Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Larkin

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by the appellee who was a passenger on the appellant’s cars, to recover damages for having been expelled therefrom by the conductor, and other employes of the company. There is a direct conflict in the testimony as to the cause of the expulsion, the circumstances attending and the degree of violence used in accomplishing it. It was for the jury to decide that question and they have done so. Our duty is confined to a review of the rulings of the Court below upon the law of the case to which exception ivas taken by the defendant. All the prayers offered on both sides, (four on the part of the plaintiff and' three on the part of the defendant,) were granted. Those on the part of the defendant are not before us, inasmuch as the verdict and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff, and he has taken no exception to the granting of these instructions. The sole inquiry therefore is, was there error in granting the plaintiff’s prayers or either of them?

In reviewing these prayers one of the questions presented is, were the jury rightly instructed upon the subject of exemplary damages? That the jury may be allowed to give exemplary or punitive damages against a railroad company in an action like this, if the circumstances of the case warrant it, is no longer an open question in this State. It was so held in the case of the President of the Balt. & Yorktown Turnpike Road vs. Boone, decided by this Court-at its April Term, 1816. There the action was to recover damages for an expulsion from the defendant’s horse cars, and by the plaintiff’s second prayer, which the Court granted in that case, the jury were instructed that if they found for the plaintiff under his first instruction, “they should award him such sum as damages, as will compensate him for the injury to his person, feelings and character, arising from the unlawful act of the defendant, and, if they believe the said unlawful act was deliberately *162and forcibly done, then they may give such exemplary damages as. they may consider a proper punishment for the conduct of the defendant acting through its agent the conductor.” In this instruction there is a plain statement of what constitutes damages by way of compensation, and in reference to that part of the instruction this Court said it “ presents a sound and unquestionable proposition.” As to the latter branch of it relating to exemplary damages, we said the question “is not entirely free from difficulty” hut affirmed it upon the authority of the Supreme Court in Quigley’s Case, 21 How., 214, where it is said “whenever the injury complained of has been inflicted maliciously or wantonly, and with circumstances of contumely or indignity, the jury are not limited to the ascertainment of a simple compensation for the wrong committed against the aggrieved person.” This doctrine has also very recently been approved by the Supreme Court in a collision case: Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co. vs. Arms, 1 Otto, 493 ; where after reference to the case of Day vs. Woodworth, 13 How., 371, where the rule of exemplary damages was discussed and recognized, and after quoting the language of Mr. Justice Campbell, in Quigley’s Case, 21 How., 213, 214, the Court say: “Although this rule was announced in an action for libel, it is equally applicable to suits for personal injuries received through the negligence of others. Redress commensurate to such injuries should he afforded. In ascertaining its extent, the jury may consider all the facts which relate to the wrongful. act of the defendant and its consequences to the plaintiff: hut they are not at liberty to go further unless it was done wilfully, or was the result of that reckless indifference to the rights of.others, which is equivalent to an intentional violation of them. In that case the jury are authorized, for the sake of public example, to give such additional damages as the circumstances require. The tort is aggravated by the evil motive and on this rests the rule of exemplary damages.” *163This seems to us to place the law on this subject upon safe and satisfactory grounds, and in view of these, authorities there was clearly no error in granting the plaintiff’s third prayer, to the effect that, “if the jury find for the plaintiff, then they should award him such damages as will, under all the circumstances of the case, compensate him for the injury to his person and feelings, suffered by reason of the unlawful acts of the defendant; and if they find that plaintiff was treated with unnecessary and reckless violence and indignity, then they may award such further damages as they may think proper to puhish such conduct and deter the defendant from like conduct in the future.”

By the plaintiff’s fourth prayer the jury were instructed that “even if they shall believe from the evidence that the plaintiff acted in a disorderly manner, and persisted in such disorderly conduct to the annoyance of the passengers, or refused to show his ticket on the demand of the conductor, and that it then became necessary under the rules and regulations of the company for the conductor to eject him from the cars, and that he was so ejected, still if they further find from the evidence that unnecessary force was used in such expulsion, then their verdict must be for the plaintiff; and in estimating the damages they may allow the plaintiff such sum of money as in their judgment will compensate him for the wounds and injuries inflicted upon him by the use of such unnecessary force, (if they shall find such wounds and injuries,) as well as for the mortification and indignity placed upon him should they find any such; and if they shall further find that there was such unnecessary forcible expulsion, and that defendant’s employés acted in a wanton, high-handed and outrageous manner, then they may allow the plaintiff such further sum of money as in their judgment may be a proper punishment of the defendant.” We find no error in this instruction. It concedes the plaintiff may have been at fault in the first instance, and subjected himself to law*164ful expulsion from the cars, and that the agents of the company had therefore the right to expel him. But in the exercise of this right it was their plain duty to use no more forcé or violence than was absolutely necessary to accomplish the expulsion. If in performing that duty, they used unnecessary force and violence and wantonly and in a high-handed and outrageous manner, subjected the plaintiff to the brutal treatment, both in removing him from the cars and after he was on the ground, to which he and his witnesses testified, then it seems to us clear, in view of the authorities to which we have referred, that their conduct rendered the company liable to exemplary damages. An excessive battery is a complete answer to a plea of son assault demesne, and if wantonly and maliciously inflicted, subjects the party making it to the same liability to exemplary damages as if he had been the original wrong-doer. The defendant had the full benefit before the jury of the testimony of its witnesses on this subject in conflict with that of the plaintiff’s witnesses. By the granting of its prayers it had also the benefit of the law exempting it from all liability, if the jury found among other facts therein stated, that no unnecessary violence was used in putting the plaintiff off the cars and keeping him off until the train had started. Between these witnesses it was for the jury to decide, and in this case we find no error in any of the Court’s rulings upon the subject of exemplary damages.

No objection is made to the granting of the plaintiff’s second prayer which is simply that if the jury find that defendant’s agents expelled the plaintiff from its cars with unnecessary force and violence, then their verdict must be for the plaintiff” without stating any measure of damages. The plaintiff’s first prayer is that “if the jury find from .the evidence that the plaintiff paid the defendant the fare required to travel on defendant’s cars from Philadelphia to Baltimore, and received a ticket as evi*165dence thereof, that the plaintiff upon the conductor’s demand while so travelling exhibited said ticket to him, and when called upon again to do so was unable to find it, and so informed the conductor, then they are instructed that while it was the duty of the plaintiff to present his ticket to the conductor when demanded, it was equally the duty of the conductor to make his demand with becoming courtesy and demeanor, and to allow plaintiff every reasonable opportunity to comply with it; and if they shall believe from the evidence that had the conductor so acted plaintiff’s ticket would have been produced, then the plaintiff could not legally be expelled from the car because of the non-production of his ticket under such circumstances, and the verdict in this case must be for the plaintiff unless the jury shall further find that the plaintiff acted in a disorderly manner to the annoyance of the passengers.” Whilst it is not and cannot bo successfully argued that it was not the duty of the conductor, as the prayer states, to make his demand for the ticket with becoming courtesy and demeanor, and to allow the plaintiff, especially after he had once seen the ticket in his possession, every reasonable opportunity to comply with the request, it is objected to the prayer that it does not submit to the jury to find that the conductor did not do his duty in this respect. If by this it is meant that the prayer assumes a fact of which there was no evidence, the objection is answered by the fourth rule and regulation respecting appeals (29 Md., 2) it not appearing by the record that any objection thereto for such defect was taken at the trial. But it is further argued that the prayer was calculated to mislead the jury by the vagueness of its terms, inasmuch as it omits to leave to the jury to find that the conductor did not make his demand and give time to comply with it as the prayer states he should have done, and then invites the jury to conjecture what would have been done had the conductor so acted, and then on the assump*166tion the conductor had not performed his duty, and on the further assumption that the plaintiff would, under certain circumstances, have produced the ticket, the jury is told the verdict must be for the plaintiff unless he behaved in a disorderly manner to the annoyance of the passengers. This objection is certainly a most ingenious one and it must be admitted the instruction is not so explicit and free from fault as it might have been. But when read in connection with the testimony on the part of the plaintiff, on which it is based, and in connection with the defendant’s prayers which were also before the jury, and which clearly state the facts as testified to by the company’s witnesses, and if so found by the j ury would defeat the plaintiff in his action, we are of opinion, there is no fatal error in it warranting a reversal of the judgment. There was evidence on the part of the plaintiff that the conductor’s manner was rude and harsh; that the plaintiff had a ticket to Baltimore on his person, and that the conductor knew he had such ticket, for in his own testimony he swears the plaintiff had shown it to him when first called upon ; that it was not the conductor’s duty or usual practice to take up Baltimore tickets until after passing Havre de Grace; that he made his peremptory demand for the ticket before reaching that point, and without giving reasonable time to comply with that demand, ordered the plaintiff to be put off the train while he was still searching for his ticket, and when as appeared afterwards it would soon have been found if he had been permitted for a few minutes to proceed qiiietly with his search. The non-production of the ticket under such circumstances clearly did not justify the expulsion, and in view of this testimony it was not, in our judgment, error to allow the jury, as the instruction in effect does, “ to believe from the evidence” (and not to conjecture as the objection puts it) that the plaintiff would have produced the ticket, if the conductor had made his demand for it with becoming *167courtesy and demeanor, and allowed him a reasonable opportunity to comply with the request. If this testimony was truthful (and the jury seem to have so regarded it,) then it is obvious no difficulty would have occurred if the conductor had followed his plain duty in the premises. In our opinion, with this testimony as well as the defendant’s prayers before them, the jury could not have been misled to the prejudice of the defendant by this instruction.

(Decided June 19th, 1877.)

Judgment affirmed.