Southern Railway Co. v. Daughdrill

75 S.E. 925, 11 Ga. App. 603, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 2, 1912
Docket3772
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 S.E. 925 (Southern Railway Co. v. Daughdrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Railway Co. v. Daughdrill, 75 S.E. 925, 11 Ga. App. 603, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 114 (Ga. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Russell, J.

The defendant in error brought a suit against the Southern Bailway Company, alleging, .that on April 28, 1910, she purchased from that company a continuous-trip ticket from Gaines-ville to Boekmart, Georgia; that when she reached Atlanta and prepared to change cars the agent of the company refused to allow her to take its train which left Atlanta at 5.10 p. m., and insisted that she could not take that train, because it did not stop at Boekmart. The petition alleged that before the ticket’ was purchased the plaintiff’s husband informed the company’s agent at Gainesville that his wife was not at all well, and that if she had to wait in Atlanta he would accompany her. After the agent of the railway company in Atlanta told her that she could not take the train, she became very much excited and humiliated. She was in a strange city, without friends, acquaintances or money to pay hotel bills or other expenses. The agent informed her that perhaps she could catch the Seaboard Air-Line train which left the Union Station in five minutes time. She caught a cab and went to the Union Station and caught this train, but when she had gotten upon the Seaboard Air-Line train she virtually collapsed from the excitement and shock to her nerves. She went to bed immediately upon her arrival at Boekmart and was confined to her bed for a week, and continued to suffer for almost a year, from the effect of her excitement and nervousness.

The plaintiff proved her case substantially as laid. The evidence of her husband was that he and his wife were in Gainesville and she intended to go to Boekmart. She was in very bad health, very nervous and easily excited. He went to the agent of the Southern Bailway Company at Gainesville and inquired what connections could be made going from Gainesville to Boekmart. He explained fully to the agent why he wanted to know, 'and that if his wife was subject to a “lay-over” in Atlanta he would come as far as Atlanta with her, if she were to be delayed for any length of time. The agent told him that his wife could take the evening train (she had first intended to go on the morning train), and go right on through to Boekmart; that she would have only a few minutes to wait in Atlanta, and would be transferred in the same car-shed. He thereupon told the agent that his wife would' wait until the evening train and that he would not go with her. The witness testified that he told the agent that his wife was not well, and [605]*605that if-she had to lie over in Atlanta, or if she had to make any transfer across town, or anything of that kind, he would come with -her; and after the agent’s assurance that his wife would only have to wait a few minutes and be transferred in the same car-shed, he communicated these facts to his wife. The plaintiff testified, that her husband told her she would make a continuous trip; that she would only have to wait a few minutes in Atlanta; that upon her arrival in Atlanta she went to the information window and asked what time she could get a train out' to Kockmart. The agent told her there would be a train passing along in a few minutes, but that this train did not stop at Kockmart and that she could not get on it. She told him she was sick and wanted to get to Kockmart, and he informed her that she would then have to go to the Seaboard Air-Line Kailway and go down on its train, and that she had only five minutes to catch the train, but possibly it might be late. He asked to see her ticket, and, after looking at it, said “this is a continuous ticket, but you can not go there until about 12 o’clock to-night.” The plaintiff testified that the agent’s statement frightened her and made her very nervous, because she had no money. She was sick and knew she had no money to pay hotel fare or have a doctor, and thought she was going to be obliged to stay there; that she had no funds at all, and knew no one at all in the city of Atlanta. She further testified that she had travelled but little by herself; that she usually travelled with her husband. Hpon the agent’s statement that while she had only five minutes to catch the Seaboard Air-Line train, perhaps she could get a hack and catch .the train because it might be late, she got a hack and went over to the other depot. She was not really able to be up, but she had to be up, because she knew she had to go somewhere. She testified that as a result of the excitement she was prostrated when she boarded the Seaboard Air-Line train; that she went home and went to bed, and was in bed the rest of the week. She suffered from a cessa-> tion of her menstruation, and was weak and nervous for a long time. There was testimony to the effect that the plaintiff’s usual weight was from 140 to 148 pounds, and that as a result of the nervous prostration to which she testified, she lost twenty pounds in weight. Another witness testified that she was in a very nervous condition when she came from the train to her house in Kockmart, [606]*606and that she was greatly nauseated. The attendant physician Testified, that when he called to see her, she was very restless and nervous; that she was affected with excessive menstruation and apparently suffering pain; and he testified as an expert that the excitement caused by the circumstances related by the plaintiff would naturally be injurious to a woman suffering from the sickness by which she was affected.

The verdict was for $1,000, but the plaintiff voluntarily wrote off a half of the recovery. The defendant excepted to the refusal of a new trial. The motion for a new trial contained the general grounds, and the ground that the verdict was excessive, and excepted to the charge of the court to the jury upon the subject of pain and suffering, alleging that- there was no evidence warranting the instruction.

1. Undoubtedly the plaintiff had a right of action, whether she was entitled to recover for pain and suffering as an element of her damages or not, and whether the amount awarded her by the jury is excessive or not. The case at bar is not unlike that of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Stephens, ante, 520 (75 S. E. 841), and is practically identical in principle with the case of Southern Railway Co. v. Flanigan, 10 Ga. App. 745 (74 S. E. 85). The only question presented on this feature of the case is whether or not a carrier is to be held to its contracts as natural persons are held to be bound by theirs, — whether if a railroad company agrees to carry a passenger by a certain route, or within a definite time¿ or under definite conditions as to connections, it is not bound to comply with this contract and is not liable for any damages which may result from its breach. It will not do to say that the_ company is not liable for the acts or statements of its agents in selling a ticket (if the person who sells the ticket is the duly authorized ticket agent); for a corporation can only act through its agents. They are its head and arms and legs.

At the time of the purchase of the ticket involved in this case the plaintiff was a woman in bad health, suffering from extreme nervousness, caused by very irregular menstruation. She wished to go to Kockmart to be at home and to receive medical treatment. According to some of the testimony her nervous condition was ¡such that it would not be prudent or proper for her to be subject to a nervous strain, or to attempt any unusual inconvenience with[607]*607out the assistance of an escort. Her case was not an unusual one, when considered in relation to the large class of unfortunately diseased females.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.E. 925, 11 Ga. App. 603, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-daughdrill-gactapp-1912.