Clare v. Northwestern Pacific Railroad

131 P. 323, 21 Cal. App. 214, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1043.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 P. 323 (Clare v. Northwestern Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clare v. Northwestern Pacific Railroad, 131 P. 323, 21 Cal. App. 214, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 329 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

From a judgment based upon a verdict by a jury in favor of plaintiff for damages in the sum of one thousand dollars and from an order denying its motion for a new trial, defendant has appealed.

It apears from the complaint that, on the thirtieth day of May, 1909, plaintiff applied at defendant’s ticket office in Corte Madera, a station in Marin' County, for the purchase of a ticket to San Francisco, but the office was closed and the agent could not be found. Plaintiff was compelled, therefore, to board the train without a ticket. Shortly thereafter defendant’s trainman demanded of plaintiff his fare and he thereupon paid the sum of thirty-five cents, which was the regular charge between the two points. The trainman, however, demanded the further sum of ten cents as an additional charge for the omission to purchase a ticket before entering the train. Plaintiff refused to pay any additional sum, stating to defendant’s agent the reason, as before indicated, why he failed to secure a ticket. Thereupon he was ejected from the train. Although no violence was used, it is claimed that from the illegal expulsion he sustained serious injury, the elements of which are set out in the complaint.

Appellant finds fault with the action, of the court in giving the following instruction: “A passenger upon a railroad train Who has not paid his fare before entering the train, if he has been afforded an opportunity to do so, must, upon demand, pay ten per cent in addition to the regular rate.” It is not disputed that this is the language of section 2189 of the Civil Code, but the contention is that, as to the fare under one dollar, it was repealed by section 15 of “An act to create the office of Commissioner of Transportation,” etc., approved April 1, 1878, [Stats. 1877-78, p. 969], authorizing the company to collect “the sum of ten cents in all cases *217 where such fare is less than one dollar, and at the rate of ten per cent on all fares in excess of one dollar.”

But, conceding this point to be well taken, it can be of no avail, since the said act of 1878 was expressly repealed by section 43 of the act of March 19, 1909 (Stats. 1909, p. 499), entitled, “An act providing for the organization of the Railroad Commission of the state of California,” etc. The result is, apparently, that no authority existed at the time in question for any excess charge. The instruction, therefore, was favorable to appellant.

Aside from this, however, appellant could have suffered no prejudice, since there was no controversy between the parties as to the amount of the excess charge. Respondent’s contention was that he should not be required, and according to his testimony he refused, to pay any excess, while appellant’s showing was to the effect that none was demanded. No issue was raised as to whether appellant had a right to demand ten cents or ten per cent extra charge. Indeed, under the admission of appellant that “the station agent was away, and that the station was closed between twelve and half past twelve, and that the agent was away until after 12:18 when that train left,” it is clear that appellant had no legal right to demand any excess fare and the instruction, if erroneous, constituted mere abstract error.

There seems to be no substantial merit in the contention of a variance between the pleadings and the proof. Appellant’s statement is: “While the complaint is based alone on an ejection following an alleged refusal of the conductor relative to a single trip ticket, the testimony shows that this demand by plaintiff was never presssed, or insisted upon; that all his insistence was for a round trip ticket and that he was expelled because the conductor refused to sell him a round trip ticket.”

As to this appellant is in error. The cause of action was grounded upon the allegation that “defendant’s servants and agents wrongfully . . . expelled and ejected the plaintiff from said train.” That was the ultimate fact to which said testimony was addressed and it was a favor to appellant that respondent offered to purchase a round trip ticket.

Neither is it fair to say that he abandoned his purpose to purchase a single ticket. Viewing the testimony, as the law *218 requires of us, we must conclude that respondent conceded to appellant the privilege of selling him either a single or a round trip ticket, but that the offer was rejected and his expulsion followed.

Ordinarily, a verdict for one thousand dollars as damages for expulsion from a train without the use of any violence would be considered excessive, although, admittedly, in many cases, the question as to the amount justified by the evidence is open to !a contrariety of judicial opinion.

In Elser v. Southern Pacific Co., 7 Cal. App. 493, [94 Pac. 852], it was held that a verdict for four thousand dollars in favor of a plaintiff who had been ejected from a train was excessive and it was the opinion of the district court of appeal of the first district that it should be reduced to eight hundred dollars, as plaintiff suffered no direct physical injury except some slight and temporary nervous disturbance. The case manifestly called for this reduction by the appellate court.

In Turner v. North Beach & M. R. R. Co., 34 Cal. 594, a verdict for seven hundred and fifty dollars was held not warranted for the reason that “there was no proof in the cause that the plaintiff had suffered any appreciable damage in her person or estate.”

In Gorman v. South Pacific Co., 97 Cal. 1, [33 Am. St. Rep. 157, 31 Pac. 1112], it was held that a verdict for five hundred dollars was not excessive where it appeared that the conductor used unnecessary violence and insult which caused mental suffering and humiliation upon the part of the passenger.

In Cox v. Los Angeles Terminal Ry., 109 Cal. 100, [41 Pac. 794], a verdict for five hundred dollars was held excessive on the ground that there was no appreciable damage and the evidence showed that “the conductor was civil and gentle in his intercourse with plaintiff.”

The supreme court’s action in reducing the verdict from one thousand four hundred dollars, to four hundred dollars, in Sloane v. Southern Cal. Ry. Co., 111 Cal. 668, [32 L. R. A. 193, 44 Pac. 320], is not so easily justified, but there is force in the contention that, since plaintiff there suffered no direct physical injury and the effect upon her nervous condition was only of brief duration, the jury, in arriving at the amount of *219 their verdict must have been influenced by other considerations than the testimony before them.

Each ease, of course, is characterized by its own peculiar facts.

Here the plaintiff had recently submitted to a surgical operation for tonsilitis and was in a somewhat enfeebled condition, and, as a result of the walk back to Corte Madera through the hot sun, the jury were justified in concluding that he was rendered ill and confined to his bed for several weeks and incapacitated from performing his ordinary work for a period of seven months.

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131 P. 323, 21 Cal. App. 214, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clare-v-northwestern-pacific-railroad-calctapp-1913.