Norman v. East Carolina Railway Co.

77 S.E. 345, 161 N.C. 330, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 5, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 345 (Norman v. East Carolina Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman v. East Carolina Railway Co., 77 S.E. 345, 161 N.C. 330, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 231 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

*335 Allest, J.

Tbe plaintiff paid the usual and customary fare for bis ticket, and was granted no right or privilege in consideration of a reduced rate.

Under these circumstances, the ticket was in the nature of a receipt for the passage money, and its office was to furnish evidence to the agents of the company that the bearer was entitled to be carried.

It was. prima fade evidence that the holder had paid the regular price for it, and had the right to be transported, and was evidence of an agreement on the part of the defendant to carry him to his destination for a consideration paid. 1 Fet. Cor., sec. 275; Boyd v. Spencer, 103 Ga., 146.

The plaintiff performed his part, of the contract and was entitled to a valid ticket, and in the absence of evidence of assent on his part prior to or at the time of the purchase, was not bound by a stipulation rendering the ticket invalid, as there was no consideration to support the stipulation.

The Supreme Court of Tennessee, speaking of this question in R. R. v. Turner, 100 Tenn., 223, says: “¥e are also of opinion that the mere stamping or printing of a limitation or condition upon the back or face of a ticket, and the acceptance of such ticket by a passenger, without more, is not sufficient to bind him to such condition or limitation, in the absence of actual notice to him of such condition or limitation and his assent thereto when he purchases the ticket. It cannot be presumed that every person buying a railroad ticket, for ordinary and general use, will, in the hurry and bustle of travel, stop to read and critically inspect his ticket. As a matter of fact, but little opportunity is afforded him to do so. He generally takes his place in the crowd at the ticket window, produces and hands over his money with a request for a ticket to destination. His money is received. The ticket is produced, and, after being stamped, is handed to him through the ticket window. He has had no opportunity to see what is upon it, and has no time, in the rush, to stop and read and consider what may be printed or stamped on its face or back, and when he has paid full fare there is no occasion for his doing so, inasmuch as he can safely *336 rely upon the contract which the law makes for him. Ordinarily local tickets do not generally contain any terms of contract, and are not intended to do so. They are mere tokens to the passenger and vouchers for the conductor, adopted for convenience to show that the passenger has paid his fare from one place to another, very much in the nature of baggage checks. The contract is in fact made when the ticket is purchased, and if it is different from what the law would imply, it must be so stated and assented to when the ticket is delivered.' . . . This rule, which we consider to be settled by the weight of authority and by reason, by no means prevents a railroad com.pany from selling special tickets for special trains with limitations and conditions, such as excursion, round-trip, commutation, and mileage tickets, when the conditions and limitations are known to the purchaser and assented to by him orally or in writing, and he has paid for such ticket less than the usual fare: When tickets are sold at reduced rates, it has been very wisely said that the purchaser should, in consideration of such reduced fare or greater privileges, expect and look for some conditions, limitations, and terms different from those attaching to tickets generally, and be on his guard to become informed of them. But there is no such obligation upon the ordinary passenger, who pays the usual or full fare and asks for no reduced rates or special privileges, and he has a right to expect an unlimited ticket.”

We quote at length from the opinion because the rule with its limitation is stated clearly and accurately.

Nor was there anything on the ticket to notify the plaintiff or to indicate to him that he was entering into a contract by which the ticket delivered to him would be invalid if the station at which it was issued was not stamped on the back, and while common carriers may make reasonable rules and regulations, they cannot bind persons dealing with them by special contracts of which they have no notice, and not contained in the writing.

In construing contracts of this kind, “language of uncertain or doubtful meaning should generally be taken in its strongest sense against the company by which the ticket was issued and *337 sold, and in favor of tbe purchaser. This rule of construction is in accord with common sense. It may be supposed that one wbo bimself writes or prepares a written contract in which he is interested will be sure to use language which he conceives is best adapted to secure to himself the full benefit of everything he could claim under the agreement the writing is intended to evidence. It is therefore allowable and just, at the instance of the opposite party, to scan critically the phraseology employed. This is obviously right for the additional reason that as the purchaser had nothing whatever to do with preparing the ticket, and had no voice in the wording of it, it was his right to claim under it the benefit of the strongest interpretation which could be made in his favor.” 1 Pet. Cor., sec. 276.

The ticket does not say it will be void if the station is not stamped on the back, nor is there anything to suggest that there was any obligation on the plaintiff except to present it; and as it was evidence that the regular fare had been paid, and required no identification of the purchaser, we fail to see how the defendant could have suffered loss by accepting it. Indeed, so far as we are advised, from the evidence, the only useful purpose that could be served by stamping on the back is to enable the defendant to check up its agents.

If, however, the statement on the ticket is contractual and is equivalent to a stipulation that the ticket will be invalid unless the station at which it was issued is stamped on the back, there is no evidence that the plaintiff had notice of such requirement, and as he paid for a valid ticket, he had the right to assume that the agent had given him what he had paid for. Wood Railways, vol. 3, sec. 349; R. R. v. Turner, 100 Tenn., 223; Head v. R. R., 79 Ga., 358; R. R. v. Dougherty, 86 Ga., 744; Ellsworth v. R. R., 95 Iowa, 107.

The authorities cited fully support the text in section 349 of vol. 1 of Wood on Railways, from which we quote: “Where the passenger asks and pays for a certain ticket, and the station agent by mistake gives him a different one, which does not entitle him to the passage desired, the conductor has no right to expel him, and the company is liable in damages if he is *338 expelled. Tbe passenger bas a right to rely on tbe agent to give him tbe right ticket. There are authorities which hold the other way, but it seems that their views are indefensible.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 345, 161 N.C. 330, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-v-east-carolina-railway-co-nc-1913.