Kinchlow v. Peoples Rapid Transit Co.

88 F.2d 764, 66 App. D.C. 382, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 1936
DocketNo. 6540
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 88 F.2d 764 (Kinchlow v. Peoples Rapid Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinchlow v. Peoples Rapid Transit Co., 88 F.2d 764, 66 App. D.C. 382, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362 (D.C. Cir. 1936).

Opinions

MARTIN, C. J.

This is an appeal by Mamie Kinchlow (colored), plaintiff below, from a judgment upon a directed verdict in favor of the defendants, in an action brought by her to recover damages because of her ejection from a bus, while in the State of Virginia, on which she was traveling from the city of New York to Norfolk, Va.

The declaration contained three counts, charging: First, a breach of a contract of carriage; second, a wrongful ejection from the bus; and, third, false imprisonment, alleging that the plaintiff’s ejection from the bus was upon the order and at the request of the driver of the bus, while acting as the agent, servant, and employee of the defendants.

The defendants by their pleas admitted that the plaintiff was “removed” from the bus and placed under arrest by officers of the law of the State of Virginia, but denied that she was so removed and arrested by order or request of defendants, or of their' agent, servant, or employee. The defendant, Peoples Rapid Transit Company, a corporation, also alleged that at the time of the occurrence complained of the plaintiff was a passenger in a bus operated by the defendant Richmond Greyhound Lines, Inc., which was an entirely distinct and separate corporation and not under the management or control of this defendant.

The evidence submitted by the plaintiff at the trial consisted of her own testimony only, the salient statements of which are as follows: That on August 1, 1932, she purchased at the Greyhound Bus Terminal in New York a round-trip ticket from New York to Norfolk; that she was assigned to seat No. 29, which was the last seat in the rear on the right side of the aisle over the wheel; that she was told that the ticket would take her straight through and that she could go on the same bus and have the same seat; that she accepted and paid for the ticket and took the seat; that she had noticed an advertisement of the Greyhound Bus Lines in the bus terminal which set out in substance that the Greyhound Line was a sin[765]*765gle system of bus transportation; that there was no inconvenience of changing from one bus to another; that a passenger might travel from coast to coast and go “Greyhound” all the. way; that she got in the bus and occupied the seat assigned to her until the bus arrived in Washington, D. C., when she was instructed to take a bus just in the rear of the one she had been riding on; that this bus had the same color scheme, painting, design, and arrangement as the first one; that she took the same relative seat in the second bus as she occupied in the first bus; that when she left Washington the driver said, “You got to get up”; that she did not answer him, but a colored girl in the seat in front of her asked permission to sit beside her, which she did; that the driver came back and said to plaintiff, “Nigger, you’ve got to get up”; that she said, “I am not moving, there is no place for me to sit, do you want me to sit on top of the bus,” and the bus driver said, “You just as well get up, I will pick you up”; that when the bus got over the bridge and into the State of Virginia the driver left the bus and came back with three policemen; that “they handles us very rough”; that when she got to the officer’s car she said: “This is a shame. My mother is lying down there dead; I’ve got to go home.” And one of the officers said: “Girlie, I am sorry, it is a tough break, you just got hold of a tough driver.” That she was taken to the police station and put in jail until the trial the next day; that she was fined $25; that she did not continue to Norfolk as her mother had been buried, but went to Williamsburg, Va., and from there back to New York.

On cross-examination the plaintiff further testified that she did not resist the officers; that she did not get hysterical, she only cried; that none of them touched her.

The plaintiff thereupon rested her case.

The defendants on their part called Campbell W. Gray, the driver of the bus, as their first witness, who testified in substance as follows: That he knew the plaintiff; that she and another person occupied the right rear aisle seat; that the bus was fully loaded; that he had three colored passengers sitting on the back seat along with two white passengers, and that he asked plaintiff and the colored girl beside her if they would mind exchanging seats with the two white women in the rear seat; that they refused; that he said, “You can stay where you are right here in the District but we will cross the state line in a few minutes and to avoid moving when we get over there I thought you would just as soon take your seats now as to stop when we cross the Virginia State Line”; that when the line was reached he went back to them, pointed to the marker, and told them that under the Virginia law they were to move back; that they said they would not move back; that he proceeded on to Alexandria and stopped at the George Mason Hotel and called police headquarters; that in response to the call, Officers Snoots and Stewart came; that when they arrived he pointed out where the women were sitting; that he had no further conversation with the two colored women; that the officers asked them to move and they said they would not move; that the officers told the women that they would have to get off and the women said they would have to be taken off; that the women were talking in a loud and profane manner, and that the .officers arrested them, using quite a bit of force; that he drove the bus on to Richmond; that at the request of the officers he returned the next day and testified at the trial in police court; that he did not at any time place his hands on the plaintiff or yell or threaten her; that he did nothing with respect to the ejection of the plaintiff, except that he summoned the officers; that he did not ask the plaintiff to get up and stand without offering her another seat, but that he particularly asked plaintiff to exchange her seat with the white women; that he did not remember plaintiff saying, “Where am I going to sit, on top of the bus?”

Defendants next called John L. Stewart, a police officer of Alexandria, Va., who testified in substance as follows: That on or near noon, August 2, 1932, he was told to go to the George Mason Hotel and meet the bus there; that he and Officer Snoots met the driver outside the bus, and the driver pointed out to them the two colored women who had refused to exchange seats; that he then proceeded to the back of the bus and asked them to change seats with the two white women who were seated in the rear of the bus, explaining to them that it was the law of the State of Virginia; that he told them the easiest way was the best way; that plaintiff said that she was not going to move, using profane language; that she [766]*766said, “I am not going to move any damn place; now if you want me to move, damn you, you try to move me”; that he objected to this language and placed her under arrest, whereupon she said, “You poor white trash from Virginia think you can do us any way”; that he was met by resistance, kicking, and pulling, when he arrested her and that he asked Officer Snoots to assist him in removing her from the bus; that his clothing was torn by plaintiff; that on arrival at the station he charged the plaintiff with disorderly conduct; that plaintiff was tried, found guilty, and fined. Witness on cross-examination testified that the bus driver took no part in ejecting the plaintiff nor did he make a request that they take her off; and that the charge of disorderly conduct against the plaintiff was based on what happened after he asked her to move.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 F.2d 764, 66 App. D.C. 382, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinchlow-v-peoples-rapid-transit-co-cadc-1936.