St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Smith

244 S.W. 741, 155 Ark. 519, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 13, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 741 (St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Smith, 244 S.W. 741, 155 Ark. 519, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 326 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The appellee instituted this action against the appellant to recover damages.for an alleged unlawful eviction and for maltreatment. Appellee alleged that on the 28th day of May, 1921, he was a passenger on appellant’s road from its station at Ashdown, Arkansas, to Orton, Arkansas; that while on the train as such passenger the auditor cursed, 'abused, and maltreated him, and used in his presence violent, profane and insulting language, and forcibly evicted him from the train at Bed Bluff station, three miles west of his destination; that said eviction and abusive and insulting language was unlawfully and wilfully done; that he suffered shame and humiliation from the cursing, which occurred'in the presence of other passengers on the train and in the presence of his young son, who was with him at the time, all to his damage in sum of $500, for which he asked judgment.

■ In its answer, the appellant denied specifically the allegations of the complaint. The testimony on behalf of the appellee was substantially as follows: He was a passenger on appellant’s train between Ashdown and Orton, Arkansas, on May 28,1921. He got on the train with his little boy, and gave the auditor his ticket. He had a sack of flour with him, and after he gave his ticket to the auditor the auditor asked him what he was going to do with the sack of flour, and why he didn’t give it to the baggage man. Appellee then detailed the conversation as follows: “He told me, ‘By God, the Frisco wasn’t running a charity train; there had been too much of that done on the Frisco line, parents running their- children through and not paying’ anything-; they all claim they are under five years old; you might have told the truth about the kid being six years old’ — I mean seven years old. I says, ‘I ought to know the kid’s age.’ He says, ‘That don’t make any difference. By God, you have got to pay for him!’ and I gave him a dime. He says, ‘I am going to put you off; that ain’t enough to pay the kid’s fare to Orton or Red Bluff, or not even to Long. ’ ' I says, ‘This is all I have got’; and John Machen and Ben Wright was sitting across the aisle from me. I asked John did he have any money that'I could pay my kid’s fare as far as Red Bluff anyhow. He said no, he didn’t have nothing only train fare himself, and Ben Wright told me he had a dime he -would loan me, and when he loaned me the dime the auditor came back and says, ‘By God, have you dug that money up yet?’ I says I have got part of it. What do I have to pay for the kid’s fare to Orton?’ He says 24 cents. He says, ‘What have you got?’ I says ‘Another dime.’ I handed it to him, and he says ‘I will let you and the kid go on to Red Bluff, and if you can’t dig up the rest of the fare you will sure as hell get off at Red Bluff.’ And about the time we got to Red Bluff the brakie hollered ‘Red Bluff,’ and he came to the door too and started in and asked me-so he came to the door — I was in the smoker — came to the door and told me he was going to put,the kid off. I says, ‘If you put the kid off I am going to get off with him; if you put the kid óff I will have to get off too'.’ I told him to give me part of my money back, ‘I ought'to have a little coming if you ain’t going to carry me on to Orton.-’ He' says,- ‘Give you hell if you look like you wanted it.’ He says, ‘You can ride on to Red Bluff or get off. ’ John Machen took hold the kid and says, ‘ Come on, son, yonr papa is liable to have a fight with the auditor. ’ I had some stuff in a sack and a sack of flour, and I picked up my stuff and got off, and I had to walk then in home about three miles ’. ’ ’

The appellee further testified that the language used to him by the auditor was humiliating; that he was crippled in one of his legs; was in poor health; had been sick, and came very near getting too hot walking from Bed Bluff to his home at Orton, a distance of about three miles. Besides the sack of flour, he had lard and a bucket of molasses in a sack, and also a pair of overalls.

A witness on behalf of the appellant testified that he was the auditor on the train on the occasion testified to by the appellee. Witness remembered that the man got on the train at Ashdown, and had a ticket for himself. He didn’t have any ticket for his child. Witness told the man to borrow the money from some of his friends on the train. Some one loaned the man some money. Witness didn’t remember how much. He collected the fare and cut the passenger a cash fare receipt and let them ride to their destination. He didn’t tell the appellee that he would have to get off at Bed Bluff, and did not curse him or use any profane and abusive language toward him. ,On cross-examination he stated that he didn’t remember whether he told appellee that he would have to get off. Witness presumed that if he collected the man’s fare and the child’s fare they would .get off at their destination. He denied telling the appellee that he would give him hell if he wanted his money back, and stated that he didn’t talk in a loud tone of voice* He didn’t remember taking up Smith’s ticket from Ashdown to Orton, and didn’t remember appellee having a sack of flour with him — couldn’t say whether he gave a cash fare slip to Smith or any one else.

Testimony of other witnesses who were on the train at the time corroborated the testimony of the auditor to the effect that he did not curse the appellee or use any profane or .abusive language in his presence.

The appellee testified, in rebuttal, that the auditor gave him a cash fare slip for his boy from Ashdown to Bed Bluff, and the auditor also gave him back two eents.

The court instructed the jury, at the request of the appellee, as follows: “No.4. You are instructed that, if you find that P. A. Smith purchased a ticket from the defendant, and boarded its train at Ashdown, Arkansas, and gave said ticket to the defendant’s auditor for transportation from Ashdown to Orton, then the relation of carrier and passenger existed, and it was the duty of the defendant to transport the plaintiff to Orton on its train; and if you further find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant’s auditor ejected the plaintiff from its train at Bed Bluff, and used insulting language toward him, then you should find for the plaintiff in damages such sum as will reasonably 'Compensate him for such ejection, inconvenience, insults and humiliation as he suffered therefrom, if any you may find, not to exceed the amount sued for.”

At the request of the appellant the court instructed the jury as follows: “No. 1. The court instructs you that, if you find from the evidence that defendant’s servant did not curse and abuse plaintiff, and the plaintiff voluntarily left the train at Bed Bluff, then the defendant would not be liable to the plaintiff, and you will return a verdict in its favor.”

The appellant objected generally to the instruction given at the request of the appellee, and also specifically as follows: “Because it authorizes the jury, in the event they should find for the plaintiff, to recover damages for mental anguish. * * * There is no physical ejection at all. If there is any ejection at all it is constructive purely. * * * Mental anguish is not recoverable for merely constructive ejection.”

The appellant, in its motion for a new trial, assigned as error the giving of appellee’s instruction No. 1, and also the general assignments that the verdict was against the evidence and against both the law and the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 741, 155 Ark. 519, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-v-smith-ark-1923.