Quimby v. Boston & Maine Railroad

5 L.R.A. 846, 23 N.E. 205, 150 Mass. 365, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 282
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 1, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 5 L.R.A. 846 (Quimby v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quimby v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 5 L.R.A. 846, 23 N.E. 205, 150 Mass. 365, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 282 (Mass. 1890).

Opinion

Devens, J.

When the plaintiff received his injury, he was travelling upon a free pass, given him at his own solicitation and as a pure gratuity, upon which was expressed his agreement that in consideration thereof he assumed all risk of accident which might happen to him while travelling on or getting on or off the trains of the defendant railroad corporation on which the ticket might be honored for passage. The ticket bore on its face the words, “ Provided he signs the agreement on the back hereof.” In fact, the agreement was not signed by the plaintiff, he not having been required to do so by the conductor, who honored it as good for the passage, and who twice punched it. The fact that the plaintiff had not signed it, and was not required to sign it, we do not regard as important. Having accepted the pass, he must have done so on the conditions fully expressed therein, whether he actually read them or not. Squire v. New York Central Railroad, 98 Mass. 239. Hill v. Boston, Hoosac Tunnel, & Western Railroad, 144 Mass. 284. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Chipman, 146 Mass. 107.

The object of the provision as to signing is to furnish complete evidence that the person to whom the pass is issued assents thereto; but one who actually avails himself of such a ticket, and of the privileges it confers, to secure a passage, cannot be allowed to deny that he made the agreement expressed therein because he did not and was not required to sign it. Gulf, Colorado, & Santa Fé Railway v. McGown, 65 Texas, 640, 643. Illinois Central Railroad v. Read, 37 Ill. 484. Wells v. New [368]*368York Central Railroad, 24 N. Y. 181. Perkins v. New York Central Railroad, 24 N. Y. 196. If this is held to be so, the case presents the single question whether such a contract is invalid, which has not heretofore been settled in this State, and upon which there has been great contrariety of opinion in different courts. If the common carrier accepts a person as a passenger, no such contract having been made, such passenger may maintain an action for negligence in transporting him, even if he be carried gratuitously. Having admitted-him to the rights of a passenger, the carrier is not permitted to deny that he owes to him the duty which, as carrying on a public employment, he owes to those who have paid him for the service. Todd v. Old Colony & Fall River Railroad, 3 Allen, 18. Commonwealth v. Vermont & Massachusetts Railroad, 108 Mass. 7. Littlejohn v. Fitchburg Railroad, 148 Mass. 478. Files v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 149 Mass. 204. Philadelphia & Reading Railroad v. Derby, 14 How. 468. Steamboat New World v. King, 16 How. 469. But the question whether the carrier may, as the condition upon which he grants to the passenger a gratuitous passage, lawfully make an agreement with him by which the passenger must bear the risks of transportation, obviously differs from this.

In a large number of cases, the English courts, as well as those of New York, have held that where a drover was permitted to accompany animals upon what was called a free pass, issued upon the condition that the user should bear all risks of transportation, he could not maintain an action for an injury received by the negligence of the carrier’s servants. A similar rule would, without doubt, be applied where a servant, from the peculiar character of goods, such as delicate machinery, is permitted to accompany them, and in other cases of that nature. That passes of this character are free passes properly so called, has been denied in other cases, as the carriage of the drover is a part of the contract for the carriage of the animals. The cases on this point were carefully examined and criticised by Mr. Justice Bradley, in Railroad Co. v. Lockwood, 17 Wall. 357, 367; and it is there held that such a pass is not gratuitous, as it is given as one of the terms upon which the cattle are carried. The decision is put upon the ground that the drover [369]*369was a passenger carried for hire, and that with such passenger a contract of this nature could not be made. The court, at the conclusion of the opinion, expressly waives the discussion of the question here presented, and, as it states, purposely refrains from expressing any opinion as to what would have been the result had it considered the plaintiff a free passenger, instead of one for hire. Railway Co. v. Stevens, 95 U. S. 655, in which the same distinguished judge delivered the opinion of the court, is put upon the ground that the transportation of the defendant, although not paid for by him in money, was not a matter of charity or gratuity in any sense, but was by virtue of an agreement in which the mutual interest of the parties was consulted.

Whether the English and New York authorities rightly or wrongly hold that one travelling upon a drover’s pass, as it is sometimes called, is a free passenger, they show that, in the opinion of those courts, a contract can properly be made with a free passenger that he shall bear the risks of transportation. This is denied by many courts whose opinions are entitled to weight. It will be observed that in the case at bar there is no question of any wilful or malicious injury, and that the plaintiff was injured by the carelessness of the defendant’s servants. The cases in which the passenger was strictly a free passenger, accepting his ticket as a pure gratuity, and upon the agreement that he would himself bear the risk of transportation, are comparatively few. They have all been carefully considered in two recent cases, to which we would call attention. These are Griswold v. New York & New England Railroad, 53 Conn. 371, decided in 1885, and that of Gulf, Colorado, & Santa Fé Railway v. McGown, 65 Texas, 640, decided in 1886, in which the precise question before us was raised and decided, after a careful examination of the authorities, and opposite conclusions reached, by the highest courts of Connecticut and of Texas. No doubt existed in either case, in the opinion of the court, that the ticket of the passenger was strictly a gratuity, and it was held by the former court that, under these circumstances, the carrier and the passenger might lawfully agree that the passenger should bear the risks of transportation, and that su.ch agreement would be enforced, while the reverse was held by the court of Texas. [370]*370We are brought to the decision of the question unembarrassed by any weight of authority without the Commonwealth that can be considered, as preponderating.

It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff, that, while the relation of passenger and carrier is created by contract, it does not follow that the duty and responsibility of the carrier is dependent upon the contract; that, while with reference to matters indifferent to the public, parties may contract according to their own pleasure, they cannot do so where the public has an interest; that, as certain duties are attached by law to certain employments, these cannot be waived or dispensed with by individual contracts ; that the duty of the carrier requires that he should convey his passengers in safety; and that he is properly held responsible in damages if he fails to do so by negligence, whether the negligence is his own or that of his servants, in order that this safety may be secured to all who travel.

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Bluebook (online)
5 L.R.A. 846, 23 N.E. 205, 150 Mass. 365, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quimby-v-boston-maine-railroad-mass-1890.