Runyan v. Central Railroad

44 A. 985, 64 N.J.L. 67, 1899 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 13, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 A. 985 (Runyan v. Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Runyan v. Central Railroad, 44 A. 985, 64 N.J.L. 67, 1899 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 24 (N.J. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Lippincott, J.

This is the same case in a different form,, as reported in the Court of Errors and Appeals in 32 Vroom 537.

The facts up to a certain point are the same as set forth in-the opinion in that case.

In that case the judgment of nonsuit was reversed, because-of an erroneous rejection of evidence offered by the plaintiff on the trial thereof, tending to show, or introductory to the-proof of, a custom, usage or practice on the part of the passengers of the defendant company to carry packages of merchandise with them into cars, to be transported with them on the journey, and to show that the company with knowledge of the custom, usage or practice had acquiesced in it, and that thereby arose a regulation of the company that such packages might be carried as personal baggage.

The plaintiff in this case had purchased a ticket from New [69]*69York to Elizabeth, on a passenger train between those places, nnd attempted to enter the ear of the defendant to go to Elizabeth. He then had with him a small satchel containing •sundry articles of use, and besides in his arms.and hands a ■ten-pound package of nails and a letter file, which he had purchased in the city of New York. The agents of the defendant company refused to allow him to enter the car with the package of nails and letter file. He insisted upon entering the car with these packages. He was prevented from •doing so, and he eventually took his passage to Elizabeth on sl train of the Pennsylvania railroad, and he now sues to recover damages of the defendant company because of his •exclusion from the cars of .that company. He recovered a verdict against the company, upon which judgment has been entered, and the cause is now under review upon writ of •error at the instance of the defendant.

The Court of Errors and Appeals, in its opinion (32 Vroom 537), held that the ticket of the plaintiff which he had pur•chased for his passage was but a token of his right to transportation, and that the plaintiff was a passenger with all his •common law rights, and that “ at common law he was entitled to take with him for use his personal baggage appropriate to the journey and its object—that is, not only wearing apparel for use and ornament, but also other articles, all within reasonable limit, the use of which was personal to him •during his journey and in accomplishing its purposes.”

The package of nails and the letter file in the hands of the plaiutiff, under the evidence in the case, which is the same in this respect in the former ease, were held in nowise to belong to the class of articles which he had the right to carry with him at common law, as they plainly were not for the personal use of the plaintiff upon the journey or in accomplishing its purpose.

But the court, in treating the offer of evidence which was erroneously excluded, said “ that if the defendant company had, previous to the denial of the admission to their cars complained of, for a long time acquiesced in and made an accom[70]*70modation for the carriage of small packages of merchandise of its passengers, in its passenger cars, so as to lead them to accept and rely upon its attitude in that respect as one of its regulations, it cau resume its rights under the law only after reasonable notice of its rescission of the regulation so made. It could not suddenly enforce the right resumed against passengers who were in good faith traveling in reliance upon the previous regulation without reasonable notice, and who were ignorant of, and unprepared for any change in it. We think that the questions asked were ■ admissible as a step in the plaintiff’s proofs, and were wrongfully overruled, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed.”

Therefore, the present case must be governed by this principle enunciated by the Court of Errors and Appeals, that a custom, usage or practice of passengers to carry small packages with them on the passenger cars, acquiesced in by a railroad company, embodies or engrafts itself into the contract of carriage of the passenger, as a regulation of the company, ánd can only be segregáted from such contract by reasonable notice of the rescission of such regulation or reasonable notice of the resumption of the common law contract of carriage. This must be considered settled in this state, notwithstanding the fact that the questions which were proposed and excluded on the former trial were admissible, as it seems to me, upon an entirely different ground than that they tended to prove a custom or usage.

It will be noticed that the whole stress of the decision in the former ease was placed upon the fact that the usage or custom was of such a character as gave the passenger a right to rely on it as a regulation which, for the time being, became a part of the contract of carriage.

In the case, sub judias, an attempt was made on trial, in behalf of the plaintiff, to establish a custom, usage or practice of passengers on this railroad to carry packages of merchandise into the cars with them on their journeys, and that provision had been made by the company for the carriage of such packages in this manner and to accommodate the pas[71]*71sengers in the exercise of this custom and usage, and thatby reason of these facts the defendant company had acquiesced in such custom or usage, and that upon its attitude in this respect the plaintiff had the right to rely, as one of its regulations, without notice of its discontinuance or rescission.

The plaintiff in this case relies entirely upon the establishment of a previous custom, usage or practice of passengers to carry small packages of merchandise with them into the cars and on the journey. This is made the basis of proof in this ease, and it is not claimed that a right of recovery can stand upon any other ground.

After the evidence upon the part of the plaintiff had closed a motion to nonsuit was made and refused.' The first assignment of error is based upon an exception allowed to this refusal.

The consideration of this assignment of error requires an examination into the question, whether the evidence is of such a character as that it should be sent to the jury to determine whether such a custom, usage or practice had been established, or, in other words, whether an implied regulation had been established that passengers could carry such packages with them.

In the decision in the Court of Errors and Appeals, the court was dealing with the overruling of an offer of evidence, and nothing at all was determined as to the character of proof necessary to establish the implied regulation, or necessary to establish the custom or usage from which acquiescence of the railroad company could be concluded, and upon which the plaintiff could rely as a part of his contract of carriage.

It is clear that such a custom or usage is in derogation of the contract at common law. It is in derogation of the common law right of the defendant, and strips it of a benefit of which it possessed at common law. It interpolates itself into the contract, and therefore the custom, usage or practice must be strictly proved, the evidence adduced to prove it must be clear, it must be strictly construed, and great care should be exercised in allowing a custom, usage or practice to [72]*72change contracts either expressly entered into or implied at common law. Southwestern Virginia Mineral Co. v. Chase, 95 Va. 50, 57; Metcalf v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A. 985, 64 N.J.L. 67, 1899 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/runyan-v-central-railroad-nj-1899.