Hines v. Meador

224 S.W. 742, 145 Ark. 356, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 742 (Hines v. Meador) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hines v. Meador, 224 S.W. 742, 145 Ark. 356, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 430 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee sues for damages resulting from personal injuries alleged to have been sustained on account of being assaulted by a fellow passenger while he was riding on a train. The jury awarded damages in the sum of $2,500, and the Director Greneral has appealed.

Appellee’s injuries occurred on November 3, 1918, while he was riding on a passenger train running between Little Rock and Camp Pike. It was a train which left the Union Station at Little Rock early in the morning before daylight, and was operated principally for the convenience of mechanics and other laboring men who were engaged in construction work at Camp Pike, and they traveled in large numbers on that train. There were fifteen coaches in the train, the front five being set apart for negro passengers and the others for white passengers, the rule governing the embarkation of passengers being that negroes should load from the front and white passengers from the rear.

Appellee is a white man and was at work as a carpenter at Camp Pike. He boarded the train at the Union Station at Little Rock and went into one of the coaches set apart for white passengers, and he took possession of a seat in the coach just behind a seat occupied by two negroes. The coach was not completely filled at that time, but it was filled up by other white passeiigers when the train stopped at the Argenta station. After the train moved out from the Argenta station appellee reached over and took hold of one of the negroes by the right arm or sleeve and said, “Lad, go into the coach ahead; this is the white coach.” The negro replied, “I came in here first,” and then appellee retorted, “We need the room in here, and there is plenty of room ahead.” Thereupon the negro struck at appellee with a knife and cut through his coat sleeve and into his arm, inflicting a wound which left a scar, but which was not serious. The negro fled from the coach immediately after cutting appellee, and the incident created a commotion among the passengers. Appellee followed the negro out to the front platform, calling out, “Stop that negro! he has a knife!” and just as appellee reached the door of the coach the negro, who had gotten out on the platform, turned on appellee and cut him with the knife, this time striking him in the right temple and cutting downward the full length of the side of his face. The flesh was cut through to the bone, and two of the arteries were cut, and the wound was a very serious one. The negro then made his escape, and the train was stopped, and appellee was taken therefrom and sent to a hospital. He was incapacitated from work for three or four months and suffered great pain and inconvenience and had not recovered from the effects of the wound at the time of the trial. The evidence tended to show that it would be a good while before there would be complete recovery from the injury, and that there was plainly observable a scar which would be left permanently the full length of appellee’s face.

There is a conflict in the testimony as to what passed between appellee and the negro, so far as relates to appellee’s conduct. The testimony adduced by appellant tended to show that appellee attempted to eject the negro from the coach, and that, after he was cut the first time, he followed the negro to the platform in án effort to engage in a fight with him. In other words, there was testimony adduced which would have warranted the finding that appellee provoked the assault by his own conduct, but appellee’s own testimony was sufficient to warrant the finding that his conduct, in requesting the negro to leave the coach and in following the negro to the platform for the purpose of causing his arrest, was not sufficient to provoke the assault.

The court gave, over appellant’s objection, the following instruction, which is assigned as error:

“You are instructed that the law requires that all railway companies carrying passengers in this State shall provide separate accommodations for the white and African races by providing two or more passenger coaches for each passenger train or by carrying one partition car, one end of which may be used by white passengers and the other end by passengers of the African race, and that the officers of such passenger trains are required to assign each passenger or person to the coach or compartment used for the race to which such passenger belongs. And if you find from the evidence in this case that plaintiff became a passenger upon one' of the defendant’s trains about the date mentioned in the complaint, and was assigned to or was riding in the coach or compartment provided for white passengers upon said train and that defendant’s officers in charge of said train knowingly permitted a negro passenger to enter said compartment and ride therein, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have known that said negro passenger was riding in said compartment among white passengers, and made no effort to expel him therefrom, and that said negro passenger, while riding therein, made an. assault upon plaintiff and thereby injured him, then you will find for plaintiff, unless you further find that plaintiff, by his own wrongful act, provoked the assault, and but for such act or conduct on his part he would not have been assaulted.”

The court also refused to give an instruction at the request of appellant, telling the jury that “a carrier is not liable for damages caused to a passenger by the assault of another passenger unless the carrier’s employees had knowledge, or in the exercise of due degree of care should have had knowledge, that the assault was about to occur; or, unless, after the trouble started, they have reasonable opportunity to prevent the injury and fail to do so.”

The rulings of the court in giving the first instruction and refusing to give the one requested by appellant are each assigned as error. The argument of learned counsel for appellant in support of these assignments of error is, in substance, that a violation of the statute of this State requiring the separation of white and colored passengers in a train (Kirby’s Digest, section 6622, et seq.) does not create a cause of action in favor of an injured passenger, and that liability in this case is dependent on the question whether or not the servants of the company exercised proper degree of care to prevent the injury after they knew or had reason to anticipate that injury might result. Counsel cite two decisions of this court which they argue support their contention. St. L. & S. F. R. Co. v. Petties, 99 Ark. 415; C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Allison, 120 Ark. 54. Neither of these cases support the contention. In the Petties case the alleged injury resulted from the failure of a carrier to furnish a seat to a female passenger who was riding in a coach assigned to passengers of her race, but which was crowded with passengers of the other race and the defense was that on account of an unanticipated emergency there was not sufficient seating capacity in the train for all passengers. We held that the carrier was not liable for failure to furnish a seat to the passengers, if, on account of the unusual and unanticipated emergency, accommodations could not he furnished for all of the passengers, even though passengers of another race were allowed to go into the coach properly occupied by the plaintiff and took up all the seats.

The Allison case was one where a passenger sued for being compelled to ride in a coach with passengers of another race.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 742, 145 Ark. 356, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-v-meador-ark-1920.