Court Opinion

ID: 7988938
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:28:45.531103+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:17.579267
License: Public Domain

Price, I.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
On Sunday, August 11, 1901, White purchased a round trip ticket from Vicksburg to Glass Station, on appellant’s rail-; *122road, entitling him to transportation, and in the afternoon of the same day he was at Glass Station in readiness to begin his return trip to Vicksburg. When - defendant’s passenger train No. 22 approached the station, White flagged the train with an umbrella and a shoe box, which he waved across the track. The train was about one-half a mile away when White began flagging it. The whistle blew, but the train ran beyond the station from two hundred to four hundred and fifty yards, where it stopped to put off two passengers. Glass Station is ten miles south of Vicksburg, and White worked on a dredge boat, and it was necessary for him to be in Vicksburg the next morning, or perhaps lose his job. Failing to get on board the train, he walked to Vicksburg, arriving there between ten and eleven o’clock at night; and it ivas a rainy evening. The engineer testified that he was at his post of duty, keeping a lookout; that Glass was a flag station, and when he reached the proper point he whistled for flags, and saw none; that there was no signal given to stop; that if he had been flagged, and knowingly ignored it, he would likely lose his job. The conductor testified that he stopped his train one-fourth of a mile north of Glass, for the reason that there was a young man on the train with a round trip ticket from Port Gibson to Vicksburg, and, as the train was passing by Glass Station, the passenger asked to be put off there, and the conductor signaled the train to stop, and the passenger, with another, got off.-
On this statement of facts the court gave for plaintiff the following instruction: “The court instructs the jury that, if they find for the plaintiff, they may, in addition to actual damages, assess punitive damages — that is, damages by way of punishment, to compel defendant to have due regard for the rights of the public — in such sum as they may see proper, not to exceed the amount sued for, towit, $5,000, provided, that they shall believe from the evidence that the failure to stop the train was either willful, reckless, or capricious on the part of the engineer or other employees.”
*123The defendant asked the following instruction, and it was by the court refused: “The court instructs the jury, for the defendant, that, even though they may believe from the evidence that the plaintiff signaled train No. 22 on August 1, 1901, and, even though they may believe from tbe evidence that tbe engineer saw tbe signal, or, in tbe exercise of ordinary care, ought to have seen said signal, yet, if they further believe from tbe evidence that tbe engineer’s failure to stop said train in accordance with said signal was not due to malice or deliberate design or willfulness or wantonness on tbe part of the engineer, they may only award tbe plaintiff such actual pecuniary damage as be may have sustained by reason of said failure to stop said train.” Tbe jury found for plaintiff $750.
Tbe action of tbe court in giving tbe first instruction and in refusing tbe second instruction are both assigned as error. It cannot be said that punitive damages will be inflicted because tbe engineer of tbe train was in position to see; but, as to whether be did see, or not, is a question of fact for tbe jury. If tbe engineer did see tbe signal to stop, and understood it,, and then did not stox>, and there is no reasonable explanation as to why be did not stop in obedience to such a signal, growing out of bis duties as engineer of a passenger train, then it is a question of fact for tbe jury, under proper instructions, as to whether bis acts were characterized by malice, deliberate design, willfulness, or wantonness. Tbe court gave tbe instruction for plaintiff that, if they believed tbe failure to stop tbe train by tbe engineer was willful, reckless, or capricious on bis part, they might find punitive damages. Then, certainly tbe defendant was entitled to an instruction that if tbe engineer did not act maliciously, deliberately, willfully, or wantonly in not stopping tbe train, they could only find actual damages. We find nothing tenable in tbe other errors assigned.
Por tbe rgfusal of tbe court to give tbe instruction asked by tbe defendant, tbe case is

Reversed and remanded.