Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Dennis

23 S.W. 400, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 1893
DocketNo. 217.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 400 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Dennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Dennis, 23 S.W. 400, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

HEAD, Associate Justice.

Prior to April 29, 1891, the following circular was extensively distributed and advertised in the papers in North Texas, including Weatherford, to-wit:

“ Round trip excursion from Fort Worth to Seymour. Train leaves Union Depot, 9 a. m., Thursday, April 30, and returns May 2, spending the entire day, May 1, in Seymour. 82 the round trip from Fort Worth and all points up to Wichita Falls. 81 for round trip from Wichita Falls and Iowa Park. One and one-third fare will be sold on Texas & Pacific Railroad for round trip. First opportunity to buy property at public sale. Grand excursion and barbecue April 30, from Fort Worth to Seymour, Baylor County, 82. Round’ trip, good for return May 2. Best chance ever offered to see the glorious Panhandle country in her robes of green. Rates arranged at hotels for guests at $1 per day. Don’t forget the day, April 30, 9 a. m., from Fort Worth. L. & II. Blum’s Riverside Addition, 200 feet above the court house square. The Oak Cliff of Seymour. Five hundred lots will be auctioned off on the grounds. Terms of sale—under 850, cash; over 850, one-third cash, balance in one and two years.”

The record does not disclose that appellant had anything to do with the distribution of these circulars or advertisements, but on April 28 and 29 it placed on sale at Weatherford round trip tickets from there to Seymour for 83.25, which was a low excursion rate, being much less than the regular fare, but the record does not disclose whether it was the exact rate advertised as above or not.

These tickets contained printed conditions limiting their use to May 2; also stipulating that they would “ not be good for return passage unless the holder identifies himself as the original purchaser to the satisfaction of the authorized agent of the Denver, Texas & Fort Worth Railway (Panhandle Route) at point between punch marks, on or before-, 188-; and when officially signed and dated in ink, and duly stamped by said agent, this ticket shall then be good only-days after such date.”

On April 29 appellee purchased one of these tickets at Weatherford from appellant’s agent, paying 83.25 therefor, and a few moments thereafter entered one of its trains and proceeded to Seymour to attend the sale advertised as aforesaid. On May 2 he presented his ticket to the proper agent at Seymour and had it stamped for return passage, and started on his return trip in the first train that left Seymour after the conclusion of the sale on the 1st, but when he reached Fort Worth, the afternoon of the 2nd, he was compelled to delay his journey until the morning of the 3rd, because there was no train to Weatherford over appellant’s road until that time. In fact, at the time appellant sold the *94 ticket the different trains did not so connect as to make it possible for appellee to attend the sale at Seymour on the 1st and reach Weatherford on the 2nd, but appellee did not know this until he reached Fort Worth on his return.

On the morning of the 3rd appellée entered the cars of appellant at Fort Worth and insisted upon riding to Weatherford upon this ticket, after explaining the facts to the conductor; but after considerable parleying and telegraphing by the conductor to the superintendent of appellant, the conductor forced appellee to leave the train about nine miles before he reached Weatherford, from which place he was compelled to ride in a wagon, during the heat of the day, to his destination. The conductor, in compelling appellee to leave the car, exhibited considerable firmness in the presence of a number of passengers, whose attention was-thereby attracted, but no more than was reasonably necessary to enforce obedience to his requirements, and if appellee was wrongfully on the train, he would not have a cause for action on account of excessive force used by the conductor in expelling him.

The only objection urged by the conductor to appellee’s ticket was the expiration of the time to which it was limited. To go from Weatherford to Seymour, as called for in this ticket, it was necessary to go over appellant’s road to Fort Worth, and from there to Wichita Falls over the Denver, Texas & Fort Worth Railway, and from there to Seymour over the Wichita Valley Railway; but it would seem from the record that the road from Wichita Falls to Seymour was treated as a part of the Denver, Texas & Fort Worth. At least the ticket issued by appellant called for it to be stamped at Seymour by the agent of said last named road.

'Appellee instituted this suit to recover damages for his alleged wrongful expulsion from the train by appellant, and a trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in his favor for $500, from which this-appeal is prosecuted.

Opinion.—It is well settled, that a railroad has the right to limit the time ■within which a ticket it sells at a reduced rate must be used; but it is equally well settled, that such limitation must be reasonable. This question is well considered in an opinion rendered by Chief Justice Fisher, of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District of this State, in the case of Railway v. Wright, 2 Texas Civil Appeals, 463. Also, see Railway v. Looney, 85 Texas, 158; 2 Wood’s Railway Law, 1403, 1404.

This question of reasonable time has ordinarily arisen in cases involving the time necessary to make the contemplated trip, without reference to the business in which the passenger is engaged; but we believe that when we take into consideration the fact that these excursions are the source of much revenue to the carriers, as evidenced by the zeal with which they *95 seek to encourage them, it will not be extending the principle too far to hold, that where the carrier seeks to induce numbers of passengers to go upon an excursion of this kind, by offering to them special rates, it should allow them a reasonable time in which to accomplish the purpose of the journey, and that m the absence of knowledge to the contrary on the part of the passenger, he has the right to infer that the limitation contained in his ticket will do this.

We know it has often been said, that one proposing to travel in railway cars must inform himself as to the time of arrival and departure of the trains, and the connections of the different lines; but this has generally been said in its application to one travelling upon his own business in the usual way (Beauchamp v. Railway, 56 Texas, 239); and we do not think it in conflict with the holding, that where one is going upon a special trip which he has been induced to take by the favorable terms offered by the carrier, who well knows the object intended to be accomplished, the latter should be presumed to know the connections made by the different roads over which it sells the ticket, and the passenger can presume that a reasonable time has been allowed to transact the business in the contemplation of the parties at the time of the sale.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 400, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-dennis-texapp-1893.