Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Price

125 Tenn. 646
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 125 Tenn. 646 (Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Price, 125 Tenn. 646 (Tenn. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by Z. T. Price and wife, Amelia Price, against the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Company and the Pullman Palace Car Company, to recover damages for the expulsion of Mrs. Price from a sleeping car at Tifton, Ga., in September, 1901’.

The suit was brought before a magistrate. There was a judgment there for $500 against the railway company, which was affirmed by the circuit court and by the court of civil appeals. The suit was dismissed in the circuit court as to the Pullman Palace Car Company by consent of counsel for the plaintiffs below. A writ of certiorari was granted by this court to review the action of the court of civil appeals, and the case has been heard here.

Upon the trial of this case in the circuit court, counsel for the railway company requested the judge to reduce his findings to writing. The judge replied that it was a rule of his court, when requests of this character were made, to require the attorney for the successful party to [649]*649prepare the written finding of facts. In accordance with this demand of the trial judge, there was a written finding of facts prepared by the attorney for plaintiffs below. It was signed by the judge and is put into the record as his finding.

This practice is improper. It is no compliance with the statute (Shannon’s Code, section 4684), which requires circuit judges to make these findings of fact in writing upon the request of either party to the suit. Such findings are accorded the highest dignity in the appellate courts of Tennessee. They are looked to as embodying a fair statement of all the essential facts in the record, and this court has said, in Hinton v. Insurance Co., 110 Tenn., 130, 72 S. W., 118, that it will not go outside this finding and examine the record at large for the facts of the case, but will only look to the record to see if the findings of fact are supported by any evidence. There are other cases, familiar to the profession, which further illustrate the weight and force that are here given to these findings of the trial judge.

The preparation of such a finding, being a matter of so much importance and a high judicial function, cannot properly be intrusted to counsel. Counsel have a natural bias with respect to cases in which they are engaged that makes it well-nigh impossible for them to fairly and fully present all the facts as the judge would do. We are of opinion, therefore, that his honor was in error in delegating the preparation of the duty imposed upon him by the statute to counsel in the case, and that the finding in this record cannot be looked to by us and [650]*650treated as a statutory finding of facts by tbe trial judge. Had exception been taken, tbe case would have been reversed on this account.

However, no error being assigned to this action of the trial judge, we have examined tbe record, as if no special finding bad been requested, to see if there is evidence to sustain tbe judgment below. There is really no controversy with reference to tbe determinative facts of this case. •

In tbe spring of 1907, Mrs. Amelia Price, who was a delicate woman, troubled with asthma and in tbe habit of spending her winters in tbe South, purchased, in Jacksonville, Fla., a round-trip ticket to Nashville and return. This ticket was procured from tbe agent of tbe Georgia Southern & Florida Railroad Company. It read over that raod from Jacksonville to Macon, over tbe Central of Georgia from Macon to Atlanta, and over tbe lines of tbe plaintiff in error from Atlanta to Nashville.

In conformity with a stipulation in this ticket, upon her arrival in Nashville, Mrs. Price deposited tbe same with tbe agent of plaintiff in error at tbe Union station in Nashville, pending her return to Jacksonville, paying a small fee in this connection.

When she was about ready to go back'to Florida, in September, 1907, she went to tbe Union station at Nashville with tbe intention of buying sleeping car accommodations from Nashville to Jacksonville. She was there told that sleeping car space was sold at tbe Maxwell House, and tbe agent at tbe Union station gave her a slip, or routing, as it was called, purporting to show tbe [651]*651character of her railroad transportation, and she took this slip to the agent of the plaintiff in error in the Maxwell House, where the city office of the plaintiff in error was maintained. From the latter agent she purchased a berth in a sleeper running through from Nashville to Jacksonville; it being, according to the Pullman check given her, “Lower Bérth No. 8, car No. 1, Nashville to Jacksonville.”

On the day after procuring her sleeping car ticket, she returned to the Union station and procured her railroad ticket, and embarked in a sleeper on a train leaving Nashville at 9:30 a. m., known as the “Dixie Flyer.” Her tickets were examined by the gateman and others prior to her boarding this sleeper and this train, and she was assigned to the berth called for by her Pullman check.

There is some evidence indicating that she was changed from one sleeper to another later in the same day, probably after she. had passed Atlanta and gone off the lines of plaintiff in error. This change is not a material circumstance in the case, if it happened, as “there was no car on the Dixie Flyer going from Nashville to Jacksonville over the route indicated by her ticket. At any rate, she appears to have retired that night without interruption, but about 1 o’clock she was awakened, and, upon looking out, saw the Pullman conductor and the railroad conductor by the side of her berth. They informed her that her ticket was not good over the line traversed by -the sleeper in which she was located, further than Tifton. They told her that if she [652]*652wished to remain in this sleeper, and go on to Jacksonville, it would be necessary for.her to pay four dollars and fifty cents additional fare; that, if she was not willing to pay this additional fare, she would have to get off at Tifton, which place they would reach in about ■one hour. She decided to get off at Tifton, and did so, remaining for an hour or so, when she caught another train for Jacksonville, and reached there somewhat later than she would have done, had she continued on the train from Avhich she was removed. She was, as said before, a delicate woman, and there is testimony indicating that the exposure and excitement incident to her being removed-from the train at Tifton brought on an attack of asthma, which caused her considerable inconvenience and suffering.

The record shows that during the year of .1907, there was a line of through sleepers operating between Nashville and Jacksonville, but that the route of these sleepers was as follows:

From Nashville to Atlanta over the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Eailway.

From Atlanta to Macon over the Central of Georgia Railroad.

From Macon to Tifton over the Georgia Southern & Florida Railroad.

From Tifton to Jacksonville over the Atlantic Coast Line.

The route of these sleepers, it will be seen, was the same as the route of Mrs. Price’s ticket, up to Tifton, Ga., but from Tifton to Jacksonville the sleeper went [653]*653over the Atlantic Coast Line, while her ticket read over the Georgia Southern & Florida Railroad.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Tenn. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-chattanooga-st-louis-railway-co-v-price-tenn-1911.