Case Name: James Hamilton, by His Next Friend, R. F. Douglas, v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, Appellant
Court: Iowa Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Iowa
Decision Date: 1903-02-12
Citations: 119 Iowa 650
Docket Number: 
Parties: James Hamilton, by His Next Friend, R. F. Douglas, v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Iowa Reports
Volume: 119
Pages: 650–652

Head Matter:
James Hamilton, by His Next Friend, R. F. Douglas, v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, Appellant.
Railroads: ejection of trespasser : acts of conductor : liabil1 ity oe company. Plaintiff was a trespasser' on defendant’s ' passenger train. In putting him off the conductor seized him . by the collar and slapped and beat him. Held, that putting plaintiff off the train was within the scope of the conductor’s duty and that as there was no personal malice and the beating was in connection with removing the plaintiff, the company was liable for the injury.
Appeal from Linn District Gourt. — Hon. H. M. Remley, Judge.
Thursday, February 12, 1903.
Action to recover damages for personal injuries inflicted on plaintiff by a conductor in charge of one of defendant’s trains. Verdict for plaintiff for $50. From judgment on the verdict, defendant appeals. —
Affirmed.
J. G. Cook for appellant.
P. W. Tourtellot and W. E. Steele for appellee.

Opinion:
McClain, J.
Just prior to-the injury complained of, plaintiff had been riding on the platform of a car of a passenger train of defendant, confessedly as a trespasser. Being driven from' the platform by a brakeman while the train was stopped at a railroad crossing, plaintiff climbed upon another platform, after the train was in motion. Again the train was stopped, and he was put. off. When the train was started a second time, he climbed on the rear steps of the last coach, and stood outside-of the vestibule doors. The conductor of the train opened the doors from the inside, seized plaintiff by tbe collar, and slapped and beat him with bis hand; and, when plaintiff exclaimed, "Don't kill me!" the conductor responded, "No, I won't kill you, but I give you to understand when the. train is stopped twice and you are put off you will stay off." Thereupon the train was again stopped, and plaintiff was put off or got off. This action is to recover damages for the beating.
Counsel for defendant contends that the acts of the conductor were outside of the scope of his authority, and, as plaintiff was á trespasser, the defendant is not liable. It is not easy to determine in every case what acts are so-far the result of personal motives of the servant as to relieve the master from liability therefor, where the servant is at the time engaged in general in the discharge of duties for his master. There is no question that if, in removing plaintiff as a trespasser, the defendant's conductor, who was charged with the duty of removing trespassers from the, train, caused him to suffer personal injury by reason of attempting to put him off at a dangerous place or by using unreasonable and unnecessary' - violence, the defendant would be liable for his acts,even though they were wanton, willful, malicious, and unlawful. Marion v. C. R. I. & P. R. Co., 64 Iowa, 568; Johnson v. St. P., M. & O. R. Co., 116 Iowa, 639; Hoffman v. New York Cent. & H. R. R. Co., 87 N. Y. 25 (41 Am. Rep. 337). This proposition is conceded by counsel for appellant, but he contends that the evidence shows the beating of the plaintiff to have been a separate and distinct transaction from that of putting him off the train. So it appears from the testimony of the conductor, but, according to the testimony of plaintiff, he was struck and beaten and put off as a part of one continuous transaction, and we think it was for the jury to say whether this was so. But even if the beating was a distinct transaction, it was not as the result of any personal malice or ill will of the conductor, but because, as con ductor, he was irritated by the conduct of plaintiff, and as he. declares, was actuated with the purpose of teaching .the plaintiff a lesson, so that when he was put off he would •.stay off. There is nothing to indicate that the conductor, under pretense of discharging his duty as conductor, was taking the opportunity to injure plaintiff on account of his own personal ill will. He was confessedly acting throughout as conductor, — discharging the duty of preventing plaintiff, as a trespasser, from riding on the train. We think the case is plainly one where' the .wrongful acts of the conductor, if any," were chargeable to the defendant.
Complaint is made of refusal to give an instruction .-asked by defendant, but the law of the case was correctly stated to the jury in instructions given which sufficiently covered the instruction asked.
The judgment is AEEiRMEn.