Quinn v. Louisville & Nashville R.

32 S.W. 742, 98 Ky. 231, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 31, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 742 (Quinn v. Louisville & Nashville R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinn v. Louisville & Nashville R., 32 S.W. 742, 98 Ky. 231, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 44 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

Tlie appellant, Fannie Quinn, was a passenger on the train of the appellee, being carried from the city of Louisville to her home at Elizabethtown, in this State.

While in the coach assigned her and her race by the company (she being a colored woman), and complying with the regulations of the corporation as well as the statute in regard to separate coaches, she alleges that certain white passengers, in an intoxicated condition, entered the coach to which she had been assigned and the one set apart for the colored race, and whilst in this car used violent, profane, obscene and indecent language in her hearing, such as humiliated her and disturbed the peace of those in the car; that they were permitted to enter this car by the consent of the conductor and against her consent and earnest protest, etc.

[233]*233The railroad company, by its answer, placed in issue the material facts alleged, and upon hearing the evidence the jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and the principal error relied on for a reversal is the error of the court in the instructions given the jury.

The facts of this case are in substance these: The appellant had been to the city of Louisville attending an educational convention as a delegate, aDd when returning was ás-signed to the coach set apart for her race. There were but few passengers in this coach, and the witnesses for the appellant state that the conductor, or some officer of the company similarly uniformed, was in the car and was-appealed to for protection, and his response was: “They have no business in here, but they trill come in.” One of the white men was much intoxicated, and after he had given an aged colored man a drink from his bottle he offered a drink to the appellant, and perhaps laid his hand upon her, at the same time making such profane and indecent remarks as were calculated to humiliate and mortify the appellant as well as other passengers, the language used being heard at the far end of the car. The conductor testifies he was busily engaged in taking up tickets, the cars being crowded, and as he passed through the coach for colored persons saw a white man standing in the aisle talking to a colored man, and said to him: “This is the car for colored people, and you must go out.” The reply was: “Yes, Captain, I know that, but I want to speak to this old colored man for a few minutes, and will only be here for a minute or two, and will go out;” and the conductor then proceeded to the other cars, leaving the white man in the coach with his old colored friend. He further stated that he had been instructed by the company to permit white passengers to go into the car set apart for colored people on business, when he had no reason to believe [234]*234from their appearance they would misbehave, but would not permit them to ride there as passengers. The person entering the car was introduced as a witness, and says he was intoxicated, and, seeing his colored friend in the car, stepped in to give him a drink, and corroborates the conductor as to what took place between hmself and that officer. He does not recollect of using the language attributed to him; may have used profane language, but nothing more. That this witness was intoxicated is beyond controversy, and from the uncontradicted testimony in the case an ordinary observer would have arrived at such a conclusion.

The haste of the conductor in his effort to collect the fares and take up tickets in the other cars accounts no doubt for his failure to observe the condition of the white passenger, and we may assume caused his assent to his remaining longer in the colored compartment.

It is contended by counsel, and upon this idea the instruction below was framed, that if the conductor was otherwise vigilant, and was ignorant of the passenger’s condition and his treatment of the colored passenger, no recovery could be had.

Upon the question of knowledge on the part of the railroad officials as to the rude conduct of the white passenger the testimony is conflicting. While the mere presence of the intruder into this coach for colored persons, with the knowledge of the conductor, would pot give to the occupants a cause of action against the corporation-, we can not concur with counsel or the court below that the separate coach law has no application to the facts of this case. It is not necessary, in order to permit- a recovery, to show that the conductor knew of this bad treatment of the colored passenger, or from his condition had the right to anticipate it. was the purpose of the intruder to produce trouble. He should not [235]*235be allowed to enter the car, or to remain there after his presence is discovered.

In the transportation of passengers prior to the passage of the separate coach bill the frequent disturbances arising between the two races, resulting often in serious injuries being inflicted by the one on the other, and the danger to other passengers, led to the enactment of this law as a police regulation, in order to prevent, as far as possible, these altercations upon railroad trains, and to check the disposition of those of. the dominant race to oppress and humiliate those who were entitled to the protection of the law. No discrimination is made by the law' in favor of the one race or the other, each to have the same facilities as to transportation, as to conveniences and accommodations in the coach to which they are assigned.

In order to make this law the more effectual heavy penalties are imposed on the railroad companies for not having separate coaches, and upon the conductors or those in charge of trains for not assigning to each white or colored passenger his respective compartment. (Kentucky Statutes, sections 797-800.)

If. as we shall assume was the case, each one of the passengers had been assigned the coach required by the statute, and the white passenger had left his coach and gone into the coach with these colored people without the knowledge of the conductor while he was attending to his duties in the other cars, and had there abused and insulted the appellant, it is plain no action could be maintained against the company, but when the white passenger is assigned to the car set apart for those of another race the company will be held responsible for his bad conduct affecting the rights of other passengers, although the conductor may be ignorant of what is transpiring, and w-here the conductor or those managing [236]*236the train know that one is in the wrong car, it is his duty to expel him, and by consenting to his remaining the company becomes responsible for his conduct so long as he does remain.

If a contrary rule is applied and no liability exists on the part of the corporation to the passenger, the separate coach law becomes a dead letter, and those who are entitled to its protection have no means of enforcing its provisions but by indictment, where a penalty may be adjudged in favor of the State. '

It is made the duty of conductors, under heavy penalties, to execute this law, and where .there is a neglect of duty for which a penalty is imposed, and private injury results from this neglect, a cause of action arises in favor of the person injured. This is the universal rule applicable to such cases, and should be made to apply to the facts of this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 742, 98 Ky. 231, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-louisville-nashville-r-kyctapp-1895.