Matthews v. Southern Ry. System

157 F.2d 609, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 263, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 1946
Docket9062-9064
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 157 F.2d 609 (Matthews v. Southern Ry. System) 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
Matthews v. Southern Ry. System, 157 F.2d 609, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 263, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759 (D.C. Cir. 1946).

Opinions

PRETTYMAN, Associate Justice.

Appellants brought civil actions in the District Court for damages for breach of contract and violation of their rights as interstate passengers on the appellee company’s railroad. The cases were consolidated for trial, trial was had before a jury, and the verdict was for the company.

Appellants bought tickets in Philadelphia for passage on appellee’s railroad to Greensboro, North Carolina; these tickets included through seat reservations for spec[610]*610ified seats in specified cars. They boarded the train at Philadelphia and occupied the designated seats: At Alexandria, Virginia, and again at Charlottesville, the conductor and others of the train crew requested that they move to other seats in another car. They refused. Agents of the railroad notified the Police Department of the City of Lynchburg, Virginia, “of the situation that confronted them.” At Lynchburg, Virginia, a police officer boarded the train. The conductor pointed out appellants. Some conversation ensued. The officer requested them to move to the other car, and, when they refused, he told them that in that case he would have to compel them to get off the train. Thereupon they got off.

The agents of the railroad and the police officer claimed to act pursuant to the Virginia statute1 which requires that railroads operating in th'at state furnish separate cars for white and colored passengers, and makes it a misdemeanor for any company or person to fail, refuse, or neglect to comply. Appellants claimed that the statute was invalid as to interstate passengers and, therefore, inapplicable to them, and that they had contracted with the railroad for specified seats in specified cars. It is now clear that their contention regarding the invalidity of the statute is correct.2

The railroad did not urge in the trial court the validity of the Virginia statute and does not urge it here. Neither does it rest its case upon its right to make and enforce reasonable regulations; nor does it claim that the conductor and train crew acted without the scope of their authority. Appellants claimed that the police officer acted on behalf of the railroad in ejecting them from the train, and that the conductor nnd train crew participated in the ejection. The railroad denied that claim. The issue before us is the correctness of the charge to the jury upon the law on that point. .

In the charge to the jury, the court said: “I used the expression ‘acting in behalf of the defendant’ in referring to the police officer, and this expression should be explained. If a person does nothing more than notify a police officer of an apparent violation of the law, such person is not answerable for the act of the police officer on his own initiative. Stated in another way, mere information to officers of the law tending to show that an offense has been committed, or that some person may be suspected of its commission is not enough, of itself, to establish the fact that the informer participated in the conduct of the officer. Therefore, if all the conductor did, or all that any of the employees of the company did was to notify the police officer of what he thought was a violation of the law, the defendant would not be liable for what the officer did on his own initiative. But, on the other hand, if the conductor or other employee did more than that, the defendant would be answerable for the police officer’s conduct.”

But the court continued, later in the charge:

“I shall now read you defendant’s prayer for ‘ instruction No. 2, which I have reframed, — and this is the one which is more or less repetitious of what I have already said to you.

“The jury are instructed that the burden of proving that the police officer at Lynch-burg acted on behalf of the defendant is on the plaintiffs, and if you find that the police officer, in requiring the plaintiffs to leave the defendant’s train, if you so find, was acting solely as a police officer of the city of Lynchburg, and not wholly or partly as an agent for defendant, then your verdict should be for the defendant.” (Emphasis supplied.)

This case is governed by the rules of law applicable to the obligations of a common carrier to its passengers and its liabilities for breach of those obligations. A common carrier is required to protect its passengers against assault or interfer[611]*611cnce with the peaceful completion of their journey.3 But an exception to the general rule is that an agent of the carrier is not required to interfere with a known officer of the law apparently engaged in the performance of his duty.4 This exception covers the action of an agent of a carrier in pointing out to a known officer of the law persons as to whom the officer inquires.5 Some cases hold that the exception does not apply if the agent knows that the arrest is illegal, 6 but that doctrine seems to contemplate factual knowledge and does not impose upon the carrier’s agent the obligation to decide questions of law. Under the exception, the railroad is not liable for action of its agents in notifying police officers of violations of law or suspected violations.7 This latter is so because of the basic public policy which protects such notification generally 8 and also because of the primary duty of a conductor of a train to protect passengers from injury by others; e. g., assault, robbery, insult^ disturbance, etc., in which cases the conductor must call the police. But the exception goes no further. It does not cover the "action of the agent in otherwise causing, procuring, assisting in, or participating in the arrest or ejection, or where the arrest is at the instance of the agent.9 In other words, there is a clear line between the action of an agent of a carrier in merely notifying the police of a violation of law or identifying persons at the request of a police officer, and his action in going beyond mere notification or identification and by some additional act procuring, causing, directing, or participating in an arrest or ejection. Liability in the latter cases rests upon joint tortfeasance or breach of contract, and not upon agency.10

It follows that the instruction to the jury by the trial court in the case at bar was correct except for the injection of the issue of agency. It was not necessary that the policeman be the agent of .the [612]*612railroad company in order that the company be liable. The court, therefore, erred in telling the jury that if it found that the police officer was not acting wholly or partly as an agent of defendant, the verdict must be for defendant.

Appellee urges that the cases were brought by plaintiffs and tried upon the theory of agency. We do not find that the record so presents them. The complaints lay the claim “by reason of the' defendant’s unlawful action through its agents and servants, as aforesaid, and through persons acting at its instance and behest, * * * and * * * by reason of the defendant’s' unlawful, wanton and reckless breach of contract, through its agents and servants, * * As we read those averments, the “agents and servants” were the conductor and the train crew, and the “persons acting at its instance and behest” were the police. Thus, the complaint lies in tort against the railroad as a tort-feasor with others, i.

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Matthews v. Southern Ry. System
157 F.2d 609 (D.C. Circuit, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
157 F.2d 609, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 263, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-southern-ry-system-cadc-1946.