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Elmore v. Sands

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 1, 1874
54 N.Y. 512 (N.Y. 1874)

Summary

In Elmore v. Sands (54 N.Y. 512) a regulation that a ticket must be used on the day it was purchased was held to be a reasonable rule to protect the company from fraud.

Summary of this case from Ketchum v. New York City Railway Co.

Opinion

Argued September 18, 1873

Decided January term, 1874

Samuel Hand for the appellant.

A.J. Vanderpoel for the respondent.


On the 16th of November, 1865, the plaintiff purchased, at Jamaica, a ticket for Hunter's Point upon the Long Island railroad. Upon the face of the ticket was printed, "Good this date only," and upon the back was stamped the date when it was issued. When the plaintiff purchased the ticket he intended to make the trip on that day, but his journey becoming unnecessary, he kept the ticket until the twenty-third of the same month, when he entered the cars at Jamaica to go to Hunter's Point. When called upon by the defendant as conductor for his fare, he produced the ticket; the defendant declined to receive the same on the ground that it had been issued some days before, and demanded of the plaintiff the payment of his fare, and the plaintiff refusing to pay, the defendant, using no unnecessary force, and in obedience to the regulations of the company, put him off from the train.

Upon these facts the judge at the circuit directed a verdict for the defendant, and the question for our consideration is, whether he erred in this direction. Railroad companies carrying passengers have the right to make reasonable rules and regulations for conducting their business, and they and their agents incur no liability in enforcing them in a proper manner. It does not appear that the plaintiff was obliged to purchase the ticket before he could enter the cars. He had his option either to pay upon the train or to purchase the ticket and exhibit that as evidence of his right to ride. The railroad company was not bound to issue the ticket in advance of the day on which it was to be used, and had the right to insist and provide that it should be used on the day when it was issued. It had the right to make a rule that every passenger, when he entered the train, should pay his fare or produce a ticket showing his right to ride upon that train. Such a regulation is neither unreasonable nor illegal. It is not an uncommon one, and it is not important that we should perceive all the purposes which it subserves. It is sufficient that it is apparently useful for some purpose. If the ticket be required to be used on the day it is issued, the passenger cannot well use it for more than one trip, and the railroad company will have some information of the number of passengers to provide for on any day. Without such a limitation a conductor might, for aught I can see, permit a passenger to ride for several days, and then take up and return the ticket.

In enforcing this regulation, therefore, the defendant incurred no liability, and this conclusion is reached whether we regard the ticket as evidencing a contract or as a token merely. If the former be the case, then, by the terms of the contract, it was good only for a passage on the day of its date; if the latter, then the plaintiff was bound to pay his fare, as he had no token showing that he was entitled to ride in that train. I am, however, of the opinion that the ticket was, as claimed by the learned counsel for the appellant, a mere token or voucher, showing that the plaintiff had paid his fare and was entitled to a passage as thereon indicated. ( Quimby v. Vanderbilt, 17 N Y, 306; Van Buskirk v. Roberts, 31 id., 661; Rawson v. Penn. R.R. Co., 48 id., 212.) These views are not in conflict with the decisions made in Blossom v. Dodd ( 43 N.Y., 264) and Rawson v. Penn. R.R. Co. (48 id., 212). In those cases the plaintiffs were sought to be held to contracts of which they knew nothing, and to which they had not expressly or impliedly assented. Here the words "good this date only" were plainly printed on the face of the ticket; the plaintiff had had the ticket in his possession for several days, and there is no proof that he did not know its terms. He must be presumed to have known them. But, whether he did or not, he knew that he was bound to pay his fare or present a suitable voucher. A passenger should see to it, if he prefers not to pay in the cars, that he has a proper voucher. If he does not, he cannot complain if the conductor, in obeying the regulations of his company, puts him off the train.

The conclusion I have thus reached is sustained by the following authorities: Boston and Lowell R.R. Co. v. Proctor (1 Allen, 267); Barker v. Coflin (31 Barb., 556); Boice v. The Hudson River Railroad Co. (61 id., 611); Shedd v. The Troy and Boston Railroad Co. ( 40 Vt., 88); Dietrich v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co. (71 Pa. St., 432), and many other analogous cases.

The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.

All concur; LOTT, Ch. C., not sitting.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Elmore v. Sands

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 1, 1874
54 N.Y. 512 (N.Y. 1874)

In Elmore v. Sands (54 N.Y. 512) a regulation that a ticket must be used on the day it was purchased was held to be a reasonable rule to protect the company from fraud.

Summary of this case from Ketchum v. New York City Railway Co.
Case details for

Elmore v. Sands

Case Details

Full title:JAMES H. ELMORE, Appellant, v . LEWIS G. SANDS, Respondent

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jan 1, 1874

Citations

54 N.Y. 512 (N.Y. 1874)

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