but little occasion for alarm. So far as the facts just recited are concerned, it seems to us that no unbiased mind could reach the conclusion that for alleged injuries of this kind, $2,000.00 would not be utterly unreasonable and extravagant. Hoes the behavior of the conductor, in connection with the other facts, justify any such finding? We feel constrained to say it does not. It was probably his duty, under the circumstances, to do exactly what he swears he did. But discarding his testimony and accepting that of the plaintiff, he told her in a loud tone of voice she 'must get off" the train. He used no insulting language; lie did not touch her or otherwise offer her personal violence, nor did he in any way restrain or control her movements other than by the request, or command, addressed to her loudly.

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ga. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattanooga-rome-columbus-railroad-v-lyon-ga-1892.