Church v. Chicago M. & St. P. Ry. Co.

26 L.R.A. 616, 60 N.W. 854, 6 S.D. 235, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 145
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 26 L.R.A. 616 (Church v. Chicago M. & St. P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church v. Chicago M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 26 L.R.A. 616, 60 N.W. 854, 6 S.D. 235, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 145 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Kellam, J.

This action was brought by respondent against appellant to recover damages on account of expense [237]*237incurred, and loss of services of his wife, Julia A. Church, whom he alleges was lawfully on one of appellant’s trains, and was wrongfully ejected therefrom. Respondent and his wife resided in the town of Artesian, in this state, a station on an east and west line of appellant’s road. In September, 1889, having been for several months in the state of Michigan, she desired to return to Artesian. Her husband procured and had sent to her the return coupon of a Grand Army excursion ticket, both coupons of which were good for a trip from Artesian to Milwaukee and return. It was shown by the company, and was not disputed, that it had two established routes from Milwaukee to Artesian, over either of which a passenger might make a continuous passage from the former to the latter place, — one by way of Prairie du Chien, McGregor, Canton, and Egan, thence west to Artesian; the other by way of La Crosse, thence west, through Egan, to Artesian. Mrs. Church took the train at Milwaukee for the first-named route, and proceeded as far as Canton, where, instead of changing cars for Egan, as she should have done to continue on the route named, she remained on the train with the intention of going to Mitchell, there changing and going north to Woonsocket, and thence, after another change, east to Artesian. After passing Canton, the conductor, finding her still on his train, examined her ticket, and informed her that she was on the wrong train, that she should have changed at Canton, and that her ticket would not take her to Mitchell. She insisted that her ticket entitled her to go by way of Mitchell and Woonsocket, refused to pay her fare, and was put off the train at Worthing, the next station. Appellant contends that the facts disclosed show that respondent and his wife were practicing a fraud upon the company in procuring and using this excursion ticket, sold at reduced rates to enable purchasing parties to attend the Grand Army reunion at Milwaukee, under circumstances and for a purpose which they well knew were not contemplated by the company. They also insist that there was no evidence justifying the court in submit[238]*238ting to the jury the question of actual ■ damages. There was also some conflicting testimony as to the deportment of the conductor, and the manner of her removal from the train, upon which is based a claim of undue and excessive force; but as we think the trial court erroneously instructed the jury as to her rights and the company’s duty in the premises, which might and probably did influence the jury, for which the judgment must be reversed, we notice only such error.

The first question which the facts in this case naturally suggest is this: Did Mrs. Church’s ticket entitle her to ride from Canton to Artesian by way of Mitchell and Woonsocket? The court instructed the jury as follows: ‘‘The rules of the defendant company required that she should change cars at Canton, and proceed to Artesian by way. of Egan. If Mrs. Church knew this rule, or if she was informed, at or before reaching Canton, that the rules of the company required her to change at Canton, she was unlawfully on the train at Worthing, and plaintiff cannot recover if she was removed from the train in a proper manner; but if she did not know of such rule, and was not informed of it, she was lawfully upon the train at Worthing, and the conductor had no right to put her off. Mrs. Church was not bound to inquire whether she should change cars at Canton; but if, by any means, she had been informed that she should make such change, she should have made it, and should not have remained on the train west of Canton.” Mrs. Church’s right to transportation by the appellant company was just what her contract gave her. .That contract was to carry her from Milwaukee to Artesian, subject to such reasonable rules and regulations as the company had a right to make concerning the management and running of its trains and the routes over which they should run. She was entitled to be carried through with ordinary and reasonable dispatch, but she had n.o right, under such contract, to select her route, as against a rule or regulation of the company prescribing a different and more direct route, if such regulation were a reasonable [239]*239one. The law is well settled that a railroad company, as a common carrier, may prescribe and enforce regulations for the conduct of its business in carrying passengers, so long as such regulations are reasonable. Regulations which have uniformly been held reasonable by the courts extend over a wide range of details, and it certainly ought not to be held unreasonable to allow a company, operating direct and indirect lines of road between two points, to require, by general rule, that passengers traveling upon a simple contract to carry from one point to the other should go by the most direct route. The right of the company to make such a regulation can hardly be doubted, in view of its reason and justice, and certainly not in view of the many adjudications sustaining regulations which would seem much more unnecessary and arbitrary. Such regulations become and are a part of the contract of carriage. In Dietrich v. Railroad Co., 71 Pa. St. 436, the court says: “So far as they are expressed, the terms are binding of course; but such tickets are not the whole contract, which must be gathered, so- far as not expressed, from the rules and regulations of the company in running its trains.” In Johnson v. Railroad Corp., 46 N. H. 221, it is said ‘‘that, in the absence of any special agreement, the parties are deemed to have contracted with reference to the established existing usage.” In the case before us there was no evidence of any usage inconsistant with the rule of the company. In Railroad Co. v. Randolph, 53 Ill. 515, the court says: “When a passenger purchases a ticket, he only acquires the right to be carried according to the custom of the road. * * * He does not acquire the right to insist that the company shall send him on a special train, or out of the customary course of their road.” This language is quoted and approved in Plott v. Railway Co., 63 Wis. 516, 23 N. W. 412. Bennett v. Railway Co., 69 N. Y. 594, was a case where facts were quite correspondent with those in the case before us. The plaintiff bought a ticket from “Lockport to Troy.” Between Rochester and Syra[240]*240cuse the company operated two lines, one 23 miles shorter than the other. A rule of the company required through passengers to go by the shorter route. The plaintiff — innocently, it would appear — took a train passing over the more indirect route, and over which, by regulation of the company, his ticket was not good. He refused to pay fare, and was ejected. In an action for damages the court of appeals affirmed a judgment non-suiting the plaintiff; in its opinion saying that the company’s contract was “to carry the plaintiff over the usual, through, and most direct route, and nothing more. * * * Here it must be presumed that the company were ready and willing to perform the contract as made; but the plaintiff desired to go over the Auburn road, and must have changed cars at Rochester for that purpose, and the claim for additional compensation was both lawful and just.

The rule of the company that a ticket from Canton to Artesian should be good only by way of Egan was in law a reasonable one. The distance was less — only a few miles to be sure; but the right of a passenger to compel the company to carry him 10 miles more than he has contracted and paid for is not changed in principle by increasing the distance.

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Related

Bennett v. . N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.
69 N.Y. 594 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Plott v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
63 Wis. 511 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1885)
Hall v. Memphis & Charleston R.
15 F. 57 (W.D. Tennessee, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
26 L.R.A. 616, 60 N.W. 854, 6 S.D. 235, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-chicago-m-st-p-ry-co-sd-1894.