Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Hocker

93 S.W. 1009, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 419
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 1009 (Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Hocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Hocker, 93 S.W. 1009, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 419 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

Samuel Hoeker brought this suit to recover damages of the Pullman Palace Car Company and the Kansas City Southern Railway Company. The allegations in substance being that on September 2, 1903, the plaintiff’s wife, with her baby, boarded one of the railway company’s trains at Neosho, Missouri, for the purpose of going to Texarkana, Texas; that after boarding same she purchased from the Pullman Company a berth in one of its cars, destined for Texarkana, by which it bound itself to furnish the usual accommodations to that point. After traveling in said sleeper to Winthrop, a station on said road, the agents and servants of defendants demanded that she vacate the sleeper and take a chair car, with the statement that they had orders to carry said sleeper back to Kansas City; that said demand was refused, and under the threat that if she did not leave said sleeper she would be carried back to Kansas City, she left said sleeper and was compelled to travel in a chair car to Texarkana from Winthrop; that said demand and threats were made in the presence of other passengers, and the insistence of said agents for her to leave the sleeper was prolonged for about an hour and attracted others to the sleeper, who would look and gaze at plaintiff’s wife and make remarks about her, all of *610 which caused her much mortification, humiliation and mental suffering; that thereupon she left the sleeper and rode to Texarkana, a distance of forty miles, in a chair car, which was far inferior in acommodations to the sleeper, etc.

The railway company answered that it furnished plaintiff’s wife a first class chair car, all it had agreed to furnish. That she left said sleeper voluntarily at the request of an acquaintance, ivho made the statement that the north-bound Pullman in which he was traveling had broken down and would be left at Texarkana, and it would be a great accommodation if plaintiff’s wife would vacate and allow his sick family to use the Pullman; that the railway company was operating a through train from Kansas City to Shrevesport, and hauled a Pullman sleeper each way, under an agreed charge with the Pullman Company, etc.; that the north-bound Pullman car for Kansas City had been disabled and left at Texarkana for repairs, that it was occupied by a large number of people who left it at Texarkana and had ridden in a chair car to Winthrop, some intending to make an all-night trip and some were sick; that no one riding in the sleeper was going beyond Texarkana, and then plaintiff’s wife was requested to vacate so the sleeper might be attached to the north-bound train; that it had a right under the circumstances, for the accommodation of its passengers, to turn the sleeper back to Kansas City.

The Pullman Car Company answered that it had no control over the movements of said sleeper, but that it was entirely under the control of the railway company. It denied that it was a carrier of passengers and that it had made a contract of carriage; that its contract with plaintiff’s wife bound it to assign her a berth, which berth, or a similar one, she would be entitled to use until the car should be hauled to Texarkana, should said railway company transport same to that point. That the purchase from the railway company of a first-class ticket was a condition precedent to her procuring accommodations in the sleeper, and that if plaintiff’s wife was prevented from continuing said journey in said sleeper it was because the railway company refused to haul it farther, and it was no fault of the Pullman Company.

Plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, excepting to the answer of the railway company and a plea that the sleeper was a part of said train, pulled by a locomotive of said railway company, and denied that his wife left said sleeper on the solicitation of an acquaintance, but that she left said sleeper because of the insistent, peremptory demand of the agents and servants of defendants.

A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment against both defendants, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The facts are that Mrs. Hocker, wife of plaintiff, bought at Texarkana a round trip ticket to Keosho, Missouri, over the Kansas City Southern Bailway. On September 2, 1903, desiring to return, she boarded a train with a Pullman car attached on the railway company’s line at Neosho, intending to go to Texarkana. She entered the sleeper and paid the Pullman conductor $2.50, the fare from Neosho to Texarkana. She had. with her a baby and nurse. She rode in said sleeper until Winthrop was reached, about 10 o’clock at night, at which place she was compelled by the agents and servants of the defendants to. leave the sleeper *611 and go into a chair car, in which she made the balance of her journey to Texarkana, a distance of about forty miles.

The circumstances attending her leaving the sleeper at Winthrop are in substance as follows: When the train reached Winthrop Mrs. HoekePs berth on the sleeper had been made down and her baby had gone to bed. She had not retired, but had made herself comfortable and was lounging. Just before reaching Winthrop the Pullman conductor told her they would soon reach Winthrop, where she would have to chánge cars. She told him that she supposed not—that there must be some misunderstanding, and asked if there was another sleeper, and he said there was none, and told her she would have to go into the chair car. She replied she did not think she could go into the chair car. He then left her. She meditated over it and concluded she was entitled to a sleeper to Texarkana. The conductor came back and told her they were near Winthrop and she would have to leave the car. She replied that she could not get off the car; that she had bought a ticket and was entitled to passage to Texarkana and could not change unless she was provided with another sleeper, and he said, “there is no other sleeper on here and you will have to go in the chair car.” She replied that she could not do that; that she had her baby and had put him to bed and that he must carry her to her destination. He said he could not do that; that the car was going back and she must change cars at Winthrop and go into the chair car. She told him it was impossible, that her baby had retired and she could not take him into the chair car. The conductor then went out, and in a few minutes the train conductor came in and told her that she was delaying the car; that they had reached Winthrop and she must make preparations to get off and not delay the car, that they were laté and in a hurry, and she must not delay the car any longer. She told him she could not, that she had a ticket to Texarkana and would ride on it.

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Related

Pullman Co. v. McGowan
210 S.W. 842 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Calvin v. Neel
191 S.W. 791 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
Rucker v. Barker
151 S.W. 871 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 1009, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullman-palace-car-co-v-hocker-texapp-1906.