Falls Rivet & Machine Co. v. Pullman Palace Car Co.

4 Ohio N.P. 26
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 26 (Falls Rivet & Machine Co. v. Pullman Palace Car Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falls Rivet & Machine Co. v. Pullman Palace Car Co., 4 Ohio N.P. 26 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Kohler, J.

(Orally).

In this case, counsel for both parties waived a jury and submitted the issues to the court. I have given the case a great deal of attention, and have examined the numerous authorities to which counsel have referred the court. Counsel have aided .the court very much by filing briefs and presenting the law very ably and fully.

The case derives its importance, not so much from the amount involved, which is only about sixty-seven dollars, but on account of the principle involved and the rights and interests of the traveling public on the one hand, and those of the sleeping-car company on the other. And while a great many cases have- been tried and decided upon substantially the same question, I find no case where this question has arisen in the state of Ohio.

The plaintiff claims that on the 3rd day of May, 1895, an employe of that company, by the name of A. F. Taggart, coming from New York to Cleveland, purchased a first class ticket via The Pennsylvania Railroad, and at Philadelphia, at the office of the car agency, purchased a ticket for a berth in the sleeping car “Zeus,” on the Pennsylvania train leaving Philadelphia at eight o’clock that evening, and that he had the lower berth, number three, in that car;* that he had in his hip pocket, in a pocket-book which has been offered in evidence, sixty-seven dollars of the money of plaintiff, and that when he retired to his berth, he removed his clothing and his trousers, which he placed in the hammock or small net which swung at the backside of the berth by the window, and went to sleep, and in the morning, when he rose and vvent to the toilet room, he found that his money was gone.

The question is presented to the court, whether the Pullman Palace Car Company is liable for this money.

The defendant, in the first place, denies that it was carrying passengers, and setup in its answer that it was simply furnishing cars to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, under a contract, by which the railroad company used the cars of the Pullman Palace Car Co.

[27]*27I do not exactly understand the claim made by the answer in that respect, or that the liability is contested, on the ground that they were not liable for losses sustained in their cars by theft or otherwise. Suffice it to say, that so far as that contract is concerned, a copy of which is attached to a deposition in the' case, I do not think passengers are bound to look out and examine what the contract is between the Pullman Palace Car Co., and the railroad company, in any case; that is a contract that they have between themselves, and it is deposited in the office of the Pullman Palace Car Co., where the public have no access to it and do not know anything about it, and cannot tell anything about it, and I do not believe the traveling public are obliged to look into the matter and ascertain who is really running those cars, and determine who is liable as between the two companies.

My judgment is that defendant was running those cars; that it was furnishing its own servants, its own porter and conductor, and conducting its own business, and if this money was lost in that car, under such circumstances as to create a liability, the Pullman Company is liable, without regard to the terms of the contract entered into by and between that company and the railroad company, of which the public had no notice whatever.

This raises the question as to the liability of the defendant. They claim on their side that they were liable simply for the want of ordinary care; that they had a porter on the car; that he was at his place where he could watch, and a conductor, and that therefore they were doing all they could, with ordinary care, to protect passengers, and to guard them from loss.

On the other hand, it is claimed by counsel for plaintiff, that the fact that this money was stolen, or lpst, is evidence of itself of a want of ordinary care on the part of the defendant.

This question of fact as to the want of ordinary care has been submitted to the court, being a case in which the parties are entitled to a jury, but a jury was waived and the whole question, law and fact, was submitted to the court; and I would have been very glad indeed if I could have taken the sense of the jury upon this question of fact; however, it is before the court, and I have come to a conclusion with regard to it.

Sleeping car companies are comparatively of recent origin. The law is not yet very well settled as to the nature of their liability to the people they carry on their cars. It is a wonder to me that it has not been the subject of statutory regulation; it seems to me the time has come when their ought tobe some law passed to define the rights of the sleeping car companies on'one hand, and the public on the other, but no state has yet attempted it, or at least not perfected any law on that subject; because, when any law has been passed,it has always been attacked on the ground that the car companies were engaged in inter-state business, and that such legislation is expressly prohibited by the constitution. I notice, however, that one o£ our senators in congress introduced a bill upon the subject regulating their duties, and also regulating the rates the}1' are to charge for their service. That act was not passed and therefore we are simply guided by the decisions of the courts, and they are valuable only as principles, because the facts differ somewhat in each case as to their liability.

In some cases it has been sought to make car companies liable simply as inn-keepers, on the ground that if a passenger enters the sleeping car, and his property is lost, they are liable as an inn-keeper — virtually making them insurers, or as a common carrier where he has the property in his hands for carrying it, and the actual'custody and control of the pro[8]*8perty. That liability, as lawyers all know, is a very strict liability in our state, and so far as inn-keepers are concerned, was modified by statute, but it is of ancient origin, and is a very strict liability indeed, and in a case in Nebraska, -the supreme court held that they were liable as-inn-keepers, and that all that a passenger was- bound to do, ivas to show that he had certain property or money in his possession when he entered, the car, and that it was lost when he got-up in the morning, and that fixes the liability upon a sleeping-car company precisely as it would upon* the proprietor -of an inn.

The weight of authority, however, is against that proposition.

The cases are very numerous in which the courts have drawn the distinction that the sleeping-car company is not to be held as an inn-keeper, and that it can be made liable only 'where it is shown to the jury that there has been a- want of ordinary care; or, in other words, if negligence-is established on the part of the sleeping car-company, that the mere-fact of a loss alone is not presumptive evidence of ■ such negligence, — - there must be something in addition to that. I think the weight of authority establishes that proposition where those cases have been decided throughout the country.

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Related

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1 L.R.A. 863 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falls-rivet-machine-co-v-pullman-palace-car-co-ohctcomplsummit-1896.