Shelton v. Erie Railroad

66 A. 403, 73 N.J.L. 558, 44 Vroom 558, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 A. 403 (Shelton v. Erie 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
Shelton v. Erie Railroad, 66 A. 403, 73 N.J.L. 558, 44 Vroom 558, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 138 (N.J. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, -T.

This suit is grounded upon the plaintiff's expulsion from a railroad train under the following circumstances: On December lfth, 1903, the plaintiff, being a passenger on the defendant's train from Montclair to Dpper Montclair, a distance of one and three-quarter miles, tendered to the conductor in payment of his fare a ticket that bore date December 15th, 1903, and read as follows: “Good only for continuous passage Montclair to Dpper Montclair beginning on day of sale or the nekt day.” The ticket had been sold to the plaintiff on December 15th, and hence by its terms had expired. Dpon being informed by the conductor that under the rules of the company the ticket could not be accepted for fare after the date of its expiration, the plaintiff refused to pay any other fare, and when told that under the rules he must in that case leave the train, replied that he would not do so unless legal force was used. When the train reached the next station the conductor placed his hand on the plaintiff's shoulder and the two walked to the rear platform of the car,' and when the train had stopped at the station the plaintiff stepped down on the bottom step, from which, before the train moved off he was given “a last push” by the conductor. For this expulsion the plaintiff brought his action in tort against the railroad company and recovered substantial damages.

Other facts are that the plaintiff had paid ten cents for his ticket, for which price he should have been given a ticket that was not limited; that the limitation printed on the ticket was one the defendant could not lawfully impose, and that the limitation had not been noticed by the plaintiff. Whether tickets without such limitation were issued vby the defendant and on sale at its ticket offices did not appear. [560]*560The plaintiff also testified that he had with him twenty cents, the amount of the faro and excess fare demanded of him by the conductor, but that “he had paid the full juice and refused to pay over again.”

The right of the plaintiff to maintain his present action upon the foregoing facts is directly raised by assignments of error based on exceptions to the court’s refusal to nonsuit the plaintiff or to direct a verdict for the defendant.

Upon the facts stated it is entirely clear that whatever injury the plaintiff suffered at the hands of the defendant had its origin in the delivery to him by the ticket agent of a ticket that was limited as to the time when it must be used, whereas for the price that he paid be ought to have been given a ticket that was not so limited. It is equally clear that the present suit is not grounded upon this injurious act of the defendant or its ticket agent, but upon the conductor’s denial of the plaintiff’s right to travel upon the ticket that was presented to him, viz., a ticket that on its face negatived the right that was claimed under it by the plaintiff. The precise question, therefore, is whether a passenger who has been expelled from a train for refusing to pay his fare may maintain an action for such expulsion if previously thereto he had tendered to the conductor a ticket that on its face v/as not receivable for his fare, provided that he had accompanied such tender with the true statement that he had paid for such ticket the full rate for which a proper ticket ought to have been issued to him. In still narrower form the question is whether the rule that permits the expulsion of a passenger who neither pays his fare nor tenders a ticket that shows his right to ride is abrogated or modified by the circumstances that were communicated to the conductor in the present case.

While this question is one of first impression in this court, the underlying proposition that a passenger may lawfully be ejected for non-pajanent of fare must be taken to be entirely established in this state. That “railroad companies are not bound to carry a passenger unless upon payment or tender of his fare; that they may in such case either refuse to per[561]*561mit liim to enter the cars, or having entered them they may require him to leave them before the termination of- the journey, and that if he refuses to leave they may remove him at a suitable time and place, using no unnecessary force,” were, more than half a century ago, treated by Chief Justice Green, in State v. Overton, 4 Zab. 435, as unquestioned propositions from which to reason with respect to a questionable regulation. The criticism of this ease in Daniel v. New Jersey Street Railway Co., 35 Vroom 603, left untouched these basic propositions, which, indeed, are not now questioned anywhere.

In other jurisdictions, for whose decisions we entertain the highest respect, the question we are now called upon to decide has been passed upon in a large number of cases.

In a recent case in the Federal Court of Appeals, Judge Taft said: “The law, settled by the great weight of authority, * * * is that the face of the ticket is conclusive evidence to the conductor of the terms of the contract of carriage between the passenger and the company.” Pouilin v. Canadian Pacific Railroad Co., 52 Fed. Rep. 197.

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in Bradshaw v. South Boston Railroad Co., 135 Mass. 407, held that “it is a reasonable practice to require a passenger to pay his fare or show a ticket, * * * and it would. be unreasonable to hold that a passenger, without such evidence of his right to be carried) might forcibly retain his seat in a car upon his mere statement that he is entitled to passage. If the company has agreed to furnish him with a proper ticket and has failed to do so, he is not at liberty to assert and maintain by force his rights under that contract, but is bound to yield for the time being to the reasonable practice and requirements of the company, and enforce his rights in a more appropriate way.”

In a later case (Dixon v. New England Railroad Co., 179 Mass. 242), the same court said: “The passenger’s right to transportation is no greater than the right and duty of the conductor to enforce reasonable rules, and for the time being the passenger must bear the burden which results from his [562]*562failure to have a proper ticket. A passenger may have a right to transportation between certain stations because of his connection with a certain ticket, and yet if the ticket itself is not in order a conductor is not bound to take it in payment of fare.”

Tn Stockdale’s Case, 83 Md. 245, the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that “in all cases when the question as to the right of a passenger'to travel arises between him and the conductor of a train the ticket is necessarily the conclusive evidence of the nature and extent of the passenger’s right.”

“No other rule,” said Judge Cooley, in Hufford v. Grand Rapids Railway Co., 53 Mich. 118, “can enable the conductor to determine what he may or may not lawfully do in managing the train and collecting fares.” And on another occasion the same court held that “when a passenger receives a defective ticket from an agent of the compairy by reason of the mistake or negligence of the agent the conductor may refuse to accept such ticket, and is authorized to compel the passenger to leave the train if payment of fare is refused.”

The New York Court of Appeals, in Monnier v. New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Co., 175 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 403, 73 N.J.L. 558, 44 Vroom 558, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-erie-railroad-nj-1907.