The Pennsylvania Company notified the Wabash Company that, after
a date named, no ticket sold by that company would be recognized as
entitling the holder to pass over the Pennsylvania road. The Wabash
Company after that date sold a ticket for a passage over the
Pennsylvania road. When the purchaser reached that road, he offered
his ticket to the conductor. The conductor refused to take it and,
when the holder of it
Page 157 U. S. 226
declined to pay his fare, caused him to be put off the train.
Held that the refusal to recognize the ticket was within
the right of the Pennsylvania Company, and that that closed the
matter as between the two companies in respect of the unauthorized
sale, but that the ejection from the train was done by the
Pennsylvania Company on its own responsibility, and was not made
legally necessary by anything done by the Wabash Company which the
Pennsylvania Company was bound to recognize or respect.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 7th day of December, 1880, the Wabash, St. Louis and
Pacific Railway Company, by its agents at Omaha, Nebraska, sold to
one W. J. Connell a railroad coupon ticket purporting to be good to
the holder for passage over certain railroads extending from Omaha
to the City of New York, one of which was the road belonging to the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and extending from Philadelphia to
New York.
It is to be taken upon this record that the Wabash Company had
no authority to sell a ticket entitling the holder to passage over
the appellant's road between Philadelphia and New York. Indeed, the
Wabash Company had notice that the Pennsylvania Company would not
recognize any tickets sold by it.
In the course of his journey to the East, Connell took passage
at Philadelphia on one of the appellant's trains for New York.
Being asked by the conductor for his ticket, he presented the
Philadelphia New York coupon of the ticket purchased at Omaha. The
conductor, in conformity with instructions from appellant, refused
to accept that coupon in payment of fare. Connell refused to make
payment otherwise than with the coupon so tendered by him, and,
because
Page 157 U. S. 227
of such refusal, was ejected by appellant's conductor from the
train, and left at a way station.
Connell subsequently sued the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in
the Superior Court of Cook County to recover damages on account of
his expulsion from the train of that company.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Company thereupon, May 13, 1882, gave
the following notice to the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway
Company:
"W. J. Connell has brought suit against the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company in the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois,
February term, 1882, to recover damages from the said company in
the sum of $15,000 for an alleged breach of contract for declining
to accept from him, December 16, 1880, in payment of passage fare
from Philadelphia to New York, a ticket alleged to have been sold
to him at Omaha, December 7, 1880, by Frank E. Moores, agent,
reading via Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway, Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad, and Pennsylvania Railroad, Council Bluffs to New
York, for O. 145, No. 5. As under the notice given by the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company to the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific
Railway Company December 2, 1880, the latter had no authority
whatever to sell the ticket referred to, the Pennsylvania Railroad
Company will look to the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway
Company for reimbursement of any amount the former may be compelled
to pay as damages or otherwise in consequence of the sale of such
ticket to said Connell as alleged. Having this interest in the
suit, your company will probably desire to join the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company in conducting the defense, and you are hereby
invited to do so."
There was a first and second trial of the action brought by
Connell. The first trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in his
favor for $15,000. That judgment was affirmed in the appellate
court of Illinois. But on appeal to the Supreme Court of Illinois,
the judgment was reversed.
Pennsylvania Railroad v.
Connell, 112 Ill. 295. Upon the final trial, one of the
questions passed upon by the jury was whether
Page 157 U. S. 228
the ejectment of Connell from the train was accompanied by
"unjustifiably violent and excessive" force, and whether the
injuries he sustained were wantonly and maliciously inflicted.
There was a verdict and judgment against the Pennsylvania Railroad
Company for $7,000. That judgment was affirmed in the appellate
court and also in the Supreme Court of Illinois.
Pennsylvania
Railroad Company v. Connell, 127 Ill. 419.
The amount expended by the Pennsylvania Company in and about the
defense of the action brought by Connell was $13,328.94.
In a suit brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Northern District of Illinois by the Wabash, St. Louis and
Pacific Railway Company against the Central Trust Company of New
York and others -- in which case all the property and assets of the
Wabash Company in Illinois were in course of administration, and
were in the possession of receivers appointed by that court -- the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company filed intervening petitions and asked
an order directing the receivers to pay the sums reasonably
expended by it in and about the defense of the action brought by
Connell.
The case made by the intervening petitions was heard upon
demurrers interposed by the receivers, and the petitions were
dismissed without prejudice at the cost of the petitioner. From
that order the present appeal was prosecuted.
The record does not disclose the specific grounds upon which the
circuit court dismissed the appellant's intervening petitions
without prejudice.
If the circuit court was of opinion that the appellant should
first have obtained a verdict and judgment at law, and, upon that
ground declined to consider appellant's claim upon its merits, the
judgment should not be reversed if -- assuming all the facts set
out in the intervening petitions to be true -- there was no
liability upon the part of the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific
Railway Company for the amount expended by the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company in defending the action brought by Connell.
We are clearly of opinion that no such liability existed. The
Pennsylvania Company had in its hands a simple remedy
Page 157 U. S. 229
for the wrongful sale by the Wabash Company of a ticket over its
road from Philadelphia to New York -- namely, to refuse to
recognize that ticket by whomsoever presented. It applied that
remedy, for it declined to accept the coupon tendered by Connell
and stood upon its undoubted right to demand money for his fare. As
between the two railroad companies, this closed the matter in
respect to the unauthorized sale by the Wabash Company of a ticket
for passage over the Pennsylvania road. The ejection of Connell by
the Pennsylvania Company from the train -- particularly if such
ejection was accompanied by unnecessary force -- was upon its own
responsibility, and was not made legally necessary by anything done
by the Wabash Company which the other company was bound to
recognize or respect. It had no direct connection with the wrong of
the Wabash Company in selling a ticket over the road of the
Pennsylvania Company.
It results that the court below would not have erred if the
intervening petitions had been dismissed upon their merits.
The judgment dismissing them without prejudice is therefore not
one of which it can complain, and it is
Affirmed.