delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, a boy about 14 years of age, suing by his next friend, brought this action to recover damages for being by the conductor put off a passenger train belonging to appellant, under the following alleged circumstances: On December 25, 1894, he purchased of appellant’s ticket agent, at Beattyville Junction, a round-trip ticket from that station on appellant’s road to Lexington and back; the return ticket being printed, and as follows: “Issued by the *25Lexington & Eastern Eailway. Excursion Lexington Exposition, Lexington, Ky., to Beattyville Junction. Not good after two days from sale and in no case good after January 8, 1895. [Signed] Charles Scott, General Passenger Agent.” On the back of the ticket were the words, “No stopover allowed;” also stamp of the railroad and the words in writing, “Dec. 25, 1894.” December 31, 1894, appellee boarded appellant’s train at Lexington for the purpose of returning to Beattyville Junction, but the conducter of that train, when about a mile out from the depot, refused to accept from appellee the return ticket described in satisfaction of his fare, and appellee, failing to pay his fare in money, was ejected from the train and compelled to walk back to Lexington, where he remained until the next day, when he paid his fare, and returned home.
It is alleged in the petition, but denied in the answer, that at the time appellee purchased said round-trip ticket at Beattyville Junction the ticket agent of appellant at that station represented to him that it would be good until the 8th day of January, 1895, and upon said representation appellee paid to said agent the sum of $2.35, and received therefor said ticket. Upon the trial the court gave to the jury the following instructions: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that at the time plaintiff bought the ticket offered in evidence that defendant’s agent at Beattyville Junction represented to-plaintiff that said ticket would be good for passage upon defendant’s train from Beattyville Junction to Lexington and return at any time between the 25th day of December, 1894, and January 8, 1895, and that plaintiff bought and paid for said ticket relying upon said representation, and that plaintiff offered and attempted to return upon defendant’s train before January 8, 1895, and was ejected there*26from, by defendant’s agents or employes, they will find for plaintiff such damages, if any, as they believe from the evidence he has sustained by reason of said ejectment not exceeding $5,000, and unless they so believe they will find for defendant. The measure of damages, if any, is such as will compensate the plaintiff for any loss of time, expense of a night in Lexington, the cost of transportation from Lexington to Beattyville Junction, and for any humiliation or mortification to which he may have been subjected by reason of being removed from the train; but as to this latter item of damages the jury are instructed that they should not allow him, if they believe from the evidence that before he got upon the train at Lexington to return to Beattyville Junction the extension of his ticket had been refused by an officer of the company, and that plaintiff knew at the time he entered the train that he would not be allowed to travel upon said ticket.” As there was evidence, although contradicted, tending to show that the alleged representations were made by the ticket agent at Beattyville Junction, and relied on by appellee, and also that prior to the time of his expulsion from the train he neither asked for, nor did the general manager of the road refuse, an ■ extension of his ticket, the finding of the jury upon these two issues of facts must be accepted as true. However, it is proper in this connection to notice tw.o rulings of the court, during the trial, upon the competency of evidence, complained of by appellant: First. Whether, on the 14th day of December, 1894, the general passenger agent, by circular letter, directed the ticket agent at Beattyville Junction to limit all excursion ticket's like the one in question to two days from date of sale, which appellant avowed, if permitted by the court, it would show he did do, was not, in our opinion, an inquiry *27materially affecting the legal rights of the parties.' But as that circular did have some bearing on the issue of fact whether Jones, the ticket agent, did, as appellee testified, or' did not, as he himself testified, make the representation referred to, the court ought to have permitted it read to the jury . Second. We think the court did not err in permitting the witness Blakey to testify that on the same occasion he purchased three similar excusión tickets, and that the ticket agent at Beatty ville Junction made the same representations as to them as appellee alleged in his petition and testified was made with reference to the one he had purchased. Nor does it make any difference that the testimony of Blakey was given “in rebuttal” instead of “in chief,” inasmuch as Jones, upon the interrogation of appellant, stated that he made no representation as to Blakey except that he would sell the tickets until January 8, 1895. The generally received doctrine upon the subject of passenger tickets is that they are for the most part mere memoranda, importing a contract upon the part of the carrier to carry a passenger from one point to another in the manner in which the holders of such tickets are usually carried; the real contráct between the carrier and the passenger being usually made before the ticket is delivered. Accordingly, it has been held that where the ticket does not purport to be and is not the complete agreement between the carrier and the passenger, supplementary evidence is competent to show what was the real contract indicated by the ticket. Nevertheless, it is generally, and, we think, properly, held that the ticket accepted by the passenger must usually be treated as conclusive evidence of the passenger’s rights as between him and the conductor, leaving the passenger to his action against the carrier if he has not been given such a *28ticket as the contract called for; otherwise the conductor would be compelled to accept the statements of the passenger in preference to, and contradictory of, the ticket presented to and relied on by himself. Nevertheless, in one case; Hufford v. Railroad Co., 64 Mich. 631 [31 N. W. 544],it has been held — though we think, incorrectly — to be the duty of the conductor to accept the passenger’s statement until he finds out it is not true, no matter what the ticket contained in words, figures, or other marks. As between the two, the conductor may properly rely upon the ticket as it reads,’ and, as the passenger can not reasonably demand more, it follows that the expulsion of the latter from the train in a case like the one before us can not be regarded as tortious unless accompanied with urn reasonable and unnecessary force or insult. Although it is alleged in the petition that the conductor wrongfully and maliciously, and to the humiliation of appellee, ejected him from the train, the action is essentially and in form ex contractu, and the recovery, if any, must be necessarily limited to compensatory damages. And we do not think the jury were in fact instructed, or could have fairly understood, that they were authorized to find exemplary damages; for the mortification and humiliation consequent upon the wrongful ejection of a passenger from a railroad train is a proper element of damages recoverable for a breach of contract like the present. The instructions given by the lower court accord with the principles here indicated, and, we think, were correct, but the amount of recovery assessed by the jury in this case was excessive' — • in fact many times greater than the amount of actual damages sustained by appellee, or that can be legally or justly sanctioned by any court. The verdict, therefore, for that reason, ought to have been set aside, and for the error of *29the lower court in not doing so the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.