Taylor v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

59 S.E. 641, 78 S.C. 552, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 4, 1907
Docket6719
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 641 (Taylor v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) 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
Taylor v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 59 S.E. 641, 78 S.C. 552, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 260 (S.C. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff, at Charleston, S. C., on the night of June 13, 1904, boarded defendant’s train from Charleston to Savannah as a passenger for Green Pond, S. C., to visit a sister who was ill and lived a few miles from said station; that the conductor was informed of her anxiety to reach her sister and was requested to notify her of the arrival of the train at Green Pond; that no notice was given her that her station was reached, and that no call of the station was made; that in consequence she was carried by her station to Yemassee, but was there transferred to defendant’s return train and carried back to Green Pond; that her brother-in-law was at the station to meet her when she was carried by, but upon learning that she had not gotten off returned to his home three miles distant.

The remainder of the complaint is as follows: “That upon arriving' at said station of Green Pond, and while leaving the cars thereat, this plaintiff, in the presence of the em *554 ployees of the defendant company at the depot of said station, was surrounded by a drunken crowd of colored people, who violently pushed and jolted her and abused her with menacing speeches, using profane, violent and obscene language, and that one of the employees of the defendant company ran off, telling plaintiff that he was going for his pistol in order that he might protect this plaintiff, and at the same time leaving her alone in the midst of a great throng of negroes and never returned, and plaintiff was carried to a house a distance of at least two hundred yards by a colored woman, where the plaintiff begged to' be cared for during the night and was given lodging.

“That as a result of the wanton, gross and reckless conduct of the defendant, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, utterly disregarding the rights of the plaintiff in wantonly and recklessly carrying plaintiff by the station for which her ticket called, and to the station at which she requested to be put off, without so notifying her or without giving any of the notices usually given of the arrival of traiqs at said station informing passengers of their destination, and in not protecting plaintiff from the indignities placed upon her after her arrival at Green Pond depot, from Yemassee, or by not taking her to some place of safety for the night, thereby causing great mental and nervous shock and anxiety, to this plaintiff’s injury and to her damage ten thousand dollars. Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for the sum of ten thousand dollars damages and costs.”

The jury within a few minutes after leaving their seats rendered a verdict for ten thousand dollars. A motion for a new trial was made and refused.

1 The Court, after instructing the jury that it was the duty of the railroad company to exercise the highest degree of care to protect a passenger, charged that a passenger, after having reached his destination, is a passenger until he has had a reasonable time to get away. It is contended that this instruction was erroneous in view *555 of the fact that the gravamen of the complaint was for failure to protect from indignities placed upon her by third persons after she left the car at her destination, and that it should have been qualified so as to subject the carrier to die highest degree of care to protect a passenger from third persons on the station premises when the carrier had reasonable ground to apprehend such danger.

Tlxe charge was correct as a general proposition, but as applied to the particular case in hand it was incorrect and misleading.

When one is on the carrier’s station premises with a bona fide purpose of becoming a passenger, within a reasonable time before the departure of the train to be boarded, he is entitled to protection as a passenger. Johns v. Railway Co., 39 S. C., 162, 17 S. E., 698; Holcombe v. Railway Co., 66 S. C., 10, 44 S. E., 68.

As a corollary of this rule, when a passenger has reached his destination and alighted from the train he is still entiiled to protection as a passenger until he has had a reasonable time to leave the station premises. 4 Elliott on Ry., sec. 1592; Brunswick, etc., Ry. Co. v. Moore (Ga.), 28 S. E., 1000; Glenn v. Lake Erie, etc., R. R. Co. (Ind.), 75 N. E., 282. This rule applies strictly when injury results from any instrumentality or agency under the control of the carrier. But when the injury results from the conduct of a fellow-passenger in the course of transportation, knowledge of the existence of the danger-or of circumstances from which the danger may have been reasonably anticipated is necessary to fix the liability upon the carrier for damages sustained in consequence of failure to guard against it. Franklin v. Railway Co., 74 S. C., 340; Anderson v. Railway Co., 77 S. C., 436. If this be the rule as applied to an injury from a fellow-passenger during the course of active transportation, there is quite as great, if not greater, reason for holding such to be the law when the injury is alleged to have resulted from strangers upon the station premises.

*556 It is further contended that there should be a new trial (1) because the complaint was solely for vindictive damages and there was no evidence to sustain such action; (3) because the verdict is so manifestly against the evidence and excessive that it was an: abuse of discretion to refuse a new trial; (3) because defendant was prejudiced in the trial by the absence of a material witness, defendant’s motion for continuance for that cause having been refused.

2 3 As this Court has no jurisdiction to reverse a judgment on the ground that it is excessive and as motions for a continuance are within the discretion of the trial Court, except in rare cases, we will not further notice the second and third grounds of objection.

4 But after a painstaking examination of the testimony we fail to find even a scintilla of evidence to support such a verdict. A scintilla of evidence is any material evidence that if true would tend to establish the issue in the mind of a reasonable juror.

The complaint is for wilful misconduct and it is essential that there be evidence of wantoness or wilfulness as alleged. Notwithstanding the positive statement of the conductor that he called the Green Pond station twice, on this inquiry we must accept as true the statement of the plaintiff and her two friends with whom she was conversing as the train passed Green Pond, that they heard no such call and that none was made.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony, when the conductor was informed that she 'had been carried by her station, the conductor stated that he had helped an “old lady” or “a crippled lady” off at Green Pond and had forgotten her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 641, 78 S.C. 552, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-sc-1907.