Pullman Co. v. Walton

239 S.W. 385, 152 Ark. 633, 23 A.L.R. 1298, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 3, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 385 (Pullman Co. v. Walton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman Co. v. Walton, 239 S.W. 385, 152 Ark. 633, 23 A.L.R. 1298, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 92 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This appeal involves three actions, instituted separately against appellant by appellees and later consolidated, to recover damages alleged to have resulted from failure to furnish sleeping car berths on a car operated from Kansas City, Missouri, to Clarksville, Arkansas. One of the actions was instituted by appellee Lee Walton in his own individual right; another was instituted by Lee Walton as administrator of the estate of Jesse Walton, deceased; and ihe third action was instituted by Nora Walton. Nora Walton was the wife of Jesse Walton, now deceased, and Lee Walton was a brother of the deceased. All of them lived near Clarksville, Arkansas, and Jesse Walton fell into ill health and had to go to a point in Colorado. He was afflicted with tuberculosis and gradually grew worse. So in April, 1920, when it was determined that he could not recover his health, deceased called upon his brother, Lee Walton, to come to Colorado and take him back to his home at Clarksville.

In compliance with his brother’s request, Lee Walton went to Colorado, and the party started back on the journey to Clarksville. Deceased was unable to travel alone and had to be carried about on a cot between trains, and while traveling on the car had to be carried back and forth to the toilet. He was then in a very low state of health, and died in about a month after returning home.

He was carried in a baggage car as far as Pueblo, Colorado, and there sleeping car accommodations were obtained form Pueblo to Kansas City, and a reservation was secured by wire from Kansas City to Clarksville over the Missouri Pacific Railroad.

■ The party reached Kansas City about 8 o’clock in the evening, and Lee Walton went to the Pullman ticket window in the station to purchase tickets for the berths designated in the reservation which had been previously obtained. The reservation called for lower berths 7 and 8 in car 9, but when Walton made application for the tickets he was told by the agent that car 9 would not go out on the train that night, but that car 8 would go out, and the agent sold Walton lower berths numbers 4 and 5 in car 8, Walton consenting to that change in the designation of the berths.

The train was to leave at 10 o’clock that .night, and the Walton party applied at the entrance of the Pullman car for admittance, but the conductor refused to admit them on the ground that the berths for which their tickets called had already been sold and occupied.

There is conflict in the testimony about the way the tickets read, but it is undisputed that there was a discrepancy in the designation of the berths, and that the conductor refused to admit the party into the car for the purpose of occupying the berths designated.

There is also a conflict in certain other features of the testimony as to what occurred after the Walton party appeared at the Pullman car. Lee Walton testified that when the conductor refused to admit him he stated that all of the berths in the car had been taken. He states that he then asked the conductor to furnish them at least one berth for his sick brother, but the conductor told him that every berth in the car had been taken, and that no accommodations could be furnished. He states that it was nearly time for the train to start, and he gave the tickets to a station porter with instructions to return the tickets to the ticket office in the station and to ascertain whether or not another berth could be obtained; that just before the train left the porter returned and handed him back his money for the tickets. He testified that it was so near the time for the train to leave that he was afraid to return to the ticket office himself, and that the Pullman conductor notified him that the train was about to leave.

The conductor testified that he refused to admit Walton to the car for the reason that his ticket called for berths in car number 9 when there was no such car to go out on the train. He testified that when this occurred it was thirty minutes before time for the departure of the train, and that he told Walton to go hack to the ticket office and get his berth tickets changed; that he saw no more of Walton and that no further request was made of him.

As the result of failure to get into the sleeping car, the Walton party went into the day coach — a chair car— and rode there from Kansas City to Clarksville. The schedule time for the trip was fifteen hours, but the train was three hours late when it arrived a,t Clarksville. The whole of the night was taken up in the ride from Kansas City to Coffeyville, the remainder of the trip being in the day time.

The testimony shows that Jesse Walton was very feeble at the time and was absolutely helpless. His brother made a resting place for him out of two seats with suit cases and 'boxes in between, but he was very uncomfortable all night and got little, if any, rest. The next day his temperature was considerably higher, and the evidence is that he suffered great inconvenience, discomfort and pain in failing to get a berth to sleep in. He had to be carried to the toilet several times during the night, and also suffered from being near the door, which was opened and slammed at stations when passengers were going in and out.

The jury awarded damages to the estate of Jesse Walton in the sum of $1,000, and awarded damages to each of the other appellees in their individual capacities in the sum of $250.

The conflicts in the testimony have been settled by the verdict of the jury, and the evidence was sufficient to warrant a finding in favor of appellees for the recovery of damages.

There is no question involved of the right of the sleeping car company to require the purchase and exhibition of tickets and to promulgate and enforce rules with respect to the operation of its cars. This does not, however, absolve the company from liability for negligence of its servants in refusing to furnish accommodations in accordance with tickets purchased by patrons, and the company was not absolved from liability in this instance by the fact that the holders of the tickets surrendered them and accepted the price of the tickets in return. This is true for the reason that appellee had then been deprived of the use of the tickets by the refusal of the conductor to admit them to the car. In other words, it was not a voluntary surrender of the tickets in the sense that there was a cancellation or rescission of the contract, the terms of which had already been broken by the company’s servant in refusing to admit the passengers into the car. All the passengers could do then was to surrender the tickets and accept return of the money, and the acceptance of the money did not waive the wrong or negligence of the servants in failing to comply with the contract.

The ticket agent at Kansas City who sold the Pullman tickets to Lee Walton testified that when the station porter came back to the office with the tickets he informed the porter of the mistake and told him to report to Walton that upper berth numbers 4 and 5 were unoccupied and that he could obtain them from the conductor on the train when the diagram was sent down. It is insisted that Walton was bound by this information imparted to the porter, even though it was not communicated to him.

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Related

The Pullman Company v. Anderson, Administrator
172 S.W.2d 431 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W. 385, 152 Ark. 633, 23 A.L.R. 1298, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullman-co-v-walton-ark-1922.