Parris v. Deering Southwestern Railway Co.

208 S.W. 97, 203 Mo. App. 182, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 167
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 97 (Parris v. Deering Southwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parris v. Deering Southwestern Railway Co., 208 S.W. 97, 203 Mo. App. 182, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 167 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

The plaintiff, appellant, instituted suit against the defendant, alleging that he was a passenger on one of defendant’s trains and that he hoarded the same at Ward Avenue, in the city of Caruthersville, Missouri, and shortly after the train started to move, the conductor in charge of the train wilfully, maliciously and wantonly assaulted plaintiff without any cause or provocation on the part *183 of plaintiff; that at the time he was assaulted, plaintiff’s back was turned to the conductor and he had no knowledge there was an assault about to be made upon him; that he struck him several times over the head with a “Billy,” causing severe and lasting wounds on and about his head. Judgment was asked for $1,000 compensatory damages, and $5,000 exemplary damages.

The answer of the defendant denies that the conductor in charge of the train wilfully, maliciously and wantonly assaulted plaintiff, and further answering charges that plaintiff was at the time on said train, was drunk and disorderly, and was using loud, boisterous and indecent language in the presence of the passengers on said train; that the conductor, as was his duty, tried to quiet the plaintiff and asked him to sit down and be quiet, but plaintiff refused and continued his loud and boisterous conduct to the annoyance and disturbance of the passengers, and, at the same time, had a large pocket knife, and that no one could make him sit down, and that, without provocation or cause, the plaintiff struck the defendant, who there upon struck plaintiff, causing his alleged injury, and that the striking by the conductor was done under the necessity of self defense, and that no more force was used than was necessary, and that all of it took place while the conductor was endeavorng to quiet plaintiff and cause him to sit down and cease. his disturbance.

There was a trial by a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The plaintiff, appellant, merely complains of certain instructions given. It is conceded that there was evidence to sustain both the claim of the plaintiff and the defense of the Railroad Company. The appellant, therefore, merely brings the record proper and the instructions complained of to this court for review. The error complained of is contained in several of the instructions, but especially predominates instruction Number Two, given on behalf of the defendant, which *184 is as follows, we having italicized that portion complained of by appellant:

“Yon are further instructed that, if you find and believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff took passage on defendant’s train as testified to in this case, and that the plaintiff ivas rude and disorderly on the train and that he was using indecent and boisterous language in the presence and hearing of the other passsengers, then the court instructs you that it ivas the duty of the defendant’s condutor and braheman' in charge of said train to use whatever force that was nécesary to quiet plaintiff and to prevent him being disorderly and boisterous on the train, and to prevent him disturbing the passengers on the train, and if you further find and believe that the defendant’s conductor attempted to perform his duties in this respect as aforesaid, and that the plaintiff had a pocket knife in his hand and assaulted or attempted to assault or strike said conductor and that the conductor thereupon struck and hit plaintiff to defend himself and to prevent plaintiff from disturbinbg the passengers on the train, then the plaintiff cannot recover in this case and your verdict must be for the defendant.”

It will be seen at a glance on reading this instruction that the jury were told that under the law, where a passenger breaches the rule of the Company and acts in a disorderly manner then the servants in charge of the train have a right to quiet such passengers and bring him to order, and to use such force as is necessary to quiet the'.passenger and prevent him being disorderly. Such rule, we think, vests more power in the servants of a carrier than the law permits, as, under such rule, a conductor would have the right to continue carring the passenger who was acting disorderly, and could from time to time, if the disorder continued, whip him into submission. This is not the remedy that the' statute of this State provides for a breach of the reasonable rules .of a carrier, or for one' who has behaved in an offensive manner, or is *185 guilty of repeated violation of the rules. In such ease, the conductor has a right, under certain limitations, to eject him from the train. [See sec. 3093, R. S. 1909.]

The law is well settled in this State, as held in numerous opinions cited by both appellant and respondent, that it is not only the right, but the duty of the agents and servants in charge of a train to put a stop to disorderly and violent conduct of passengers on trains who transgress the rule of the Company and interfere and disturb the peace of the other passengers. The only remedy, however, which we have been able to find applicable to such conduct is the right to expel or reject such passenger form the trtain, and in doing this the conductor and servants have a right to use only such force as is necessary to make the ejection and with this necessarily goes the right of such servant in performing this duty to use such means as'are necessary in the defense of his person against the attacks and unlawful acts of a disorderly passenger in resisting ejection.

It is pointed out in 10th Corpus Juris, page 727, that the right of ejection may be exercised particularly where there is a statutory provision to that effect with reference to persons who annoy and disturb other passengers by the use of vulgar, indecent or profane language, or who are unruly or boisterous or offensive to the peril or discomfort of other passengers, or interference with the carrier’s business.

It is laid down in Hutchinson on Carriers, Vol. 2, page 1258, sec. 1082, that a passenger who refuses to obey reasonable regulations of the cariers forfeits his right to be carried, and at once puts himself in the condition of an intruder, and may be ejected. The same author, in section 1102, Yol. 2, holds that while care and kind treatment of the passenger is required of the carrier’s servants, there is a correlative duty on the part of the passenger to behave decently, and if the passenger assaults the servants of the carrier, the latter has a right to defend himself, and where personal *186 combat between tbe two is brought on by the passenger’s wrongful assault, and he is injured, the carrier will not be liable.

It must be borne in mind that the facts alleged by the plaintiff and defendant in this suit do not disclose a case where a disorderly and unruly passenger has assaulted and is injuring a fellow pasenger by acts of violence.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 97, 203 Mo. App. 182, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parris-v-deering-southwestern-railway-co-moctapp-1919.