Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Sandlin

272 S.W. 912, 209 Ky. 442, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 912 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Sandlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Sandlin, 272 S.W. 912, 209 Ky. 442, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 518 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

At the outset of this opinion, it will serve to clarify the situation if we first consider the nature of a railroad ticket. It is the rule in .some jurisdictions that a railroad ticket, at least until cancelled, is the contract of carriage complete and self-contained without reference to anything dehors. Appellant places the emphasis of its brief on this theory. The doctrine in other jurisdictions and the one fixed in Kentucky is that as between the passenger and the carrier the ticket is a mere moranduan of a contract, the real and true details of which are entered into before the delivery of the ticket. Although the soundness of this view is attacked, yet it is well settled by a .long line of decisions in this state, and we see no reason to depart from it. See Illinois Central R. R. Co. v. Fleming, 148 Ky. 473, 146 S. W. 1110; L. & E. Ry. Co. v. Lyons, *444 104 Ky. 23, 46 S. W. 209; I. C. R. Co. v. Jackson, 79 S. W. 1187. It is also the rule in this state, as established by these cases, that as between the passenger and conductor the ticket is customarily considered -as evidence of the passenger’s rights. The meaning of this rule is amplified and explained in the Jackson case, supra, where the court said:

“The conductor is absolved from the payment of any damage in ejecting a passenger in accordance with 'the terms of his ticket, provided that the ejection is not accompanied with unreasonable and unnecessary force or insult; but in such case the passenger’s right of action is against the carrier and the agent who gave him the erroneous ticket, or either, as he may elect. The criterion of recovery is limited to compensatory damages, in which is included mortification and humiliation consequent upon the wrongful ejection.”

In the Lyons case, supra, the court said that the action where the passenger is ejected because he presents a wrong ticket given him by the ticket agent is “essentially and in form ex contractu,” and it does not sound in tort as appellant contends.

With these principles in mind, we find that on October 4, 1922, appellee purchased a ticket from appellant’s ticket agent at Altro,' in Breathitt county, Kentucky. Appellee, a woman in very humble circumstances and of exceedingly limited education, purposed visiting her sick husband who- was confined in the state penitentiary at Frankfort. Her neighbors had raised for her a purse of $12.00 to enable her to take this trip. To make it, she had first to go to Lexington, thence to Frankfort with the return trip in the reverse order. She testifies, and in this is supported by one witness, that when she purchased her ticket she asked the ticket agent at Altro for one to Lexington, and gave him therefor four $1.00 bills, which it is conceded is the legal fare from Altro to Lexington. The ticket agent testifies, and in this he also is supported by one witness, that appellee requested a ticket to the first station beyond Jackson. On his asking her if she meant O. K. Junction, she replied in the-negative. When he suggested the next station after that — ■ - Elkatawa- — she said that was the one she wanted, whereupon he filled in with his own handwriting a ticket to that *445 place, and appellee paid Mm 'therefor the snm of 87 cents, the legal tariff for such a journey. Of course, it was for the jury to say which story concerning this transaction it believed. All this transpired about dusk or a little thereafter. Later train No. 2 of appellant came through Altro bound for Lexington. It was the last train until the next day and was not scheduled to stop at Elkatawa. The ticket ag-ent, although he had been such for some four months, .says he did not know this, and as there was no evidence to the contrary we must accept Ms statement. Appellee boarded this train and in due time gave her ticket to the conductor. He says that he called her attention to the fact that it was for a station at which the train did not stop and told her that she would have to get off at Jackson and wait there until the next day for a local train which would stop at Elkatawa. Appellee made no response to the conductor. Indeed she says she heard him make no such statement. He marked on her ticket that it had been used as far as Jackson and returned it to her. In the rush of business at Jackson where the train arrived in the middle of the night, the conductor did not observe that appellee had failed to leave the train. After it had left Jackson, he discovered appellee still in her seat. He says that he told her that she ought to have left the train at Jackson, and that although he had no right .to stop at Elkatawa still in order to avoid trouble he would stop the train there in order that she might alight. He says he "agreed to do this although he knew he would have to make his excuses to the appellant for such nonscheduled stop. Appellee testifies that no such thing occurred as the conductor says, but oii the contrary as the train neared Elkatawa the conductor came to her and told her that she would have to get off and on her inquiry if this .stop was Lexington he said that it was not, but Elkatawa; that on her protest that she was bound for Frankfort he replied that her ticket called for Elkatawa and there was where she would have to get off. The conductor says she voluntarily left the train when it stopped at Elkatawa. She says he took her by the arm and led her off. The evidence is clear though that no violence or rudeness was offered her at this point. After she had disembarked from the train .she found herself at a lonely station in the middle of a dark and drizzly night in great distress of mind. She says that she crossed a muddy road to a house opposite the station where after *446 some difficulty she aroused the occupants and asked for shelter. The owner directed her to a nearby house where she was unable to attract the attention of anybody. She returned to the first house and with the assistance of the owner finally got a place for the night. The next morning she was suffering from a sore throat as a result of her exposure and also from some nervousness, both of which were only temporary and of no long duration. The good people of the vicinity made up another purse and she again took up her journey to see her sick husband.

Alleging that the appellant by reason of her purchase of a ticket from Altro to Lexington had entered into an agreement to carry her to that point, but that despite such agreement it and its agents had wrongfully ejected her at Elkatawa whereby she was made sick and nervous and humiliated, appellee brought this suit against appellant and recovered therein a verdict of $500.00. From the judgment entered thereon appellant appeals.

It first insists that the evidence in this case demonstrates that the appellee pleaded one case and proved another, if any was proved. This contention is based on appellant’s theory, as stated, that the ticket which appellee secured at Altro was the contract of carriage; that the only agreement appellant made.was to carry appellee to Elkatawa, and. that her cause of action, if any, was in tort on account of the negligence of the ticket agent at Altro in giving her a wrong ticket.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 912, 209 Ky. 442, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-sandlin-kyctapphigh-1925.