Hogan v. Nashville Interurban Railway Co.

131 Tenn. 244
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 131 Tenn. 244 (Hogan v. Nashville Interurban Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogan v. Nashville Interurban Railway Co., 131 Tenn. 244 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

MR. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case stands for trial on bill of complaint and a demurrer thereto; the appeal being that of complainant, Hogan, from a decree of the chancery court of Davidson county sustaining the demurrer.

The complainant in his bill alleges that he is about twenty-six years of age, and resides near the city of Nashville; that he is a student and instructor in Vanderbilt University, in that city, and has been accustomed to use the cars of the defendant company almost daily since the line of that company was constructed for transportation into the city; that he has since infancy been lame as a result of infantile paralysis, and has been forced to walk ever since with two crutches; that for the last ten years he has continually traveled alone and unattended, riding trains, street cars, in-[247]*247ternrlban cars, and goes everywhere a sound and healthy man can go; that in the use of defendant company’s cars he was never injured hut once, and that then his injury was due to the gross negligence of the-servants of defendant; that in so riding he has never caused any trouble, or asked or received any assistance ; that he ‘ ‘ acts as other passengers, and has been treated as such; ’ ’ that when ordinary care is exercised “there is no more danger of injuring him than any other person;” that, following the injury above referred to, complainant brought suit against defendant; that thereafter rumors reached him that the defendant was about to withdraw, from him the right of passage on its cars; that yet later a communication was received by him from the company’s general manager, as follows:

“Nashville, Tenn., April 23, 1914.
“Mr. Woodall Hogan, R. F. D. No. 2, Brentwood, Tenn. — Dear Sir: We regret to notify you that on and after May 1, 1914, we will decline to convey you as a passenger on our line, unless you are at all times accompanied by an attendant. Your physical infirmity is of such a nature as to cause a continued source of possible injury to yourself and as a possible liability as against us. You are also advised that our trainmen and ticket agents will be notified not to receive you as a passenger unless you are accompanied by an attendant. We regret that conditions are such as require [248]*248this action but deem it necessary, as well for yonr protection as for the protection of ourselves.
“Very trnly yonrs,
“[Signed] Meade Frierson,
“General Manager.”

The bill of complaint further recites: That on May 1,1914, complainant, tendering the nsnal fare, demeaning himself properly and offering to comply with all the nsnal and necessary conditions to become a passenger, presented himself to defendant for carriage on its line, bnt was absolutely refused; that in his work he is compelled to go into Nashville every day, and that his only means of transportation is defendant’s line; that defendant is a common carrier.

That the refusal to receive him as a passenger is a persecution of complainant for not dropping the above-mentioned suit and an attempted intimidation, with a view to forcing him to abandon his legal rights, and arbitrary and in violation of defendant’s charter.

The demurrer interposed set out the following grounds:

(1) That the bill discloses such physical infirmity on the part of complainant as that it was not a part of defendant’s duty at common law to receive him for passage.

(2) That by force of a valid statute defendant had a rig’ht to decline to carry complainant for any reason whatever deemed sufficient by it.

[249]*249(3) That there is no case made for resort to injunctive process; complainant having an ample remedy at law.

The chancellor sustained the several gronnds of the demnrrer.

The rnle, broadly stated, is that any person desiring transportation shall be entitled to be received as a passenger on payment of the fare, notwithstanding a seeming incapacity on his part to take care of himself, if, in point of fact, he “is competent to travel alone without requiring other care than that which the law requires the carrier to bestow on all persons alike. Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), section 966.

In the application of the rule to concrete instances the authorities are not in exact agreement, but the points of difference are narrow ones.

The disability claimed to disqualify may be mental or physical. Thus, while a common carrier may not lawfully refuse absolutely to carry persons who are insane, it may do so where the proposing passenger is not properly attended or guarded. Owens v. Macon, etc., R. Co., 119 Ga., 230, 46 S. E., 87, 63 L. R. A., 946; Meyer v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 54 Fed., 116, 4 C. C. A., 221.

In respect to physical disability, the carrier is not under obligation to receive as a passenger a person who without an attendant is unable, because of extreme age or tender years, to care for himself; and the same test applies to other physical limitations. The carrier may [250]*250.refuse to carry unless the applicant be in charge of one fit to serve as attendant.

The clearest and most comprehensive statement of the rules governing is that of the supreme court of Mississippi in a series of cases dealing with blind persons who offered themselves for passage. Blindness is by that court held to be prima facie a disqualification; that presumedly the affliction of blindness unfits a person for safe travel by railway, if unaccompanied; that a showing of experience or ability to travel alone on the part of the offerer brought to the knowledge of the railroad company’s agent may serve as a basis of liability on the part of the carrier for a refusal to accept him.

That court, on a point pertinent to the case in hand, said:

“We are asked to hold that a regulation that no blind person whatever shall travel unaccompanied by an assistant, no matter how skillful or expert a traveler he may have been, or may be, and no matter how perfectly qualified in every other respect to travel on cars unaccompanied, is a reasonable rule. This cannot be sound. Each case must depend on its own facts, and the reasonableness of the refusal to sell the blind person a ticket must, on principle, depend, not on a universal, arbitrary, and undiscriminating rule like this one, but on the capacity to travel unaccompanied of the particular blind person.”

It was therefore held, where a blind person sued, and in his declaration averred that for several years he had [251]*251traveled on defendant company’s cars, in the transaction of current business, and bad never given canse of complaint to any of its servants, and tbat no .objection bad been offered to bis riding on tbe company’s train before tbe date of tbe exclusion complained of, tbat tbis statement of bis cause of action was not demur-rable, the court bolding tbat it was sufficiently shown tbat plaintiff was able to take care of himself as a passenger. Zachery v. Mobile & Ohio R. Co., 74 Miss., 520, 21 South., 246, 36 L. R. A., 546, 60 Am. St. Rep., 529; Id., 75 Miss., 746, 23 South., 434, 41 L. R. A., 385, 65 Am. St. Rep., 617; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Smith, 85 Miss., 349, 37 South., 643, 70 L. R. A., 642, 107 Am. St. Rep., 293.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 Tenn. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-nashville-interurban-railway-co-tenn-1914.