Weber v. Southern Ry. Co.

43 S.E. 888, 65 S.C. 356, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 888 (Weber v. Southern Ry. 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
Weber v. Southern Ry. Co., 43 S.E. 888, 65 S.C. 356, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 40 (S.C. 1903).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chieb Justice Pope.

This action came on for trial before the Hon. R. C. Watts, as Circuit Judge presiding, and a jury. The object of the action was to recover in the aggregate the sum of $1,995, which the plaintiff alleged was the damages sustained by him under the two causes of action set up in his complaint. The Circuit Judge in his charge to the jury described the allegations of the complaint as follows : “He alleges in his complaint that he boarded a train of defendant company in 1901; that he got on the train at Union, S. C. He says his wife and six children were anxiously awaiting his return with some medicine which he came to Union to get; that he got the medicine and got on the car, and when the train got a short distance from Union, the conductor, who represented the defendant, came to plaintiff and called for his fare. He told the conductor that he hadn’t had time — that is, plaintiff hadn’t had time— to purchase a ticket before boarding the train, and tendered the conductor the regular fare from Union to Jonesville, which was thirty cents, that amount being included in the coins which he gave him, and that he had no more money. He said the conductor told him he would have to pay twenty cents more. After he told the conductor he didn’t have it, [358]*358then the conductor told him he would have to borrow it or get off the train. He said he asked a friend to lend him that amount, and the friend told him he did not have it; that he then asked the conductor to lend it to him until he got to Jonesville, and the conductor refused and called him a fool, and went into another car, taking the money with him. He says in a short time the conductor came back to plaintiff and dropped the money in his hand; plaintiff thought it was five cents change due, but upon finding it to be thirty-five cents, he refused to accept it, and placed thirty cents of it down where the conductor could get it, telling him at the time that he had paid the fare. He said when the train reached Bonham, a station between Union and Jonesville, the conductor, accompanied by three trainmen, took hold of plaintiff, took up the thirty cents, and with force and violence, and with intent to degrade, humiliate, mortify and wound plaintiff in his person and feelings, wantonly, unlawfully, maliciously and without regard to his rights, dragged him out of the car and jerked him off to the ground. He says by reason of the unlawful and oppressive conduct and violence of the defendant towards him, the inexcusable cursing to which he was subjected by it, and the outrageous invasion and disregard of his rights as a passenger on the train, he was damaged in the sum of $495.

“In the second cause of action, he alleges that on the same day he was at a station called Bonham station, on defendant’s road, desiring to go home, where his wife and sick children were anxiously awaiting him and needing the medicine which he got for them that day, and with which he was returning on said car, or at least hoping to return; and having at hand the means, and being fully prepared and intending- in good faith to pay any amount of fare which defendant might require or demand of him to carry him on said train to Jonesville, so soon as he should have the opportunity to do so, having first tendered the amount of the fare to the conductor, twenty-five cents, in addition to thirty cents which he had already handed him, which was more [359]*359than the fare, steppped upon the'second step of the platform of the passenger car of defendant, intending to ride as a passenger on said car, and thereby became and was a passenger thereupon. He says, immediately before he could enter the car, said conductor, with force and violence, and with intent to degrade, humiliate, mortify and wound plaintiff in his person and feelings, wantonly, unlawfully, maliciously and in utter disregard of his rights, jerked him therefrom into the ditch. He says, upon remonstrating with him and pleading the cause of his sick children at home, and telling him of the medicine he had for them, said conductor refused to let him enter the car. He says a friend of his was present, offering to pay said conductor any amount he might demand, if he would permit plaintiff to ride to Jonesville; that he cursed violently and said plaintiff should not ride for any amount, and flagged the engineer to move on. Plaintiff was again getting on the car, which was then in motion, when he was kicked off; he then ran up to the front end of the car, and was a passenger going into the' car, when the conductor, who had run through the car, and who was a large and strong man, caught hold of him and jerked him out of the car and motioned the engine to move faster. He says he caught the back rail and was endeavoring to swing around the step, when the conductor cursed him and kicked him in the side and on the hand, tearing the skin off his fingers, and finally kicking him on the elbow and knocking him to the ground, to his great and permanent injury and suffering. He said thereby he was forced to get home the best way he could, suffering much bodily pain and great mental anguish. He says by reason of the unlawful and oppressive conduct and violence of the defendant .towards him, the outrageous cursing and abuse to which he was subjected by it, and its brutal invasion and disregard of his rights, he was damaged $1,500. " He, therefore, asks for 'damages in both causes of action $1,995.”

Except as to its corporate character, and that the plaintiff entered its passenger coach at Union, S. C., and was ejected [360]*360at the station named Bonham, the Southern Railway Co. denies the allegations of the complaint. Both sides introduced testimony as to the issues made by the pleadings. There was objection as to the competency of the testimony of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, that of Mr. Whitlock, but the Circuit Judge overruled the objection. Both sides offered requests to the Circuit Judge to be passed upon in his charge to the jury; but the Circuit Judge read the requests to charge in the presence of the jury, and in his general charg'e passed upon the same. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,500. A motion was then made for a new trial, based in part upon the charge of the Judge, and also because the finding of damages was excessive in amount. This motion was overruled. Thereupon the defendant appealed to this Court upon nine grounds, as follows: <

“1. That his Honor erred in allowing the witness, Little-john, to testify as follows T told the captain to let the man go; I said I will pay his way;’ and in ruling and holding that this was a part of the res gestae; and also in ruling and holding that even if a man is lawfully ejected from a train, if this ejectment is at a regular station, then that he could by either buying a ticket or offering to pay his way, to re-enter this train and continue his journey. The error being, as it is respectfully submitted, that where a man violates the reasonable and lawful rules of the company or breaks his contract, he forfeits his right to ride on that train; and if he is then lawfully ejected, even though it be at a station, that he could not by offering to pay his fare from that station, or even from the commencement of his journey, regain his right to re-enter the same train and force the railroad company to carry out a contract which he himsef had broken. It also, being respectfully submitted, that Mr. Littlejohn being a mere volunteer, the conductor was not bound to receive any money from him, and hence his statement or what he said to the conductor is incompetent, and his Honor should have so held.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Phillips v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
73 S.E. 75 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 888, 65 S.C. 356, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weber-v-southern-ry-co-sc-1903.