McGraw v. Railroad Co.
McGraw v. Railroad Co.
Opinion of the Court
There are a number of exceptions in the record to tbe instructions given by tbe Court and to tbe refusal to give special instructions, all of which are duly assigned as error. We are of tbe opinion that tbe first exception should be sustained. His Honor charged tbe jury, as a conclusion of law, that upon all tbe evidence tbe plaintiff was a passenger on tbe defendant’s train, meaning of course that be was such for tbe purpose of maintaining this action. If be was correct in this, tbe jury must, as a conclusion of law, have answered tbe second issue “Yes” — thus eliminating tbe question whether tbe conductor used excessive force from consideration, except upon tbe character and amount of damages which should be awarded tbe plaintiff.
Eor tbe purpose of disposing of this first exception, we must assume that tbe conductor’s account of tbe transaction is correct. Tbe instruction is necessarily based upon that assumption. When tbe relation of passenger is established by entry upon defendant’s premises for tbe purpose of purchasing a ticket or taking passage on tbe defendant’s train, or entry into tbe cars for such purpose, tbe relative rights and duties of tbe passenger and carrier are fixed and well settled. There is a presumption that a person who enters a passenger car, nothing appearing in bis conduct to tbe contrary, is or intends to become a passenger. Railroad v. Brooks, 57 Pa. St., 339, 98 Am. Dec., 229. No such presumption arises when tbe entry is upon a baggage or mail car or upon any other portion of tbe train not assigned to passengers. Elliott on Railroads, section 1578, says: “Tbe presumption may of course be rebutted, and it will not ordinarily arise when tbe person occupies a position on tbe train which passengers have
New Trial.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The plaintiffs testified that they bought tickets, went across the street, still on the defendant’s premises, and bought a muskmelon, and the train starting, they ran and got upon the platform of the baggage car, and
Whether, in the absence of this direct and uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiffs bought tickets, and the ticket agent’s evidence that the tickets were “all right,” there would be a presumption that the plaintiffs were or were not passengers because of their being on the platform and not in the car, is a difficult question, and one which does not arise on the first issue upon this evidencee. The tickets were conclusive evidence that they were passengers. The Code, section 1963. How far the company should be excused for the
The following citations are from the very excellent brief filed by the plaintiffs’ counsel and are exactly in point: Section 1963 of The Code says that “on the due payment of freight or fare, legally authorized therefor,” railroads “shall take, transport and discharge such passengers.” As between the conductor and passenger and the right of the latter to travel, the ticket produced must be conclusive evidence. Frederick v. Railroad, 37 Mich., 342, 26 Am. Rep., 531; Hufford v. Railroad, 53 Mich., 118. In Creed v. Railroad, 86 Pa. St., 139, 27 Am. Rep., 693, the plaintiff was travelling on a passenger train and on a car “not intended for use of passengers,” and in a suit for damages it was held that the plaintiff was prima facie a passenger, though violating the rules of the company. Brooks v. Railroad, 57 Pa. St., 346; Thompson Carriers of Passengers (1880), 51. Irregularity in boarding the train does not sever the relationship of carrier and passenger. Smith v. Railroad,
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- McGRAW v. RAILROAD CO.
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