Curlander v. Pullman's Palace Car Co.

1 Balt. C. Rep. 530
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 530 (Curlander v. Pullman's Palace Car Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curlander v. Pullman's Palace Car Co., 1 Balt. C. Rep. 530 (Md. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.

This suit is brought on behalf of Mrs. Curlander to recover damages for having been ejected from a certain section in one of the defendant’s sleeping cars. So far as it is necessary for me to refer to the facts in the case, they are as follows; On the 30th of September, 1893, Mr. Curlander and his wife, the plaintiffs, left Baltimore upon the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad for Chicago; on the same day some gentleman and his wife, whose names are not known, but whom I will designate as Mr. and Mrs. “X,” boarded the same train at Washington for the same city. All parties were entitled to a first-class passage to Chicago.

Mi-. X had bought and paid for the use of section number one on the Pullman Sleeper, “Valley Palls,” attached to said train, from Washington to Chicago, and held a ticket for the same. The only restriction printed upon this ticket was “Good for this date and car only when accompanied by a first-class railroad ticket.” During the day the Pullman conductor took up this ticket and gave Mr. X in lieu thereof a check for the use of the section in question. This check showed on its face the same trip, that is, from Washington to Chicago, and the only limitation on it touching its use was. “This check is good for this trip only.” On the evening of the same day, at Pittsburgh, Mr. Curlander bought for himself and wife the upper berth of section six in the same car and paid for its use from that point to Chicago. On the next morning, after the car had been arranged for day travel, it was found that the seats which went with the upper berth were those which faced the rear of the car and required the plaintiffs to ride backwards. After riding a short time in this position Mrs. Curlander had a severe attack of nausea ; observing her sickness Mrs. X invited her to a seat in her section, where she rode facing the engine, and was much relieved by her change of position. Mrs X then told her that she and her husband would soon leave the car, having determined to get off at Deshler, a station about seven hours distant from Chicago, and said that her husband would give their section to Mr. Curlander so that she would not have to ride backwards. On leaving the train at Deshler, Mi-, X, accordingly told Mr. Curlander that he might have his section for the rest of the trip; and transferred to him the check which he held for the same. A little further on, at Defiance, the Pullman conductor, knowing that Mr. and Mrs. X had left the train, sold the section over again from that point to Chicago to parties who boarded the train at that station. -Upon bringing these persons to the section he found it occupied by the plaintiffs. Being requested to vacate and return to their former seats, Mr. Curlander told the conductor that the section had been given to him by Mr. X and showed him the check which he held therefor, offering to the conductor at the same [531]*531time the use of his two seats in section six. An altercation ensued, the conductor of the train was called in, and while there is some conflict as to whether the ejection was the act of defendant or of the train conductor, the plaintiffs were compelled to vacate the section. Soon after returning to her former seat, Mrs. Curlander again suffered from severe nausea and continued to do so until she reached Chicago. The plaintiffs remained in Chicago without special incident until October 10th; meanwhile, from time to time, visiting the World’s Fair, and on that day Mrs. Curlander was taken with an illness peculiar to her then condition. She started for home on the 12th and though she had not then entirely recovered, she seems to have suffered no material after effects from this sickness. This sickness also is included as an element in the claim for damages.

The sleeping car belonged to defendant and was attached to this train under contract with the railroad company, the defendant being entitled to all iuoceeds from the sale of seats or berths.

The important question at the threshold of this case is as to the right of Mr. X on leaving the train, to transfer the use of his section to Mr. Curlander for the rest of the trip to Chicago. Neither the able counsel nor the Court have been able to find any case in which this question has been passed on, or any textbook in which the author expresses an opinion upon it. It is conceded that the ticket for a section on a sleeping car is transferable by delivery at any time before the holder enters upon the journey for which it is purchased, but it. is contended that if he once enters upon his trip and leaves the train before arriving' at his destination, he abandons or forfeits his right in such section for the balance of the trip for which if was sold.

If this be so, the passenger having bought and paid for the use of the section for the whole of the designated trip, Ihe restriction against the transfer must be found either in the express terms of the contract, by implication from its terms, or by construction, from the nature of the contract. There is no express provision against transfer, and the defendant contends that the restriction arises from the nature of the contract and also by implication from some of its terms.

In the absence of authority upon the direct question as affected by the nature of the contract, the defendant relies upon a supposed analogy between the contract of carriage by a railroad company and a contract for the use of a section on a sleeping car, and invokes the rule of construction which is applied to the contract of carriage. It is well settled that the usual contract of carriage from one point to another on the same road is an entire contract, involving a continuous trip, though the ticket be silent in this respect, and that when the passenger has once selected his train and started upon his journey, he has no right to stop over at an intermediate point and then resume his journey upon another train on the same ticket. Such a contract is construed to import a continuous trip by the same train because of the nature of the undertaking. The reasons for such construction are fully stated in McClure’s ease, 34 Md. 532, and the numerous other authorities cited by defendant. But, assuming the analogy claimed, these cases would not control the question here, because in this case there was no effort made to use this section check on a later or another train, but only on the trip for which it was issued. It may be, as defendant contends, that a continuous trip under a contract of carriage, means a continuous trip by the same person as well as on the same train, though I intimate no opinion on that point, but while there are two cases submitted by defendant, in which the Courts say obiter, that such is the law, they, and all others, were cases in which the original holder or assignee of a partly used railroad ticket good only for a continuous trip, attempted to use it on another train. Some of the reasons given why the same holder cannot resume his journey on another train, might apply to the case of the use of the ticket by another person on the same train, while others would not.

But assuming that the railroad contract of carriage means a continuous .trip by the same person, and on the same train, is there anything in the nature of the contract for the use of a section on a sleeping car that requires a similar construction? The defendant claims that the contracts [532]*532are analogous, and should receive a like construction. I do not think so. The two contracts are essentially different in character; they are made with different companies, relate to different subject-matters, and are perfectly distinct in their undertaking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curlander-v-pullmans-palace-car-co-mdsuperctbalt-1895.