Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy

102 U.S. 451, 26 L. Ed. 141, 12 Otto 451, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2053
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 22, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by274 cases

This text of 102 U.S. 451 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy) 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
Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy, 102 U.S. 451, 26 L. Ed. 141, 12 Otto 451, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2053 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of errorr from a judgment for the sum of $10,000, the amount assessed as damages sustained by the defendant in error, in consequence of personal injuries received while riding, as a passenger, in a- sleeping-car which belonged to the Pullman Palace Car Company, but constituting, at the ■time the injuries were received, a part of a train of cars managed and controlled by the Pennsylvania Company, as lessee and operator of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne, and Chicago Railway. The action was commenced in the Supreme Court of Cook County, Illinois, against the Pennsylvania Company, the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne, and Chicago Raikoad Company, and the Pullman Palace Car Company. It was subsequently dismissed by the plaintiff against all the defendants except the Pennsylvania Company, and then removed for trial, into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, where the judgment complained of was rendered.

The facts set forth in the bill of exceptions, so far as it is material to detail them, are these: —-

On'the 5th of June, 1876, Roy, the defendant in error, purchased at the office of the lessée company, in the city of Chicago, a “ first-class railroad ticket ” from -that city to Philadelphia, over the line of that company, paying therefor the sum of $14.40. At the same time and place, and of the same *453 person, he purchased a sleeping-car ticket, issued by the Pullman Palace Car Company, for the route between the same cities, and for that ticket he paid the additional sum of $5. He took the train the same day, going immediately, into the section of the sleeping-car corresponding to his ticket.

The next morning, at Alliance, Ohio, upon the invitation of a friend, travelling upon the same train, he entered the sleeping-car iii which that friend .was riding, and there engaged vfith him in conversation. While so engaged, the upper berth of the section in which they were sitting fell.' Thereupon the .porter of the sleeping-car came at once and put up the berth, saying it would not fall again. Shortly thereafter the befth fell a second time, striking the plaintiff upon the head, injuring his brain, incapacitating him from pursuing-his vocation, and necessitating medical treatment. c

After the second falling of the berth, ¡the brace or arm supporting it was found to be broken.

' The evidence 'introduced by the plaintiff tended also to show that the Pennsylvania Company provided cars in which passengers having railroad tickets could ride without purchasing a sleeping-car ticket; that Roy had much experience in travel-ling, 'and would have gone into one of those cars liad he not purchased a sleeping-car ticket; that at the time he purchased .it he did not know what company ran the sleepers, but upon . taking the train he ascertained it was a Pullman car; that the Pullman Palace Car Company was engaged in furnishing cars 'to be fun in the trains of railroad companies; that, besides the general conductor of the train, there was a conductor, in uniform, and a porter, whose duty it was to make up the berths and attend to the wants of passengers occupying the sleeping-car.

Upon the trial the plaintiff introduced a time and distance card of the 'defendant corporation, issued, published, and circulated by that' company during the year 1876, prior to the date of-his injuries. That card, referring to the “ Fort Waype and Pennsylvania R. R. line,” stated that three express trains left Chicago daily, one “ with popular vestibule sleeping-ear,” one “ with drawing-room and hotel car,” and onewith drawing-room sleeping-car.” It gave notice that “ passage, excursion, *454 and sleeping-car tickets ” could be purchased at the defendant company’s office in Chioago. Referring to the “ Fort Wayne and Pennsylvania.line,” the same card announced that “ no road offers equal facilities in the number of through trains, equipped-with Pullman palace sleeping-carsIt states, among the advantages of the “Pittsburg, Fort Wayne, and Pennsylvania through line,” that the latter was the “ only line running three ‡-hrough trains, with Pullman palace-ears,” and “ the only line running sleeping-cars from Chicago and intermediate stations to'Philadelphia' without change.” The same, card gave the rates charged for berths and sections in Pullman sleeping-cars from Chicago to points east of .that .city.

The defendant, to maintain the issues on its part, offered to prove —

1. That the sleeping-car in which the accident occurred, and all the sleeping-cars then and theretofore on the defendant’s line, since the 27th of January, 1870, were owned by the Pullman Palace Car Company, a corporation of the State of Illinois, and not by the defendant; that said sleeping-cars were run in the same trains with the defendant’s cars ; that holders of railroad tickets were entitled to ride in said sleeping-cars, provided they also held sleeping-car tickets.

2. That the Pullman Palace Car Company, and it only, issued ticket's for sale, entitling passengers to ride in said sleeping-cars ; that such tickets were plainly distinguishable from railroad tickets, and were sold at offices established by said company, and indicated as places for the sale of such' tickets; that- the plaintiff purchased' the sleeping-car ticket of the same person of whom he bought the railroad ticket; that the office where purchased indicated by plain lettering upon its door that it was a place for the sale of Pullman Palace Car Company tickets, as well as railroad tickets.

S. That the Pullman Palace Car Company employed persons to take charge of its cars,'and the latter, whilst in use, were in the immediate charge of a’ conductor and a porter employed by that company; that such conductor and porter were the only persons who had authority to manage and control the interior of said cars, and the berths and seats and the appurtenances thereto.

*455 To this proof the plaintiff objected, and the objection was sustained, to which, ruling the company excepted.

The court thereupon charged the jury that the proof tended “ to show that the injury was received by reason of the negligence of the defendant’s agents or servants, or by some negligence in the construction of the car in which the plaintiff was riding.” To t-hUt charge the company at the time excepted, upon the ground that it was unsupported by the testimony, and because it assumed as a fact that the persons in charge of the sleeping-car were the company’s agents or servants.

The court further charged the jury that “ the defendant has offered in your presence to prove that the car in which the plaintiff was injured was not the car or-the actual property of the defendant, but was the property of another corporation. But I instruct,, as a part of'the law of this case, that if the car composed a part of the train in which the plaintiff and other passengers were to be transported upon their journey, and the plaintiff was injured while in,that car, without any fault of his own, and by reason either of the defective construction of the car or by some negligence on the part of those having charge of the car, then the defendant is liable.” v

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 U.S. 451, 26 L. Ed. 141, 12 Otto 451, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-roy-scotus-1880.