Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Brame

63 S.E. 1018, 109 Va. 422, 1909 Va. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 1018 (Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Brame) 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
Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Brame, 63 S.E. 1018, 109 Va. 422, 1909 Va. LEXIS 50 (Va. 1909).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit instituted by William J. Brame to recover damages from the Norfolk and Western Eailway Company, on account of injuries received in consequence of an assault made upon him- by a brakeman of that road, while a passenger upon one of its trains.

The evidence shows that Brame entered the train of the Norfolk and Western Eailway Company in an intoxicated condition. As some of the witnesses express it, he was “violently drunk,” and some disagreement having arisen between himself [426]*426and the conductor as to the payment of a cash fare, he not having procured a ticket, he became very disorderly, and abusive, using vulgar and profane language, and conducting himself in a manner most insulting to the officials of the train, and offensive to its respectable passengers, one of whom was a lady. Thereupon, the conductor directed the brakeman to remove him from the passenger coach into the smoker, which the brakeman proceeded to do; and while the plaintiff, in his testimony, says that in the process of his removal he was kicked and cuffed and much mishandled, we think it may be taken as established that no greater force uas exercised than the occasion justified, until the brakeman followed by the conductor • and pushing Brame before him carried him into the smoker, and there, as a passenger states who was in a position to see what occurred, Brame was thrown roughly into a seat. He was still very drunk, and seems to have made some movement of his hand, 'which the brakeman says he understood to be an effort to draw a weapon from his hip pocket. Whereupon, the brakeman, who is shown to have been a very powerful, active young man, struck Brame upon the jaw, breaking it and loosening a tooth, grasped him by the throat and called upon the conductor to search and disarm him. The conductor did search him, but found no weapon upon his person of any description. A disinterested passenger states that he saw Brame put his hand back towai'd his hip pocket and as far as his side pocket, “Very slowly as if 1o go after his handkerchief, and said, Til see you later;’ ” and that thereupon, Hite, the brakeman, “turned and hit him and knocked him against the window sill, and Mr. Johnson searched him.”

These are the material facts established by the testimony.

During the course of examination of the witnesses, several exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court, which are now assigned as error. The action of the court in granting and refusing instructions, and in overruling plaintiff in error’s motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, are also assigned as error.

[427]*427The exceptions to the evidence are to the refusal of the court to permit the defendant to prove that plaintiff had been drinking before he entered the train; that when under the influence of liquor he was quarrelsome; and that he was so disorderly in the store-room of a Mr. Penn during the afternoon of that day that he was requested to leave the store, and arrangements were made to expel him had he not voluntarily left. Another exception is to the action of the court in excluding proof that when the plaintiff applied for a ticket of the station agent he was refused upon the ground that he was too drunk to get on the train. Another exception is to the exclusion of the statement of the witness, Reynolds, that he got upon the train to collect a bill due him by Brame, whereas, Brame had stated in his evidence that Reynolds had gotten upon the train at his invitation.

If it were conceded that, with respect to one or more of these exceptions, the ruling of the court was erroneous, it would not be error for which the judgment complained of should be reversed. If Brame’s condition upon the train left any room for controversy or question, it might be that his condition a short time before he entered the train would be of value in enabling the jury to reach a right conclusion as to his condition and his conduct while upon the train; but his own testimony shows, and there is no room to doubt, that he was very drunk; that he was disorderly in his conduct, abusive and insulting to the officers of the train, and used language so indecent and offensive to respectable passengers as justify his removal from the day coach. But the crisis of the.situation is reached when, having removed him on account of his gross misconduct to the smoking compartment, the brakeman threw him roughly upon a seat, and struck him a blow which inflicted upon him a serious injury. His removal was justified by his conduct. The company would have been within its rights if he had been ejected from the train. But the question is, was the brakeman justified in making a violent assault upon him %

. The abusive language used by Brame, while reprehensible, did not excuse the assault.

[428]*428■ In section 704 of Bishop on Criminal Law, it is said: “Ho Avords, however provoking or insulting, or mere verbal threat, Avill so far justify a blow returned, though in actual passion, as to reduce the killing to the lower degree. It is plain, however, that words may give character to acts; and, in matter of evidence, are admissible to explain them. Hence, if there is a present demonstration of impending violence, which alone Avould be insufficient, acompanying words, added to the physical acts, may create such peril as will justify the killing of the aggressor, or reduce it to manslaughter.”

As it is commonly stated, words do not justify blows, though doubtless insulting language may be shown as extenuating the assault, and in mitigation of the damages sustained.

The turning point in this case is whether or not the insulting-language was accompanied by any act to AA-hich the Avords used gaA-e character, and which might reasonably have caused the brakeman to believe that the plaintiff then and there intended to make an attack up him; in which case, of course, he Avould haA-e had the right to protect himself against such apparently threatened attack, Avhether the same was real or not.

When AAe turn to the instructious, Ave find that they correctly propound the law as applied to the two conflicting views of the evidence presented on behalf of the.plaintiff and the defendant.

The jury Avere told that those in charge of a passenger train haA-e the right to preserve order, to remove disorderly passengers to such safe and -convenient placé as will prevent annoyance to passengers or trainmen; to stop a train and eject disorderly persons therefrom, employing ouly such force as may be necessary to accomplish these ends; and to overcome any resistance Avhich may be made by sxrch disorderly passengers; but that the officials of the train have no right to commit unnecessary violence, and if they do their principal must ansAver in damages; that insidting words and epithets from an intoxicated passenger Avill not justify an assault by those in charge of the train; but insulting words and epithets Avhich provoke an assault must be [429]

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 1018, 109 Va. 422, 1909 Va. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-western-railway-co-v-brame-va-1909.