Davis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.

88 S.E. 273, 104 S.C. 63, 2 A.L.R. 102, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 17, 1916
Docket9340
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 S.E. 273 (Davis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 88 S.E. 273, 104 S.C. 63, 2 A.L.R. 102, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 74 (S.C. 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

Action for the denial of the plaintiff’s right to have possession of his trunks. Verdict for the plaintiff for $900 punitive damages and $100 actual damages, the latter reduced by the Circuit Court to $25. Appeal by the defendant.

*70 History: The plaintiff is of middle age, resides at Marion, and has traveled as a commercial salesman for 19 years. He went from Walterboro to Marion, over the defendant’s lines, and carried two “drummer’s trunks” with-him. The trunks confessedly weighed in excess of the 200 pounds free allowance for such baggage; in avoirdupois the excess was 200 pounds, and for that the plaintiff was due to pay the defendant $1.70. The plaintiff and trunks reached Marion on Saturday, and the trunks remained in the station house there nine days uncalled for. At the end of that period of time the plaintiff essayed to go from Marion to Columbia, and he presented the checks he received at Walterboro and his mileage book and requested that the trunks be rechecked to Columbia. The baggage agent at Marion demanded payment of excess fare on the trunks from Walterboro to Marion, which the plaintiff declined, and thereout this suit arose.

The appellant has argued three questions, and we shall discuss them rather than the exceptions, for they embody the exceptions; but the exceptions may be reported. The appellant's three postulates are these:

(1) The presiding Judge erred, it is respectfully submitted, in holding that the possession of an ordinary check is prima facie evidence that the excess baggage charges have been paid.

(2) The presiding Judge erred, it is respectfully submitted, in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant as to punitive damages, and in his charge to the jury relating to such damages.

(3) The presiding Judge erred, it is respectfully submitted, in the exclusion of certain testimony.

These in their order:

1. The testimony tends to show, and there is no difference about it, that on trunks like these there are sometimes put, if not generally put, two sorts of checks — one the ordinary paper model issued to a passenger who carries baggage; *71 the other an excess check of a different model from the ordinary baggage check. ' The excess check indicates on its face the payment of the excess fare, and possibly the amount of it. It is not clear from the testimony if a duplicate of the excess check is furnished to the passenger, as is done in case of an ordinary baggage check. Rule 19, hereinafter set out, is silent on the subject. The Court asked Orr: “Does the check given to the passenger show whether the excess has been paid or not?” and the witness answered, “Yes, sir; it does, and possibly the amount.” But it is not plain from this answer what check was referred to, the ordinary check or the excess check. The plaintiff testified, “I have seen checks that show excess fare, and they generally put them on.” The Exhibit B, which sets out the form and contents of the excess check, indicates that there was issued on it a “strap check,” and a “duplicate check,” presumably one for the trunk and one for the passepger.

The rule of the company on the subject of excess checks is as follows:

“(19) Weighing Baggage and Collecting Excess Charges. —Agents must not accept statements of passengers as to weight of their baggage. Unless agent is positive the weight of a passenger’s baggage is within the regulation allowance, he must weigh it, and collect proper excess for all overweight. The amount collected must be plainly indicated on the excess baggage check. Should an agent forward baggage weighing in excess of the free allowance without making proper collection, he will be charged with the amount he should have collected. Receiving agents will weigh all baggage when in doubt as to whether same is over free allowance, and if found overweight and forwarding agent has not assessed proper excess charge, collect proper charge.”

In the instant case, without controversy, there was issued to the plaintiff at Walterboro only the ordinary baggage check, with no markings on it of excess weight or payment of money. There is no evidence that the plaintiff knew of *72 the rules of the company. The plaintiff testified that at Walterboro he paid the agent $4.50 for an ordinary passenger ticket from that point to Marion, and $1.70 excess fare on his trunks for the same journey, and that the agent issued to- him the two ordinary baggage checks which he presented at Marion. The agent at Walterboro swore to a totally different transaction. He said the plaintiff was accompanied by a lady; that he presented a South Carolina mileage book and bought also a cash ticket from Walterboro to Marion; that he presumed the two were traveling together, and without looking at their baggage he issued to them two duplicate checks, presumably one. for the plaintiff and one for the lady, and a clerk put the originals on the trunks; that plaintiff gave the cash ticket to the lady; that the witness did not see the trunks and did not ask if there was any excess, because he did not think there was any. The plaintiff flatly denied this account of the transaction. The charge of the Court was made with reference to this testimony, and the issues of fact made by it.

1 If the trunks had been ordinary passenger’s baggage, then the check that was issued would have confessedly constituted only the prima facie evidence of the receipt of the trunk by the defendant. Dill v. Railroad, 41 S. C. L. (7 Rich. Law) 158, 62 Am. Dec. 407. The case is not altered that the trunks were “drummer’s trunks.” Fleischman v. Railroad, 76 S. C. 237, 56 S. E. 974, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 519. But about the custody of the trunk there is no issue; the carrier admits the receipt, the carriage, and the delivery of the trunk at Marión.

2 The issue here is: Was the excess fare paid ? Manifestly, if as a fact it was paid, then checks cut no figure in the case. If it be true, as the carrier contends for, that by rule of the company and by custom of the company there ought to have been put on the trunks an excess check, and that its absence is prima facie evidence of nonpayment (and upon that we need express no opinion), yet, if *73 that was not done, and if nevertheless the plaintiff did pay the excess fare, then the fact must overcome the presumption; that is to say, the rights of people are not always dependent upon appearances.

The Court charged the jury that “the plaintiff has got no case unless he paid that excess for transportation of his'baggage.” It would be unpardonable to conclude that, even though a passenger had paid his excess, the absence of paper evidence of it, in a case like this, should defeat his right not to pay a second time. The prima facies, therefore, went out of the case, and the bald issue was made, independent of checks: Did the plaintiff pay the excess at Walterboro? 'The plaintiff did not rest upon the effectiveness of a check to fix his right.

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88 S.E. 273, 104 S.C. 63, 2 A.L.R. 102, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-atlantic-coast-line-r-co-sc-1916.