Spaugh v. A.C.L. Railroad Co.

155 S.E. 145, 158 S.C. 25, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 1, 1930
Docket12986
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 155 S.E. 145 (Spaugh v. A.C.L. Railroad Co.) 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
Spaugh v. A.C.L. Railroad Co., 155 S.E. 145, 158 S.C. 25, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 196 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Carter.

This action by Mrs. Olive Spaug'h, as plaintiff, against the defendant, Atlantic Coast Tine Railroad Company, was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Florence County, May 18, 1929, for the purpose of recovering damages against the defendant in the sum of $2,900.00, for injury to the plaintiff, alleged to have been sustained as a result of misinformation given her by defendant’s ticket agent at Florence, S. C.,‘ in regard to the train connections 'between, the said City of Florence and the Town of Holly Hill, S. C. Issues being joined, the case was tried at the November (1929) term of said Court before his Plonor, Judge William IT. Townsend, and a jury. The complaint contained two causes of action. At the close of the testimony introduced .on behalf of the plaintiff (the defendant offered no testimony), the defendant made a motion for direction of a verdict as to both causes of action,'and his Plonor granted the motion as to the second cause of action, the nature of which cause of action is not disclosed by the record; but since there is no appeal from the order as to that cause of action, we are not concerned with that question. The motion as to the other cause of action was refused, and the case was submitted to the jury. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,450.00. Motion for a new trial was made by the defendant, which motion was refused. From the entry of judgment on the verdict the defendant has appealed to this Court.

The exceptions impute error to the trial Judge in the following particulars:

(1) Error in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant;

(2) Error in his Honor’s charge to the jury;

*27 (3) Error in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The motion for direction of a verdict was based upon several grounds, but summed up may be stated thus: (1) The plaintiff having suffered no bodily injury, she could not recover for mere mental suffering; (2) even if it be conceded that the plaintiff was injured in the nature alleged, it was not caused by the negligence of the defendant,- but was caused by her peculiar condition of which the- defendant had no notice. .

Based on the allegations of her complaint, the plaintiff offered testimony tending to establish the_ following facts: At the time in question the plaintiff and her husband, together with their infant children, were temporarily residing in the Town of Holly Hill, S. C., in the home of her invalid mother, having moved there temporarily because of her husband being out of work; that on the day in question, May 6, 1929, the plaintiff procured a colored woman to stay in the house with her infant children and invalid mother for the day in order to be able to go with her husband to Florence, S. C., in an automobile, for the day, where her husband went seeking employment, fully expecting to return to Holly Hill the afternoon of the same day, in time to care for her mother and infant children. After arriving at Florence in company with her husband, plaintiff learned that her husband would not be able to return to Holly Hill that afternoon, or if he did so it would be necessary for him to return to Florence that night, in order to be there early the next morning for the purpose of definitely learning about the position he was seeking — could not get definite information that day, May 6, 1929. For that reason the plaintiff and her husband decided it would be best for the plaintiff to go home on the train that afternoon, if she could make connections, so as to save her husband from having to take the long drive from Florence to Holly Blill and return from Holly Hill to Florence that night, or very early *28 the following morning. Accordingly the plaintiff and her husband went to the office of the defendant’s passenger railway station and inquired of its agent in charge of said station about the train connections from Florence to Holly Hill, and upon being informed by said agent, after looking up the schedule, that she could go on defendant’s passenger trains from Florence to Holly Hill, by way of Crestón, making close connection at Crestón, and arrive at Holly Hill that afternoon. At the time plaintiff’s husband impressed upon the said agent of the defendant the necessity of making the connections and stated to said agent at the time that if the connection could not be made so that the plaintiff could get home that afternoon it was his purpose to take her home to Holly Hill in automobile, and explained to the agent the reason therefor, that their infant children and invalid mother of the plaintiff were at said home alone and that it was necessary for the plaintiff to get there that afternoon. On being informed at the time of said conversation by the agent that the connection would be made and that the plaintiff would arrive at Holly Hill that afternoon, the plaintiff’s husband purchased from said agent ticket for transportation for the plaintiff on defendant’s passenger trains from Florence to Holly Hill, by way of Crestón, and paid the regular charges for the same, and the plaintiff boarded the train the agent instructed her to go on; that after traveling some distance on said train the conductor in charge thereof took up her ticket and at the time informed her that the train on which she was riding (which train plaintiff got aboard under the direction of defendant’s said agent at Florence) did not make connections with the train going from Crestón to Holly Hill; that the train for Holly Hill was scheduled to leave Crestón before her train, on which she was riding, would arrive at Crestón; and that she would not be able to get a train from Crestón to Holly Hill until the following morning. On being thus informed, the plaintiff exclaimed, “What in the world am I going to *29 do,” and commenced crying. The said conductor told , the plaintiff that she might get off of that train af the next station if she desired to do so. She informed the conductor that would not help matters, that she had no funds, had only 25 cents (it appears that the husband had divided what money he had with her, giving her 25 cents and keeping 25 cents for himself; the balance of the money that he had he gave to the agent at Florence for the ticket he purchased). When the plaintiff arrived at Crestón, she got off said train, went to the agent of the defendant at the station of Crestón and made inquiry about the train to Holly Hill, and was informed that she would be unable to get a train to Holly Hill until the following morning, and further said that the agent at Florence should have known better than to have instructed her as related by the plaintiff. The said agent at Crestón did nothing to assist the plaintiff to get to Holly Hill, and she was forced to go! out into the rain and look for some way to go; that finally, after considerable effort, at the solicitation of a conductor on a passing freight train going in the opposite direction from Holly Hill, a traveling man offered to take her as far as Parler, a place on defendant’s said railroad in the directidh of Holly Hill, and in that way she got as far as Parler, where she remained for some time, sick and greatly distressed, fearing that her infant children and invalid mother would have to spend the night alone. After some time she succeeded in getting a ride with a farmer to Holly Hill, where she arrived sick and almost a nervous wreck.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.E. 145, 158 S.C. 25, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaugh-v-acl-railroad-co-sc-1930.