Latour v. Southern Ry.

51 S.E. 265, 71 S.C. 532, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 265 (Latour v. Southern Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Latour v. Southern Ry., 51 S.E. 265, 71 S.C. 532, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 68 (S.C. 1905).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Latour, seeks to recover $1,000 damages of the defendant railway company on account of the negligent, careless, wanton and wilful conduct of the defendant, its agents and officers, in the matter of the treatment of the plaintiff, who' was a passenger on one of its passenger trains, on the 8th December, 1902. The action came on for trial in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenwood County before special Judge Youmans and a jury. After full testimony and the charge to the jury, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant, on which judgment was duly entered. The plaintiff nory appeals to this Court on the following exceptions:

“I. It was error in his Honor to charge the jury as follows : ‘Now, gentlemen, as to making connections with trains,, railroad companies do not guarantee the making of connections. If they sold you a ticket and guaranteed connection, then you would have a cause of action, but they do not guarantee connections,’ the error being:

“(a) In so charging the jury, his Honor gave them an entirety incorrect idea of the law of this case, and lead the jury to believe that unless the company had guaranteed connections at Greenville or Atlanta, the plaintiff had no case whatever — the law is that a railway company is charged with the duty of running its train according to- schedule time, and *534 can only be excused from so doing by accident, or from causes which reasonable care could not provide against.

“(b) In so charging the jury, his Honor entirely eliminated from this case the testimony of plaintiff that the agent of the company represented that she would make connection at Greenville at the time of the sale of said ticket; it being respectfully submitted that a railway company is bound by the representations of its ticket agent to the purchaser of a ticket made at the time of the sale of the ticket.

“(c) It is alleged in the complaint that at the time of the purchase of the ticket, defendant represented to plaintiff that she would connect at Greenville, upon which point testimony was offered by plaintiff and her witnesses, and in charging that defendant did not guarantee connections, his Honor entirely eliminated this testimony and these allegations from the case, and further charged directly on the facts of the case by telling the jury that the defendant did not guarantee connections, in violation of the Constitution, which prohibits a Circuit Judge from charging on the facts of the case.

“(d) If it be true, as alleged in the complaint and as testified to* by plaintiffs’ witness, that defendant did represent to plaintiff at the time of the purchase of the said ticket that she would make close connection at Greenville, it is submitted that this in law amounts to a guarantee which would be binding on the defendant, and his Honor had no right to instruct the jury that defendant did not guarantee connections, and in so doing his Honor, in addition to charging on the facts of the case, in violation of the Constitution, which forbids him from charging on the facts, ignored these allegations and the testimony, and also placed an entirely erroneous construction on said allegations and said testimony, the same amounting' in law to a guarantee of connection, and his Honor should not have submitted this question to the jury.

“(e) The defendant was certainly bound’by the representation of its agent, and his Honor committed error charging *535 that it did not guarantee connections, and further instructed the jury that railroads' do not guarantee connections.

“II. It is further submitted, that his Honor further erred in charging the jury as follows: ‘The other side claims that she abandoned her trip,’ because:

“(a) In so charging the jury, his Honor charged on the facts of the case, and stated the testimony to the jury, in violation of the Constitution, which prohibits a Circuit Judge from charging on the facts, because the answer of the defendant was simply a general denial, but in the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, one of the witnesses testified that plaintiff had abandoned her trip.

“III. His Honor erred in charging the jury as follows: ‘She says if she had been permitted to remain in there, she would have made connection. She says it was all caused by the carelessness, negligence, wilful and wanton misconduct of the servant in charge of this train of cars, in ordering her to vacate her seat and take passage in a car that wentby Anderson and Seneca. You see what she says it was all caused by?’ This being a charge on the facts of the case, in violation of the Constitution, which prohibits a Circuit Judge from charging on the facts of a case, and his Honor in charging the jury, in the language herein mentioned, in quoting the testimony to the jury, was charging the jury on the facts of the case, and repeating to the jury the testimony in the case, in violation of the Constitution, which prohibits a Circuit Judge from charging on the facts of the case or from repeating the testimony to‘ the jury in his charge.

“(a) In so charging the jury, his Honor committed further error, in that he limited recovery to a failure to make connection at Seneca; whereas, this is not the only element in said cause of action and is not the only cause of grievance against said defendant, it being respectfully submitted that one of the elements of said cause of action, and one cause of grievance against the said defendant, was its unauthorized *536 diversion oí the plaintiff from the route indicated by said ticket.

“(b) It is submitted that plaintiff had a right to' have submitted to the jury the question of her damage for being carried by Anderson and Seneca instead of by Greenville, and whether or not she would have made connection by going by Greenville is not controlling- in the case, because it her ticket called for Greenville, it was the duty of defendant to carry her there, and its failure so to do' gives a g-ood cause of action for damages against the defendant, although, as a matter of fact, it may have carried her to another point where the same connection would have been made, arid in charging the jury as hereinabove complained of, his Honor entirely eliminated this element from the case, and makes the whole cause of action depend on failure to make connection.

“IV. It was error in his Honor to- charge the jury as follows : ‘Now, gentlemen, negligence is generally said to be the want of due care. A railroad is required to exercise care with its passengers. It takes their money and agrees to transport them and is bo-und to exercise ordinary care,’ because:

“(a) A railroad company carrying passengers is required to exercise the highest degree o-f care known to- the law, and it is not sufficient that they exercise only ordinary care.

“(b) A common carrier cannot discharg-e itself from liability to a passenger by showing that it exercised towards its passenger ordinary cafe, and his Honor committed error in instructing the jury that all that was required of the defendant in this case was to- exercise ordinary care.

“V.

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Related

Anderson v. South Carolina & Georgia R. R.
58 S.E. 149 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 265, 71 S.C. 532, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latour-v-southern-ry-sc-1905.