Davis v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.

66 L.R.A. 802, 77 P. 209, 35 Wash. 203, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 437
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1904
DocketNo. 4862
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 66 L.R.A. 802 (Davis v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co., 66 L.R.A. 802, 77 P. 209, 35 Wash. 203, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 437 (Wash. 1904).

Opinion

Fullerton, C. J.

This is an action for damages. The respondents, who were plaintiffs below, alleged in their complaint, that the appellant railway company was, in the year 1902, operating a line of street railway from the city of Tacoma to Spanaway Lake; that, for the purpose of increasing its passenger business, it had acquired certain lands at the lake named, which it had made into an attractive park, or place of resort, and had placed the appellants Shreeder & Green in charge thereof; that, on June 8th of the year named, the respondents, attracted by the announce- j ments for that particular day, visited the park, where the wrong occurred of which they complain. This wrong is thus described in the complaint:

“That these plaintiffs, seeing said advertisement, procured tickets and took their seats in one of the cars of said defendant railway company and were thereby conveyed t) said park on said day, arriving there a few minutes after nine o’clock in the evening; that the cars and the park were covered with people, and music and other attractions were there, for the entertainment of the visitors; that, a very few minutes after alighting from the car, upon said grounds, and while plaintiffs were quietly viewing the at[205]*205tractions then upon the said park grounds of said defendants, one Charles W. Cromwell, an employe of said defendants in charge of said grounds, approached the plaintiff Lenora Davis, and, after staring her in the face in a rude and insolent manner, seized her by the arm in a rough, brutal, and insulting manner, and, in a loud tone of voice, in the presence and hearing of a large group of people, said to this plaintiff Lenora Davis: ‘You must leave these grounds. You can take the next car, coming in, or going out. You are not allowed on these grounds,’ at the same time exhibiting a metallic star or badge, and claiming to be an officer and a deputy, attracting the attention of a large number of people to said plaintiff, meaning and imputing, by his words and action, that said plaintiff Lenora Davis was a lewd and base woman, unfit to be or remain upon said grounds; that she, the said plaintiff, is of the age of twenty-seven years, has always conducted keyself as a lady of refinement and respectability, and has never at any other time been charged with anything derogatory to her good name, character, and reputation, always having enjoyed a good and spotless name and the high esteem of all her acquaintances ; that she was then and there so dazed, shocked1, humiliated, insulted, and wounded in her feelings, by said words and actions of said Cromwell, that she became faint and sick and could scarcely remain standing, and has not yet recovered in physical health, nor from the great mental anguish and wounded feelings, resulting from such treat-, ment; that the defendant Green was upon the said grounds, at the time, and directed the said Cromwell to order the said plaintiff off the said grounds, and aided and participated in said violent and unjust treatment of said plaintiff.”

Damages were demanded in the sum of $5,000. Issue was joined on the complaint, the defendant railway company and the defendants Shreeder & Green appearing separately, and by different counsel. On the issues made a trial was had before a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment against all of the defendants for the sum of $750.

[206]*206The evidence introduced at the trial did not support the complaint in all of its particulars. It appears that the managers of the park, desiring to keep the place suitable as a place of resort for respectable people, had employed one Cromwell to warn off of the grounds all persons whose conduct, demeanor, or dress marked them as belonging to, or being associated with, the criminal or vicious classes; that Cromwell had been informed that such a person had entered the ground and had taken a certain direction, whereupon he went in the direction indicatedj and finding no other woman there, mistook Mrs. Davis for the person meant, and addressed her, asking her to leave the grounds; that he discovered his mistake almost immediately, and .apologized to her and her husband for so accosting her. He also called the attention of the railway company’s manager to his mistake, who likewise openly apologized to them therefor. The evidence discloses’ clearly that there was nothing-wilful or malicious in the action of the employe. Tt was a mistake simply, and one that was atoned for by the employe and tie manager of the railway company, who was present, in the only manner then possible.

Hotice of appeal was first given by Shreeder & Green, and afterwards by the railway company. The respondents move to dismiss the appeal of Shreeder & Green for the reason that they did not serve their notice of appeal on their co-defendant, the railway company, nor join in the appeal 'of the railway company, when appeal was taken by it. Tin's motion must be granted. Under the statute a notice of appeal, to be effectual, must be served on all of the parties who have appeared in the action, and who do not join in the notice of appeal. This was not done in this case. The appeal of the defendants Shreeder & Green is therefore dismissed.

[207]*207The appellant railway company insists that, if any actionable wrong is stated in the complaint at all, it is an action for defamation of character, and that the proofs are insufficient to support a recovery for that wrong, because there was no publication of the defamatory matter, and be-i cause, further, the words alleged and proved to have been spoken are not actionable per se, and no special damages were proved to have been suffered because of them. But whether this may be called an action for defamation of character, for insult, or for personal indignities, or by some other name, we are clear that an actionable wrong was both alleged and proven. Every person not belonging to a proscribed class has a right to go to any public place, or visit a resort where the public generally are invited, and to remain there, during all proper hours, free from molestation by any one, so long as he conducts himself in a decorous and orderly manner. This right to freedom from molestation extends not only to freedom from actual violence, but to freedom from insult, personal indignities, or' acts which subject him to humiliation and disgrace, and any one guilty of violating any of these rights is liable in all cases for the actual damages suffered therefrom by the injured person. It matters not whether the wrong be one of pure negligence, or a wanton and wilful wrong, an action ■will lie for the actual damages suffered. Actual malice, or wanton and wilful conduct, on the part of the wrongdoer^ is material only on the question of punitive or exemplary damages, and must be shown in order to recover such damages, but the injured person may recover actual or compensatory damages regardless of whether there was any actual malice or intent to commit a wrong on the part of the other. When the employe of the appellant ordered Mrs. Davis from the grounds in question, he committed a wrong for [208]*208which she is entitled to recover for any actual damages suffered. If it were true that the company had the right to exclude from these grounds persons whose conduct, dréss, or demeanor generally proclaimed them to he, or whom it knew to be, members of a class with whom decent people do not associate, this fact would not exempt it from liability for a mistake it made in the effort to exercise that right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 L.R.A. 802, 77 P. 209, 35 Wash. 203, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-tacoma-railway-power-co-wash-1904.