Saunders v. Atlantic Coast Line R. R.

85 S.E. 167, 101 S.C. 11, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 24, 1915
Docket9080
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 167 (Saunders v. Atlantic Coast Line R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Atlantic Coast Line R. R., 85 S.E. 167, 101 S.C. 11, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 90 (S.C. 1915).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

According to plaintiff’s testimony, the facts appear to be as follows: On June 5, 1913, plaintiff was at Fayetteville, N. C., and wanted to meet a business engagement at Barn-well, S. C., in the afternoon or evening of that day,, and go thence to Atlanta, Ga., in time to meet his wife, who was to arrive there in the early morning of the next day, on a train from Greenwood, S. C., where she resided with plaintiff. His wife was sick and was going to Atlanta for medical treatment, and he was anxious to get there in time to meet her and take her to the sanatorium.

Plaintiff went to defendant’s ticket agent at Fayetteville and told him only of his engagement at Barnwell, and asked if he could get a ticket on which he could get to Barnwell in time to meet it. After some investigation, the agent told *13 him that he could sell him such a ticket, and that his route would be via Florence and Sumter tq Columbia, S. C., over defendant’s lines, and from Columbia to Barnwell over the Southern Railway. Plaintiff had an interstate mileage book which was good over all the roads in this route, and, in exchange for mileage coupons 'therefrom, the agent gave him a passage ticket from Fayetteville to Barnwell, and told him that, according to the schedules, he should get to Columbia about noon, and to Barnwell about 4:30 p. m. that day.

The agent could have given him a ticket which would have entitled him to transportation over the route indicated, and, according to the schedules, he could have arrived at Barnwell about the time stated. But the ticket given him indicated no special route, and, therefore, it entitled him to transportation only over defendant’s lines by the direct route from Fayetteville to Barnwell, over which it was impossible for him to get to Barnwell that day, because defendant’s local train for Barnwell left Sumter before the arrival of the train from Fayetteville.

The distance from Fayetteville to Barnwell over the direct route is 201 miles, while the distance by Columbia is 226 miles. The defendant’s agent at Fayetteville testified that he detached only 201 mileage coupons from plaintiff’s book, and denied that plaintiff asked him for a ticket via Columbia, or said anything to him about his engagement or desire to get to Barn-well that day — that he merely asked for a ticket to Barnwell, which he gave him over the direct route.

The conductor on the train between Fayetteville and Florence, to whom plaintiff first presented the ticket, told him that his ticket was not good over the route via Columbia, and that he could not get to Barnwell on it that day.

On arriving at Florence, plaintiff had to change cars, and, while waiting for the train for Sumter, he went to Mr. Hare, defendant’s assistant. superintendent, and explained the situation to him, telling him that he intended to hold defendant to the contract which he said he had made with *14 the agent at Fayetteville. Mr. Hare called up the Fayette-ville office over the telephone, and asked why the ticket had been irregularly sold. It seems, however, that the agent who sold the ticket was not then on duty, and, as plaintiff’s time was limited, Mr. Hare advised him to go ahead on the ticket as far as Sumter, as it entitled him to passage to that place, and said that he would wire him further instructions on the train.

The conductor on the train between Florence and Sumter, to whom the ticket was next presented, told plaintiff that it was not good via Columbia, and advised him to get off at Sumter and buy a ticket to Columbia. Plaintiff informed him of his anxiety to get to Barnwell that day and thence to Atlanta, and his reasons therefor. The conductor replied that he was as sorry as he could be, but that he could not honor the ticket further than Sumter. • He afterwards showed plaintiff a telegram from Mr. Hare, which read as follows: “Cond. No. 51: Please say, to Mr. M. B. Saunders, holding mileage exchange ticket Fayetteville to Barnwell, that the agent at Fayetteville advises he only pulled two hundred and one miles from book which is local mileage all A. C. L,. route via Florence and Sumter. Suggest to him that if he desires to go via Columbia on Southern that he purchase ticket via that route and handle the one he has. Wire (with ?) Mr. T. C. White at Wilmington fpr refund for unused portion.” The word “wire” in the last sentence of the telegram is evidently a misprint in the record or in the telegram 'for “with.” At any rate, plaintiff testified that Mr. Flare advised him in the telegram to pay the cash fare or buy a ticket from Sumter to Columbia, and that the unused portion of his ticket would be refunded. At first plaintiff seems to have been inclined to do this, but after-wards decided to stand on his contract, as he expressed it, and insist on being carried via Columbia on the ticket which had been given him.

*15 After leaving Sumter, the conductor approached plaintiff and asked him if he had gotten a ticket, and, on being told that he had not, and that he would insist on being carried on the ticket he had, the conductor told him that, unless he paid his fare in.cash, he would eject him. Plaintiff then offered to pay $1.05, which is the price of a ticket from Sumter to Columbia, when bought at the Sumter office; but by a valid rule of the company, conductors are required to collect $1.20 of passengers who fail to get tickets. Plaintiff refused to pay the extra charge, but offered tó pay his fare with coupons from his mileage book, which the conductor refused to accept, and, thereupon, plaintiff was ejected at Wedgefield. There was nothing in the manner of his ejection of which complaint is made, and he can recover, if at all, solely upon the conduct of the defendant’s agent at Fayetteville, for the testimony shows that the other agents of defendant treated him with the utmost, courtesy and consideraion, and accorded to him every right to which he was entitled under the law.

Besides a general denial, defendant set up in its answer the defenses that, under its tariff, filed with and approved by the interstate commerce commission, and duly published, plaintiff was not entitled to be carried to Barnwell, via Columbia, on the ticket which had been given him, and that, in attempting to ride on it, after he had been repeatedly warned that it was not good and would not be accepted for his transportation over that route, he was guilty of contributory negligence, and suffered no injury as the proximate result of any wrongful act of defendant; and, on those grounds, besides others which related to the matter of damages, moved the direction of a verdict. The motion was refused, and the jury found for plaintiff $500.00 punitive damages. From judgment on the verdict, defendant appealed.

*16 1 *15 There was no error in refusing the motion to direct the verdict on the first ground above stated. The issues aris *16 ing out of the interstate feature of the transaction and the law applicable thereto we're not alone necessarily conclusive of plaintiff’s rights.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gordon v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.
2 S.W.2d 675 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1928)
Enlee v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.
96 S.E. 490 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 167, 101 S.C. 11, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-atlantic-coast-line-r-r-sc-1915.