Smith v. Southern Ry.
Smith v. Southern Ry.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action was brought to recover damages for compelling plaintiff to pay her fare in cash, under threat of' expulsion from one of defendant’s trains, notwithstanding she presented to the conductor a ticket which had been issued and sold to her husband for her by one of defendant’s ticket agents.
The ticket was obtained under the following circumstances: Plaintiff’s husband had purchased one of defendant’s interchangeable 1,000-mile individual mileage coupon books, upon the cover of which is printed a contract which was signed by the purchaser. Besides many other stipulations, the contract provides that the book shall not be transferable, and that if it or any ticket issued in exchange for coupons from it shall be presented to any agent or conductor by any other person than the original purchaser, neither the book nor such ticket will be honored, but both will be forfeited and taken up and cancelled; and that no agent or employee of any line over which it reads has power to alter, modify or waive any of its conditions or stipulations. In November, 1908, plaintiff and her husband, desiring to go from their home in Edgefield, S. C., to Augusta, Ga., Mr. Smith presented to defendant’s ticket agent at Edgefield his mileage book and a five dollar bill, which plaintiff had given him to buy her ticket with, and asked the agent for two tickets to Augusta, — one for himself to be paid for with coupons from the book, and the other for his wife, the plaintiff, to be paid for out of the bill. The agent said to him: *423 “Why don’t you get both tickets out of your mileage book?” Mr. Smith replied: “I did not know you could do that.” The agent said: “Of course, you can, and I will give you both tickets from your mileage book,” and pushed the bill back to Mr. Smith, who said, if he .could do that, he would rather pay mileage for the tickets than money. Accordingly, the agent detached the necessary number of coupons from the book to pay for both tickets, and issued1 them in the usual form. Their date, number and other marks showed that both had been issued in exchange for coupons from Mr. Smith’s mileage book. The conductor on the road from Edgefield to Trenton honored them without question, punched them and returned them to Mr. Smith, by whom they were presented1. At Trenton, the parties changed cars and took another line of defendant’s road for Augusta. When the tickets were presented to the conductor on this line, he called for the mileage book, and, after comparing the tickets with it and seeing that both had been issued for coupons from it, he refused to honor them and told Mr. and Mrs. Smith that they would have to pay their fare in cash, or he would put them off the train. Mr. Smith explained to him the circumstances under which the tickets had been issued, and told him that he had offered to pay for his wife’s ticket in money, but, at the suggestion of the agent, both tickets had been issued in exchange for coupons from his mileage book. But the conductor refused to accept the explanation, and demanded payment of their fares under threat of expulsion. Thereupon, Mr. Smith, to save his wife from being ejected from the train, got the money from her and paid her fare, but refused to pay his own. After some parleying, fhe conductor allowed Mr. Smith to ride on his ticket, but took up both tickets and the mileage book.
Under the instructions of the Court the jury found a verdict for plaintiff for $1,000.00, upon which judgment was entered.
*424
It must not be forgotten that this is not an action upon Mr. Smith’s contract, either to enforce it or for damages for its breach; but it is an action for a tort — for a wrong done to plaintiff by defendant, through its agents; first, by the agent at Edgefield, who, by falsely representing to Mr. Smith that he could issue the tickets as he did, misled him into a violation of the contract printed on his mileage book, and caused him to make another contract with defendant; and, second, by the conductor, who refused to recognize the last contract which Mr. Smith was so induced to make. The company can act only by agents. It was present in the person of its ticket agent when the contract was made and the tickets issued. It was present in the person of its conductor when that contract was violated. It will not be' heard to say that it manages its business in such a way that *426 it makes a contract through one of its agents which it may violate through another with impunity to itself. There can be no doubt that defendant is liable for the conduct of its agents, acting within the apparent scope of their authority. That is elementary law. It is a ticket agent’s duty, and, therefore, within the scope of his authority, to give passengers correct information with regard to their tickets, and to provide them, upon payment of the fare, with proper tickets. Therefore a passenger has a right to rely upon information given him by the ticket agent. The traveling public are not concerned with the management of the affairs of railroad companies. They are not presumed to know the rules and regulations adopted by the companies for the guidance of their agents; nor are they presumed to know the limitations of the authority of the agents of the companies. The agent who sold the tickets in this case was not examined; but, assuming that he merely made a mistake, the defendant cannot be heard to say that it is not liable even for the error of its agent, which resulted in injury to the plaintiff, because the act of its agent is its own act. There is some conflict in the authorities, but the weight of reason and the trend of judicial thought is in favor of the doctrine that a passenger has the right to rely upon the statements and assurances of a ticket agent as to the sufficiency of the ticket furnished him as evidence of his rights as a passenger, and that the carrier is liable for the errors and omissions of such agents resulting in injury to the passenger. Childs v. Ry., 69 S. C. 327, 48 S. E. 252; Tolleson v. Ry., 88 S. C. 7, 70 S. E. R. 311; Hufford v. Grand Rapids etc. Co., 64 Mich. 631, 8 Am. St. Ry. 859; Head v. Ga. Pac. R. Co., 79 Ga. 358, 11 Am. St. R. 434; Hot Springs R. Co. v. Deloney, 65 Ark. 177, 67 Am. St. R. 913; O’Rouke v. Citizens etc. Co., 103 Tenn. 124, 76 Am. St. R. 639; Wilson v. Indianapolis St. Ry., 161 Ind. 153, 100 Am. St. R. 261; Pausen v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 70 Fed. 585, 30 L. R. A. 730; Wood v. Ry., 55 L. R. A. *427 536; St. John v. Gulf etc. Ry. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 35 S. W. 501.
The other questions raised by the exceptions are either involved in the foregoing considerations, or are of such a nature that they cannot control the decision and do not require extended notice.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Smith v. Southern Railway
- Cited By
- 17 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Carrier — Passenger—Punitive Damages. — A carrier is liable in punitive damages for requiring a passenger, whose husband presented at the initial office his own mileage book and the money; for a ticket for himself and his wife, but at the suggestion of the agent paid for both tickets with mileage from his book, to pay her fare on threat of expulsion from the train. 2. Ibid. — Ibid.—Conductor.—It is the duty of the conductor to heed the reasonable explanations of a passenger about an irregular ticket or his right to passage.