N. & W. Railroad v. Wysor

82 Va. 250, 1886 Va. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 8, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 82 Va. 250 (N. & W. Railroad v. Wysor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. & W. Railroad v. Wysor, 82 Va. 250, 1886 Va. LEXIS 27 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit is a common law action of trespass on the case for damages for the alleged violation by the defendant company of its special contract with the plaintiff, embodied in the terms and conditions of what is called a “commutation ticket,” and entitled on its face: “No. 161. Norfolk and Western Railroad Company. 2,500 mile ticket. Form C. Good over the Norfolk and Western railroad, and all divisions, and Shenandoah Valley railroad.” There was a general demurrer to the declaration, which was overruled. by the court. The declaration sets out a special contract, made by the plaintiff with the defendant for the transportation of the plaintiff over the roads of the defendant at a rate greatly less than the regular passenger fare. To show his rights as a passenger, and the defendant’s duties to him as such, the plaintiff sets out in his declaration the special contract of carriage as contained in his said commutation ticket. This said contract contains and expresses certain conditions and stipulations, with the reservation of distinct rights to the company, which the plaintiff accepted by a writing signed by him “in consideration of the reduced rates at which the ticket was sold to him.” These said conditions and stipulations, thus distinctly set out in the contract itself, are fully and particularly explained in the [255]*255“instructions to conductors,” which are printed in the ticket, and to which the attention of the plaintiff was specially called before he signed and accepted the contract of which they are part and parcel, and which, when read, admit of no doubt or question as to what was the intent of the parties when the contract was entered into as to the mode in which it was to be performed.

To entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action for an alleged violation of this contract, he must aver in his declaration-, and prove that he had faithfully performed his part of the contract, or was willing and ready to perform it, but was prevented by the failure or inability of the railroad company to perform it on their part.

The declaration nowhere alleges, avers, or pretends that the plaintiff had complied with the terms of the contract and performed what was required of him; hut the averments of his declaration show that he had willfully and deliberately violated both the letter and spirit of the contract, and had assumed such an attitude towards the defendant railroad company and its servants, as to prevent entirely the performance of the contract between him and the company, as it was intended and agreed. The contract is entire, and it must be construed as a whole. To strike out the conditions and stipulations which constitute the consideration or inducement to the company to enter into the special contract to carry the plaintiff at a reduced rate—only a little more than one-half of their regular fare— would be to destroy the contract and deprive it of its character as a special contract differing from that implied in the regular tickets sold by the company, and which the law makes in favor of every passenger who gets upon the train and pays his full passenger fare. For the foregoing reasons the demurrer to the declaration should have been sustained. But the decía[256]*256ration is demurrable'on the ground of a misjoinder of actions. The first and second counts are ex contractu, the third and last count is ex delicto—for a violent, willful, and malicious assault and battery. “Actions in tort cannot be joined, with causes arising out of contract.” 4 Minor’s Inst. 366.

“The consequences of a misjoinder of counts or causes of action are more material than in case of a single count being defective; for, in the case of a misjoinder, however perfect the counts may respectively be in themselves, the declaration will be bad on general demurrer, but not (under our statute of jeofails—Code 1873, chapter 177, section 3) on motion in arrest of judgment or writ or error, unless a demurrer had been put in and overruled.” 1 Chitty’s Pleadings, page 236; 4 Minor’s Inst., page 367; Womack v. Circle, 29 Gratt. 196.

The counsel for the plaintiff in error waived the demurrer, and requested this court to decide this case upon the facts in the record and the law applicable to the facts. It appears from the evidence that PI. C. Wysor, the defendant in error, who is the plaintiff in this suit, on the 30th day of June, 1884, got upon the train of the defendant company at Dublin, in Pulaski county, to go to Central depot, a distance of eight miles; that he was the owner of a twenty-five-hundred-mile commutation ticket or book, issued to him by the said company, numbered 161, containing the following “conditions”: “Only the two persons named in this contract are entitled to use the coupons herein. It entitles the authorized holder to travel to the extent of the miles indicated on the regular passenger trains, provided always, that he enters or leaves said trains at the regular stations of the company, as appears in its published schedules, at points at which it takes or leaves other passengers. The usual amount of locked personal baggage, &c. * * Coupons not good for passage if detached. In [257]*257consideration of the reduced rates at which this ticket is sold [we] hereby accept the above conditions.

[Signed] “Henry C. Wysor,
“S. Baskerville.”

This commutation ticket or book has, conspicuously, “Instructions to Conductors.” First.—Conductors will detach coupons to cover number of miles passenger travels, and return same to auditor, together with other collections. Second.—Coupons from this book must not under any circumstances be accepted for passage if detached. Third.—Take up and return the cover of this book as soon as all, the coupons are detached. Fourth.—This ticket must not be honored unless it bears the stamp of office issuing the same.

[Signed] A. Pope,
General Passenger and Ticket Agent.

Said ticket had coupons attached, so that the exact number of miles the passenger desired to travel could be readily detached. The said H. C. Wysor, the plaintiff, ordered the ticket through the defendant company’s station agent at Dublin, from the general passenger and ticket agent of the company at Roanoke, Va.; who, as he knew, could only issue them, and who only could issue orders and instructions to the conductors for the regulation and running of the trains. And when he received the ticket or book he read the “instructions to conductors” on the inside of the said ticket to which his attention was particularly called, and he then read and signed the contract on the inside of the front cover of said ticket, and paid the said agent the fifty dollars and took the book. On the said 30th day of June, 1884, when the conductor of the train of defendant company, one Cabell Childress, came into the car, soon after the train got in motion from Dublin going east, he saw the plaintiff, Wysor, in [258]*258the car, and as he approached him to collect his fare he saw him in the act of detaching the coupons from his commutation ticket. He at once extended his hand towards the plaintiff, saying: “Stop; don’t do that.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Levy v. Runnells (In Re Landbank Equity Corp.)
66 B.R. 949 (E.D. Virginia, 1986)
Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. O'Flaherty
88 S.E. 312 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1916)
Pullman Car Co. v. Krauss
40 So. 398 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)
United Railways & Electric Co. v. Hardesty
57 L.R.A. 275 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
Gregory v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
100 Iowa 345 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1896)
Norfolk & Western Railroad v. Anderson
17 S.E. 757 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1893)
Womack v. Circle
29 Va. 192 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1877)
Norfolk & Petersburg R. R. v. Ormsby
27 Va. 455 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1876)
Farish & Co. v. Reigle
11 Gratt. 697 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1854)
Snead v. Coleman
7 Gratt. 300 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Va. 250, 1886 Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-w-railroad-v-wysor-va-1886.