Curran v. United Railways Co.
Curran v. United Railways Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an action by plaintiff against the defendant company for assault and battery, the plaintiff having been ejected-from one of the defendant’s street cars by the conductor in charge thereof, on account of his refusal to pay his fare. The case was tried before a judge and a jury, a verdict resulting for plaintiff for $50 actual and $2000 punitive damages. Defendant was granted a new trial, “Because the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer offered .at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence.” Plaintiff appeals.
The defendant, United Railways Company owns and operates the street railways in the- city of St. Louis, including the lines known as the Fourth street line as well as the Tower Grove line. These two lines of cars intersect at Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue and also at Grand avenue and Arsenal street, each of which intersections is a point of transfer from one line to the other. The record shows appellant could have hoarded a car on Chouteau avenue at Eighth or Ninth streets, •which are the corners nearest his place of business, in which case a transfer would have been issued to him for the Tower Grove line west, but the appellant, instead of boarding the car at either of these corners, preferred to walk to Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue, a distance of two and one-half short blocks, and gave as his reason for doing so that the Fourth street cars were always crowded when he started home at the close of his day’s work, but that usually quite a number of passengers got off the Fourth street car at Twelfth street, where they transferred to the Tower Grove car, which gave him a better opportunity to get into the car at that point. It was his custom to board the Fourth street oar at Twelfth street and ask for a transfer to the Tower Grove line west, making the transfer at Grand avenue and Arsenal street.
At Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue, at the point at which appellant customarily boarded a Fourth street car, he could have boarded a Tower Grove car, which would take him to his destination by a direct route, without the necessity of transferring. The Tower Grove line is approximately three hundred and sixty feet longer from the Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue intersection of that line with the Fourth street line, to the intersection of these two lines at Grand avenue and Arsenal street.
Appellant, instead of taking the direct line in the first instance, for a long time had customarily taken the Fourth street car at Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue and obtained' a transfer to the Tower Grove line, marked “Tower Grove west,” and made his transfer at Grand avenue and Arsenal street. Transfers of this kind had been issued to him by the Fourth street car conductors with but few exceptions. One of these occasions, on November 10, 1913, appellant had been refused a transfer by one of the conductors on the Fourth street line, and was given as the reason for this refusal that the appellant might’ want to use the transfer to return downtown. Appellant explained to the conductor that there was a place provided on the transfer where it could be punched, “Tower Grove west,” so that it would be impossible to use the transfer for a return trip east. The conductor still refused to issue the transfer and appellant was obliged to pay an additional fare at Grand avenue and Arsenal street when he boarded the Tower Grove line at that point. After that day appellant had no further trouble about getting a transfer in this manner until November 24, 1913, when he happened to get on a Fourth street car on which the same conductor was in charge who had previously refused to issue him a transfer. The conductor again refused him a transfer. This time the conductor stated as his reason for the refusal that appellant should get on a Tower Grove car at Twelfth street and Chouteau avenue, where appellant had boarded the Fourth street car.
The following day the appellant sent a letter to the superintendent of transportation of the defendant company, outlining what had occurred the night before and asking whether or not he was entitled to a transfer from this conductor. To this letter appellant -received no reply.
The defendant company introduced evidence tending to show that the conductors on the Fourth street line were instructed not to issue transfers for Tower Grove line west to any passengers boarding the Fourth street line at Twelfth street, and that no conductor had authority to do otherwise.
An ordinance (No. 19352) of the city of St. Louis, governing the operation of the defendant’s street railway system, including the two car .lines in question, was introduced in evidence and by section 5 thereof it is provided:
In the written memoranda filed by the learned trial judge in sustaining defendant’s motion for a new trial, it is said:
“The case turns entirely upon the question whether the plaintiff was entitled to a transfer under the circumstances stated or not. This question has received considerable thought on the part of the court since the case was tried. The plaintiff had the right and it was the duty of the defendant to carry him from the point where he boarded its lines to any other point on its system for one fare, and as has been heretofore held, by the most direct route. If the passenger can, at the point at which he wishes to board a car, take the identical car which will leave him at his destination he has not, in my opinion, the right to take a car on a different line, which crosses at the same point, and insist upon being transferred from that line to the first named line at another point where they cross each other; especially is this true in a case such as this where the passenger by so doing is not taking a substantially shorter route to his destination. The evidence in this case showed that by taking the Fourth street car, to Grand avenue and Arsenal street and then transfering to the Tower Grove Car, plaintiff saved in distance a matter of something like a block; in other words, that the route over the Tower Grove line from Twelfth and Chouteau to Grand and Arsenal is. about one block longer than the route, between the same two points, of the Fourth street line. Under such circumstances, I do not think that a passenger has a right to insist on traveling on two lines, which would mean letting him on and off the cars twice instead of once, with the resultant loss of time to the défendant and the increased risk of injury to him and consequent liability to the company.
“It is a fact of which the court will take judicial notice that many of the lines of defendant’s street railway cross each other at different points in the city, us
“If this view is correct, then it follows that the conductor was right in refusing a transfer; that plaintiff was not justified in refusing to pay his carfare, and that his removal from the car, accomplished, as already stated, without unnecessary force and without any circumstances indicative of a desire to injure or humiliate him, was not wrongful. This being true, plaintif has no cause of action.”
What we have quoted above from the memoranda of the learned trial judge is a correct statement of the law applicable to the facts in this case and we adopt the same as part of our opinion herein.
The public convenience, and not the .indulgence of individual caprice, is to be served, and this is to be accomplished by reasonable rules and regulations of the company in conformity with such ordinances as may be pertinent thereto. A passenger has not the option of selecting the route by which he will travel from one point where he boards the car to the point of his destination, if the route selected requires a transfer, where the company offers the passenger a direct route between the said points, which will take him to his destination in the same time and by practically as short a route, and without transferring, as in the instant case. [Mills v.
The evidence showed that when the conductor ejected plaintiff he had a right to do. so and used no more force than was necessary. In view of these facts the trial court properly granted the defendant below a new trial on the grounds set forth in his memoranda. The judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.