Wesley v. Southern Ry.

71 S.E. 855, 89 S.C. 314, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 17, 1911
Docket7974
StatusPublished

This text of 71 S.E. 855 (Wesley v. Southern Ry.) 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
Wesley v. Southern Ry., 71 S.E. 855, 89 S.C. 314, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 263 (S.C. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice; Gary.

This is an action for damages, alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, through the wrongful acts of the defendant, in ejecting her while she was a passenger on its train of cars.

The allegations of the complaint, material to- the questions involved, are as follows:

“That on the 11th day of September, 1909, the plaintiff went to Dawkins, a station on the defendant’s railroad, and purchased from the defendant’s agent, at that place, a passenger ticket for Shelton, another station on the defendant’s said road, paying the full price therefor, which was *319 demanded by the defendant’s said station agent, and she thereby became a full first-class passenger on defendant’s said road, and upon the arrival of -the defendant’s train for Shelton, the plaintiff boarded same.
“That when the said train had gone a short distance towards 'Shelton, the defendant’s ticket auditor came to plaintiff, and took up her ticket, and after leaving plaintiff, for a short time returned to her and accused her of having given him a half ticket, which she had not done, and when the said train had been stopped at -the next station, the defendant’s said ticket auditor, and other agents and servants- of the defendant, wrongfully, unlawfully, wilfully and wantonly, and forcibly -ejected the plaintiff from the said train. * * *
“That the action of the defendant, its -agents and servants, in ejecting her from the said car, as aforesaid, was not only a gross violation of the obligation which they had, for value received, assumed, to carry the plaintiff, but was a wilful, wanton, and malicious violation of the plaintiff’s rights as a passenger, to her damage in the -sum of two thousand dollars.”

The defendant’s answer to the complaint, was a general denial.

His Honor the presiding Judge thus summarized the plaintiff’s testimony:

“The plaintiff’s testimony impressed me as being truthful, and a correct statement of what took place. As already stated, she testified that she bought from S. T. Good-left, a ticket agent of the defendant at Dawkins, a full fare ticket from Dawkins to Shelton, that she boarded the train h-ere in question, and tendered to the ticket -collector, the ticket so received from the agent at Dawkins, that the ticket collector, called by her ‘conductor,’ either at the time or shortly after receiving the ticket, claimed that it was a half fare ticket to a point of destination at-Cedar Springs, some sixty miles far *320 ther than Shelton, that he thereupon ordered her to get off at Blairs, a station short of her destination at Shelton, that she then commenced crying and begged him not to put her off at Blairs, and told him that the agent at Dawkins had sold her the ticket, and had told her that it was a full fare ticket to Shelton, but that the ticket collector, refusing to- credit her story, forced her to' leave the train at Blairs, without investigating so far as appears, the truth of her claims. As already stated, the ticket agent at Dawkins,' Mr. S. T. Goodlet, corroborated her story, in so far as the purchase of the ticket from Dawkins to1 Shelton by 'her, on that day is concerned.”

There was also testimony to the effect, that about the time the agent at Dawkins sold the plaintiff a ticket, he also sold a half fare ticket to another woman, who was accompanied by a little girl, on the representation that it was for the girl who was going to Cedar Springs, which was about five times the distance to' 'Shelton; that .the two- women boarded the train, but the girl was left behind; that when the auditor came to collect the ticket, the two women were sitting near each other; that the plaintiff handed to the auditor a half fare ticket, in the usual form, dated September 14, 1909; good for passage from Dawkins to Cedar Spring's; that the auditor then and there returned this ticket to the plaintiff with this endorsement: “Off at Blair, Acct. grown person on this ticket and no funds. Party got off on own account. No. 13. 9-11-1909. G. B. Forbes, G. C.” That the plaintiff was ejected at Blair.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit as to punitive damages, which was refused; and, at the close of all the testimony renewed such motion, but it was again refused.

The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $500, and- the defendant appealed upon exceptions, which will be reported.

The first exception was abandoned.

*321 1 Second and Third Exceptions: The defendant made a motion for a new trial, and one of the grounds was, that there was error in the refusal, to sustain the motion for nonsuit. His Honor the presiding Judge in. the order refusing- the new trial, stated the reasons why the motion for nonsuit could not be sustained, and they, are satisfactory to .this Court.

2 Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Exceptions: The allegations of the complaint, that the action of the defendant, in ejecting the plaintiff, “was not only a gross violation of the obligation which it had assumed, to carry the plaintiff, but was a wilful, wanton, and malicious violation of the plaintiff’s rights as a passenger,” do not confine the plaintiff, to a recovery of punitive damages, as a gross violation of duty, does not necessarily involve wilful misconduct. The words “g-ross negligence,” do not ordinarily import recklessness or wantonness, and it is only when the context shows that they were thus intended, can they be so construed. Boyd v. Ry., 65 S. C. 326, 43 S. E. 817.

In the present case the context shows that the words “gross violation,” and “wilful, wanton and malicious violation,” were not used in the same sense; that the first 'had reference to negligence, and the second to intentional wrong.

The complaint, therefore, states two causes of action— one for negligence and the other for wantonness or wilfulness, — and the plaintiff was entitled to recover both actual and punitive damages.

3 Seventh and Eighth Exceptions: The charge set out, in the seventh exception, immediately precedes the charge in the eighth exception, and the two parts must be considered together, as they are dependent upon each other, for a proper construction.

The allegation of the complaint, is, that the plaintiff after boarding the train, delivered to the defendant’s auditor, the ticket which she had purchased from the agent at Dawkins, for which she had paid full price, and which entitled her to. *322 ride as a first-class passenger to Shelton, another station on defendant’s line of road.

The defendant’s answer denied, that she handed a ticket of that description, to its auditor.

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Related

Boyd v. Blue Ridge Ry. Co.
43 S.E. 817 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.E. 855, 89 S.C. 314, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wesley-v-southern-ry-sc-1911.