Dupre v. Southern Ry.

44 S.E. 580, 66 S.C. 124, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 20, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 580 (Dupre v. Southern Ry.) 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
Dupre v. Southern Ry., 44 S.E. 580, 66 S.C. 124, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 78 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinon of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

The questions presented by this appeal arise from an order made by his Honor, Judge Townsend, on an application to him for an order to make the complaint more definite and certain. He refused, in his order, to. allow any of the amendments sought by the defendant except one. The plaintiff appeals from his allowance as to the fifteenth article of the complaint. The defendant appeals from his whole order.

It will be necessary now to make the foregoing more definite by setting out the complaint, the order appealed from, the order made, and the exceptions to the order as made. The following is the complaint:

“Daniel C. DuPre, the plaintiff above named, complaining *125 of the Southern Railway Company, the defendant above named, alleges:
“I. That the said defendant is now, and was at the times hereinafter mentioned, a body corporate and politic under its charter and the laws of the State of Virginia, and liable to be sued in this Court.
“II. That the said defendant owns and controls property, carries on business, and has its agents in the said county of Greenwood, in the said State of South Carolina.
“III. That on the 28th day of February, 1901, or shortly after midnight of that day, the plaintiff, his wife, Mrs. A. B. DuPre, and his wife’s mother, Mrs. L. H. Parrish, left the town of Greenwood, in the said State of South Carolina, to accompany the dead body of Miss Emma G. Parrish, sister of the plaintiff’s wife, and daughter of the said Mrs. L. H. Parrish, to Versailes, in the State of Kentucky, where the said dead body was to be buried on the second day following —the plaintiff intending to accompany his said wife and her mother and the said dead body only as far as the city of Atlanta, in the State of Georgia, and there to assist his said wife and her mother to take passage on the defendant’s train running toward the said destination, arid to have the said dead body properly transferred to the defendant’s train for transportation.
“IV. That, for the purposes above set forth, the plaintiff, just before midnight on the said 28th day of February, 1902, purchased from the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, at the said town of Greenwood, four first class passenger tickets, one of them being for the transportation of his said wife, one of them being for the transportation of his said wife’s mother, and one of them for the transportation of the said dead body, over the lines of the said Seaboard Air Line Railway Company from Greenwood aforesaid to Atlanta, in the State of Georgia, and thence over the lines and on the trains of the defendant to Lexington, in the State of Kentucky, that being the terminus of defendant’s line toward Versailes aforesaid; the fourth ticket being for his *126 own transportation from Greenwood aforesaid to the city of Atlanta aforesaid over the line of the said Seaboard Air Line Railway.
“V. That the three tickets first above described consisted each of a principal ticket good for transportation from Greenwood aforesaid to Atlanta aforesaid, and a coupon providing for additional transportation from Atlanta aforesaid to Lexington aforesaid, which coupon also provided that the selling company, to wit: the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, would not be responsible for the connecting line, the defendant company, but sold such ticket as the agent of the latter.
“VI. All the said tickets were sold to the said plaintiff by the regular ticket agent of the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, acting also as the agent for the defendant company.
“VII. That for the sale of the three tickets first above described, to wit: the tickets embracing coupons for transportation from Atlanta aforesaid to Lexington aforesaid over the line of the defendant railway company, the said Seaboard Air Line Railway Company and its agent at Greenwood aforesaid, were the agents of the defendant, and as such sold the plaintiff those three tickets, and received his money in purchase thereof.
“VIII. That upon the arrival of the plaintiff, his said wife, her said mother and the said dead body at the city of Atlanta, about thirty minutes before the departure of the defendant’s next passenger train going to Lexington, in the State of Kentucky, the plaintiff was informed by the agent of the defendant there, that the tickets first above described would not be accepted for the transportation of his said wife and her mother over the defendant’s line, because, such agent stated, the same had not been properly stamped at Greenwood aforesaid. Thereupon the plaintiff went to the office of the defendant’s passenger agent, and not finding him there, went to the defendant’s ticket agent, and offered to pay all expenses of ascertaining, by telegraph, whether *127 the said tickets were genuine and duly issued at the place of their purchase above described, upon which offer that agent, without just cause, and in utter disregard of the plaintiff’s rights, refused to act.
“IX. That thereafter, and about ten minutes before the departure of the train mentioned in paragraph VIII. of this complaint, the plaintiff went to the conductor of that train and made the offer described in said paragraph VIII., which was positively refused.
“X. That at the times mentioned in paragraphs VIII. and IX. of this complaint, the ticket for the transportation of the said dead body was in the possession of the defendant’s agents, to wit: its baggage master on the train of the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, who took it on the passage between the said town of Greenwood and the said city of Atlanta.
“XI. That the plaintiff was also informed by an agent of the defendant in the said city of Atlanta, at or about the times mentioned in paragraphs VIII. and IX. of this complaint, that the said dead body would not be transported by the defendant unless some person in charge of it accompanied it; yet, notwithstanding this announcement, and notwithstanding the facts and announcements set forth in paragraphs VIII. and IX. of this complaint, the said dead body was very soon thereafter carried away from that city and station by the defendant on one of its trains, without the knowledge of the plaintiff, who and his said wife and her said mother were left waiting in the city of Atlanta.
“XII. That by reason of the facts hereinabove set forth the plaintiff, his said wife and her mother, already grief-stricken by the death of their said near relative, became greatly distressed, fearing that some unhappy accident might happen to the said dead body (as, that it might, perhaps, be put off the train and left at some station short of the said station of Lexington, Kentucky), and the plaintiff, now almost exhausted and greatly worried by the misconduct of the defendant’s agents, and their mistreatment of *128

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Plumley v. Gosnell
178 S.E. 261 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1935)
Ford v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.
168 S.E. 143 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1932)
Ford v. Atlantic Coast Line R.
168 S.E. 143 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1932)
Bateman v. Wymojo Yarn Mills
152 S.E. 675 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1930)
Shaver v. Grendel Mills
54 S.E. 610 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 580, 66 S.C. 124, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupre-v-southern-ry-sc-1903.