State v. Overton

24 N.J.L. 435
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.J.L. 435 (State v. Overton) 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
State v. Overton, 24 N.J.L. 435 (N.J. 1854).

Opinions

The Chief Justice.

The defendant was convicted in the Oyer and Terminer of Morris, of an assault and battery upon Theodore A. Canfield. A motion having been made for a new trial, upon the ground that the charge of the court was erroneous, and that the verdict was against law and contrary to the evidence, the question was reserved and submitted to this court for its advisory opinion.

The material facts are, that on the 18th of March, 1853, Canfield, the prosecutor, procured at the office of the Morris and Essex Railroad Company, in Newark, a passenger’s ticket to Morristown. He paid for the ticket the regular fare from Newark to Morristown, and took his seat in the cars. At Millráfro1, one of the way stations upon the road, he left the train. Before leaving the cars, he received from [437]*437Van Pelt, the conductor of that train, a conductor’s chock, upon which was printed the words “ conductor’s check to Morristown.” About an hour afterwards, Canfield took the next train of cars which passed the Millville station for Morristown, of which train Overton, the defendant, was conductor. Upon being asked by the conductor for his fare, Canfield tendered in payment the check received by him from Van Pelt, the conductor of the train in which Canfield had first taken his seat; this the conductor refused to aeceptrand the passenger refusing to pay his fare, and declining to leave the cars upon request, he was, without unnecessary force or violence, and without personal injury, removed by the defendant from the cars, at one of the way stations upon the road, before reaching Morristown. The company furnished, at the office in Newark, through tickets to Morris-town, and also tickets to Millville and other way stations upon the route. The cost of a ticket directly from Newark to Morristown was less than the cost of a ticket to Mill-ville and another ticket thence to Morristown. Some years previous to the transaction, the company had given public notice that conductor’s checks were not transferable from one train to another.

It was not questioned upon the trial that a railroad company are not bound to carry a passenger, unless upon payment or tender of his fare; that they may, in such case, either refuse to permit him 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. The ground upon which the conviction was asked, was, that in fact the passenger had paid his fare; that he offered to the conductor competent and satisfactory evidence of that fact, and that, consequently, the act of the conductor in removing him from the cars, was illegal.

Had the passenger in fact paid his fare, or was the check given by the conductor of another train, evidence of that fact ? He had, it is admitted, paid his fare to Morristown, [438]*438by the train in which he originally took his passage. Did that authorize him to leave the train at any point upon the road, and to resume his place for his original destination, in a different train, at his pleasure ?

The question is obviously a question of contract between the passenger and the company. By paying for a passage, and procuring a ticket from Newark to Morristown, the passenger acquired the right to be carried directly from one-point to the other, without interruption. He acquired no-right to be transported from one point to another upon the route, at different times and by different lines of conveyance, until the entire journey was accomplished. The company engaged to carry the passenger over the entire route for a stipulated price. But it was no part of their contract that they would suffer him to leave the train, and to resume his seat in another train", at any intervening point upon the road. Their contract with the passenger would have been executed, if they had proceeded directly to Morristown, without' stopping at any intervening point; nor could he have complained, of a violation of contract, if no other train had passed over the road, in which he might have completed his journey. If the passenger chose voluntarily to leave the train before reaching his destination, he forfeited all rights under his contract. The company did not engage, and were not bound, to carry him in any other train, or at any other time, over the residue of the route.

The production of the conductor’s ticket in no wise altered the case, or affected the terms of the original contract. It was evidence, indeed, that the holder had paid his passage, and was entitled to be carried to Morristown. But how and when ? Why, clearly, according to the terms of his original contract. It was evidence that he had paid his fare to Morristown, and was entitled to be carried there by the train in which he had originally taken his passage ; for that purpose alone it was given to him; that train he had left voluntarily, without the knowledge or assent of the conductor, and without giving up his check. The check [439]*439was therefore valueless; the right, of which it was the evidence, the passenger had voluntarily relinquished.

This is the clear legal effect of the contract between the company and the passenger, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary. If the passenger insists that under his contract, by virtue of general usage, or the custom upon the road, he is entitled to be carried at his pleasure either by one or by different trains, and at different times, over various portions of his journey, the burthen of proof was upon the State. No such usage was established, although some evidence was offered upon the trial, for the purpose of proving it.

The defendant offered evidence to show that some years previous to the transaction, the company had adopted a rule, and given public notice, that a conductor’s check was not transferable from one train to another. This properly considered, is a simple warning to passengers, that they would be carried s“trictly according to the terms of their contract. Even if a previous custom had been proved, (which it was not,) for passengers to be carried over different parts of their journey by different trains, it was a mere warning that in the future the custom would not prevail. Upon the trial, this action of the company was presented to the court, and by them submitted to the jury, as if it were a by-law or regulation of the company affecting the rights of passengers, upon the reasonableness and consequent validity of which the jury were to decide. The court clearly intimated its opinion, that the regulation of the company was valid, but under the influence of the ruling of another tribunal, submitted the validity of the regulation as a matter of fact to the jury.

In this the court erred. Here was no evidence of any by-law, or of any regulation made by the company, affecting the rights of passengers upon the reasonableness, or validity of which either court or jury were called upon to decide. The right of the passenger rested upon his contract. The notice given by the company was in strict conformity with his rights under the contract. Upon the evidence in the cause, if no proof had been offered of the notice given by the company, that conductors’ checks were not transferable, the [440]*440defendant would have been entitled to a verdict. Proof of that notice certainly placed him in no worse position.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.J.L. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-overton-nj-1854.