New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Winter's Administrator

143 U.S. 60, 12 S. Ct. 356, 36 L. Ed. 71, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2009
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 1, 1892
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by128 cases

This text of 143 U.S. 60 (New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Winter's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Winter's Administrator, 143 U.S. 60, 12 S. Ct. 356, 36 L. Ed. 71, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2009 (1892).

Opinion

Me. Justice Lajviae,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

There were eleven assignments of error originally, based upon certain exceptions to the rulings of the court during the progress of the trial,- but in the brief of counsel for plaintiff, in error they have been reduced to- eight.- As the only one of thése exceptions that was properly saved, under oúr rules,- was that relating to the admission of .evidence as to what the ticket agent at Boston said to the plaintiff when he purchased his 'ticket,'we would, perhaps, be justified in limiting our consideration to; that point. Aside from this informality or .defect in the exceptions saved, however, and as the assignments of error all refer either directly or remotely to that point, and thus relate to but one subject, we shall consider them, not separately, but shall, for convenience, -treat them together. It is urged that the court erred (1) in- allowing the plaintiff . to testify as to what was said by the agent in Boston when he bought his ticket; (2) in its instructions to the jury upon this point, and *69 with respect to the rules and regulations of the • road relative - to stop-over checks; (3) in not giving certain instructions asked" for bj the defendant, upon the question of stop-over checks'; and (4) in not telling the jury, in effect, that it was their duty under all the evidence in the case, to bring in a verdict for the defendant. . .

The grounds upon which it is insisted, that the evidence referred to was inadmissible are, that the ticket, itself and the rules and regulations’ of. the road, with respect to stop-over checks, constitute the contract between the passenger and the road and the only evidence of such contract, and that no representations made by a ticket seller could be received to vary or change the. terms of such contract. This contention cannot be sustained, and is opposed to the authorities upon the subject. While it may be admitted, as a general rule, that the contract between the passenger and the railroad company is made up of the ticket which he purchases, and the rules and regulations of the.road, yet it does not follow that parol evidence of what was said between the passenger and the ticket seller from whom' he purchased his ticket, at the time of such purchase, is inadmissible, as going to make up the contract of ° carriage and forming a p'art of it. In the first place, passengers on railroad trains are not presumed to know the rules and regulations which are made for the guidance of the conductors and other employes of railroad companies, as to the internal affairs of the company, nor are they required to know them. Hufford v. Grand Rapids Railroad, 64 Michigan, 631. In this case there is no evidence, as already stated, that notice or knowledge of the existence of the rules of the defendant company, or what, they were, with respect to stop-over privileges, was brought home to the plaintiff at the time he purchased his ticket or at any time thereafter. There was nothing on the face of the ticket to show that a stop-over check was required of the passenger as a condition precedent to his. resuming his journey from Olean to Salamanca, after stopping off at the former place. It is shown by the evidence, that Olean w7as a station at which stop-over privileges were allowed. Under such circumstances, it was entirely proper for the passenger to make *70 inquiries of the ticket agent and to rely upon what the latter told him with respect to his stopping over at Olean. Hufford v. Grand Rapids Railroad, supra; Palmer v. Railroad, 3 So. Car. 580; Burnham v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 63 Maine, 298; Murdock v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 137 Mass. 293; Arnold v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 115 Penn. St. 135.

Upon this question, and also with respect to the action, of the first conductor and the regulations of the road relative to stop-over privileges, the court gave to the jury the following instructions: “That if the plaintiff’s testimony was true in regard to what took place between himself and the ticket agent, in Boston, and afterwards with the first conductor on the defendant’s train, and if the plaintiff, when he bought his ticket in .Boston, informed the ticket agent of his wish to stop off at the Olean station, and was then told by the ticket agent that he would have to speak to the conductor about that, and •between Binghamton and Olean the plaintiff informed the conductor' that he wished to stop over at Olean and the conductor, instead of giving the plaintiff a stop-over ticket, punched the plaintiff’s ticket and told him that was sufficient to give him the right to stop over at Olean and . afterwards to use the punched ticket between Olean and Salamanca, then, whatever the rules and regulations of the road were, the plaintiff was rightfully a passenger on the train at the time' of his expulsion, and the conductor had no right' to put him off for not paying his fare, and the ■ company was liable for the act of the conductor; that if, on the other hand, the plaintiff did not notify the conductor of his wish to stop over at Olean and received no such assurance from the conductor or from the ticket agent- as he has testified, then the punched ticket gave him no right to ride as a passenger on the train between Olean and Salamanca without paying his fare, and if he refused to pay his fare when demanded the conductor was justified in putting him off, and his offer to pay his fare after the train was stopped was too late, and did not give him the right to ride on the train, and the conductor was justified in expel-ling him, notwithstanding the offer.”

We think these instructions perfectly correct and that, upon *71 these points, they embodied substantially the whole law of the case. The gravamen of this action is the wrongful conduct of the conductor who ejected the plaintiff from the train. Whether the plaintiff told nothing but the truth with reference to what occurred on the train between him and the conductor before he was put off and at the time he was put off, or whether the jury believed all he testified to with reference to those matters, is not the question to be determined.' But, taking the case in this particular most strongly in favor of the defendant, under the evidence submitted, it must be admitted that the action of the conductor was inexcusable. He testified, among other things, (1) that he thought the plaintiff’s ticket was a limited one, and so reported it to his company, when, in truth and in fact, it was unlimited; thus showing carelessness and negligence in a most pronounced .degree. (2) That he knew, or had good reason for knowing, that the Binghamton-Salamanca coupon had not been used to the latter place, because it had been punched by Conductor Hurty, who had charge of the next preceding train to the one of which he had.charge; so that it was impossible for him to believe that the plaintiff was trying to ride on a ticket that had once been used over that part of the road.. But he tries to justify his conduct, in this particular, by saying that he would not have been authorized to carry the plaintiff on his tráin, anyway, without his having a stop-over check procured from the conductor of the train on which he had ridden to Olean.

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Bluebook (online)
143 U.S. 60, 12 S. Ct. 356, 36 L. Ed. 71, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-lake-erie-western-railroad-v-winters-administrator-scotus-1892.