New Orleans, Jackson, & Great Northern Railroad v. Statham

42 Miss. 607
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 42 Miss. 607 (New Orleans, Jackson, & Great Northern Railroad v. Statham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans, Jackson, & Great Northern Railroad v. Statham, 42 Miss. 607 (Mich. 1869).

Opinion

Shackelford, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of “trespass upon the case,” instituted by the defendant in error in the First District Circuit Court of Hinds county, against plaintiff in error.

It is alleged in the declaration, that on the 17th day of January, 1867, Statham purchased a ticket for Terry station on said road, and entered the cars of said road, the tain going south; that he was carried by the said Company’s engine beyond the platform of said station, and placed on the ground by said Company’s conductor.

That the train upon which he was a passenger that day did [610]*610■not stop a half-minute at said platform at Terry; that he was sick at the.time, and that the conductor knew it, and that he was unable to attend to himself; and that the conductor, Joseph H. Smith, persistently and insultingly refused to detain the train at the platform aforesaid the usual time for discharging passengers, or long enough for the friends of Stat-ham to remove him from the train; that he had to get off the train on the ground, and then was carried back “ from where he got off to the station-house.”

That when the conductor was appealed to by the friends of Statham and the bystanders to back to the platform to enable, Statham to get off, Smith profanely and blasphemously said' “he would not back the train for Jesus Christ.”

It concludes: “ For these wrongs and injuries he demands ten thousand dollars damages.”

The plea of not guilty was filed to this declaration.

Jury and verdict for defendant in error for $3275, and judgment thereon against plaintiff in error.

A motion', was made by plaintiffs in error for a new trial, which was overruled by the court.

To the ruling of the court in refusing the new trial the plaintiff in error excepted.

The bill of exceptions embraces the motion for a new trial; also all the testimony before the jury at the trial, and the instructions of the court given, and those refused and modified. The case is here by writ of error for revisa!.

There are five assignments of error. ■ The disposition of the questions raised on the motion for a new tidal, and made here the grounds for the first assignment of error, will settle all the points presented for our consideration in the four other assignments of error, which are mere repetitions of the grounds for a new trial. ■ .

No special or pecuniary damage was sustained by the defendant in error by the, act complained of in his declaration. No attempt was made on the trial- to prove that he received any injury to his health or person, or that he sustained the least pe[611]*611cuniary loss by his getting off the car at the point he reached the ground.

Therefore it must be conceded by the defendant in error that the verdict in this case was for exemplary or punitive damages.

To warrant a jury in finding a verdict for exemplary or punitive damages, either malice, violence, fraud, or oppression must be shown to have mingled in the acts complained of. Sedgwick on Damages.

Testing the case under consideration by this rule, we shall determine, first, whether the verdict was against the law and the evidence ” —this being the first ground insisted upon on the trial of the motion for a new trial.

To arrive at a correct conclusion upon this point, we shall necessarily be compelled to bring into view much of the testimony.

We are unable to perceive, after an examination of the record, any act of the conductor, Joseph H. Smith, towards the defendant in error, which savors of rudeness, violence, malice, fraud, or oppression.

Dr. Thompson, the principal witness for the defendant in error, states that he called the attention of the man he supposed to be the conductor, to Mr. Statham, when he called upon him for his ticket, and said “ he was very sick; that he was to get out at Terry; ” that “ Ms reason for doing so (as he supposed he was the conductor) was, that he might stop the cars at Terry station long enough for Statham to be taken out of the cars.”

It will be observed that this witness did not inform the conductor that he wished him to delay the train longer than usual. He did not inform him that Mr. Statham. needed assistance in getting out of the cars, or that he wanted the conductor, or the employees of the company, to assist him in getting out of the car.

Neither did his friend Lenoir make any such request. The defendant in error made no statement to the conductor that he needed assistance to enable him to leave the train, or that he [612]*612desired Mm to assist him. He failed to give the conductor the least intimation that he was unable to get out of the car without assistance.

. There was no proof at the trial that Mr. Statham was speechless on the occasion.

It seems clear that the friends of Statham, as well as Statham himself, neglected to make such statements to the conductor as should require him to pursue any other course, other than the usual routine of business, when he reached Terry station.

Thompson and Lenoir-, as shown by the testimony of Thompson, carried Statham from the hotel in Jackson to the hack which transported him to the depot in Jackson.

Could they not have done the same thing at Terry station?

There is no reason given why it was not done ; Lenoir and Thompson were to get off at Terry.

Thompson shows conclusively that there was no attempt made by any one to help Statham from the cars on the arrival of the train at the station.

Thompson says he stationed himself at the door, and “junvped off to hunt assistance,” arid met Mr. Seal, and informed him that Mr. Statham was in the ear, and pointed to the one he was in, and turned to find other assistance; that he was looking for other assistance, and the cars passed on before he found any.”

It is not shown by the testimony of Statham, or any of his witnesses, that he could not walk with assistance.

The contrary appears from the proof: it is shown, and not denied by Statham,'that, with the assistance of Lenoir and Seal, Statham walked out of the car on to the platform of the car, and from thence walked down the steps of the car to the ground; and was then immediately placed in a chair procured before from the station-house, and from thence carried all the way to the station-house, across the platform of the station.

Statham appeared on the platform of the car most distant from the platform of the station. It was just as easy for him to have walked to the end of the car he was in, which w-as [613]*613shown by the testimony to have been within' six or eight feet from the station platform, as it was for him to go where he presented himself for debarkation.

Having gotten to the end of the car farthest from the station platform and the ladies’ car, there certainly could be no impediment in the way to the ladies’ car. At all events, none was shown' at the trial. If he had gone into the ladies’ car, he could have gotten from it to the station platform.

By his not taking this course, his action and that of his friends must be considered in this particular as voluntary, and done from their own choice. ■

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Bluebook (online)
42 Miss. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-jackson-great-northern-railroad-v-statham-miss-1869.