Elliott v. Southern Pacific Co.

79 P. 420, 145 Cal. 441, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 606
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 2988.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 79 P. 420 (Elliott v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Southern Pacific Co., 79 P. 420, 145 Cal. 441, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 606 (Cal. 1904).

Opinions

ANGELLOTTI, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for the sum of seven hundred dollars, and from an order denying its motion for new trial. The action was for damages alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff by reason of his alleged wrongful and forcible expulsion from a train of defendant on August 13, 1894, on .which train, it was alleged, the plaintiff was a passenger.

The case was tried without a jury. The record shows the following facts: On August 13, 1894, the plaintiff boarded defendant’s train at the Oakland pier, Alameda County, for the purpose of being transported thereon to Pleasanton, in the same county. He presented to the conductor for his passage on such train a round-trip ticket “From Pleasanton to San Fran, and return,” which he had purchased from defendant’s ticket agent at Pleasanton on July 3, 1894, at a reduced rate,—to wit, one fare for the round trip, viz., $1.10,—and which he had used on July 3d in traveling from Pleasanton to San Francisco. This ticket was distinctly marked upon its face “Void after July 6, 1894,” and this limitation and the fact that the ticket was sold at a reduced rate were known to plaintiff at the time he purchased the ticket.

The conductor at once handed the ticket back" to plaintiff, informing him that it was no good—that it had expired. The *444 plaintiff told the conductor that he thought he was entitled to ride on it, that he had bought and paid for it, and that it was no fault of his that he had not ridden on it. The conductor then left the plaintiff, but returning presently, said, “Let me see that ticket,” and upon plaintiff handing it to him, said, “That is no good,” and put it in his pocket. He further said, “You will either have to pay your fare or get off the train at San Leandro.” Plaintiff said, “Then give me back my ticket.” The conductor said, “Well, I will look out for that ticket.” Yihen near San Leandro, he returned and said, “Now you will have to get off here or pay your fare.” The plaintiff said, “I don’t propose to do either until you give me back my ticket.” The conductor said, “I will take care of the ticket; you will have to get off the car.” The plaintiff said, “I don’t propose to do either.” The conductor said, “I will put you off,” and plaintiff said, “Bring your crowd.” The foregoing statement as to what took place on the train is from plaintiff’s testimony, and is as favorable to him as any of the evidence given.

The plaintiff forcibly resisted all attempts to eject him, and was by means of force rejected by defendant’s servants from the train, but no more force or violence was used than was reasonably necessary to effect the ejection. “Neither his [plaintiff’s] bodily suffering nor his mental suffering were very great nor were his bodily injuries serious.”

The foregoing statement of facts is in accord with the findings of the court, except in so far as certain findings may be capable of being construed as showing that the conductor received the ticket as in any degree entitling plaintiff to travel, or without notifying plaintiff that it was of no value and that he could not honor it, or that plaintiff intimated in any way that he would pay his fare or present a valid ticket if the other ticket should be returned. In so far as the findings may intimate any of these things, they are not supported by the evidence, as is fully shown by plaintiff’s testimony on this subject, which has already been stated. The case in this respect is simply one where the conductor repudiated as absolutely void, and expressly refused to honor for passage, a ticket that was absolutely void, but after so expressly refusing to honor it nevertheless took it into his possession and retained it.

*445 It was further found by the court substantially as follows:—

From July 5, 1894, to July 13, 1894, defendant, notwithstanding its desire and attempts to operate its passenger-trains between Oakland pier and Pleasanton, was absolutely prevented from doing so by the forcible violence of a large body of men, the trouble having been caused by a “strike” of “engine firemen in its employ.” On July 5 and 6, 1894, it did not operate any of its ferry-boats between San Francisco and Oakland pier. It did, however, operate a ferry-boat between San Francisco and a place in Oakland near a station on the railroad from Oakland pier to Pleasanton. On both days the plaintiff went to the proper place in San Francisco for the purpose of taking passage, and learned that defendant was not operating its boats or trains. He, however, on July 6th took passage on the ferry-boat running to Oakland, using his ticket for that purpose, and, having arrived at the landing place in Oakland, proceeded upon his journey to Pleasanton, where he arrived the same day, walking a part of the way, and riding the remainder of the way upon conveyances not operated by the defendant.

Train service was resumed on July 13, 1894, and defendant, by its order to its conductors, extended the time within which plaintiff and others similarly situated might use tickets of like character for return passage about six days, which period elapsed in the month of July, 1894, but the fact of such extension was not communicated to plaintiff.

The court further found that such period of extension was not" a reasonable period; that the first opportunity that plaintiff had of using said ticket for transportation between Oakland pier and Pleasanton was on August 13, 1894, and that this was a reasonable time within which to use the same. These findings are attacked as not being sustained by the evidence, and the attack is, in our opinion, well founded. Six days was twice the original life of the ticket, and certainly much more than sufficient to enable one who had come from Pleasanton to San Francisco upon such a ticket, to make his return journey. August 13th was not the first opportunity that plaintiff had of using said ticket, for the train service had been resumed on July 13th and continued uninterrupted thereafter. The only basis for a finding that August 13th was the date of plaintiff’s first opportunity to use the ticket is *446 the evidence of plaintiff that after July 6th he was not again in San Francisco or Oakland until August 13th; in other words, that he did not again have occasion to go from San Francisco or Oakland to Pleasanton until that time. This cannot, in a ease of this character, he the criterion as to what was a reasonable time or the first opportunity.

The court further found that at the time defendant sold the ticket to plaintiff it knew, or had good and sufficient reason to know, from facts and circumstances then existing and within its knowledge, that it would be or might be unable to transport plaintiff upon said railroad on July 5th or 6tli, that it did not communicate these facts and circumstances to plaintiff, that plaintiff did not know thereof, and that if he had known thereof he would not have purchased the ticket. There is absolutely no evidence to sustain the finding embraced in the last clause.

The court also found that in selling the ticket under such circumstances the defendant committed a fraud upon plaintiff.

The plaintiff testified that on July 5th, when, at San Francisco, he found that the trains were not being operated, he asked a man who was stationed at the ticket-window of defendant to give him his money back.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 420, 145 Cal. 441, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-southern-pacific-co-cal-1904.