1. By forbidding common carriers engaged in interstate commerce
to issue free passes for interstate journeys, except to specified
classes of persons (Hepburn Act, 1906), Congress took over the
Page 260 U. S. 460
subject to the exclusion of state laws not only as to what
passes may be issued and used, but also as to their limitations,
conditions and effect upon the rights and responsibilities of the
passenger and railway company, respectively. P.
260 U. S.
468.
2. A condition affixed to a free pass, issued under the Hepburn
Act, that the person accepting and using it assumes all the risk of
accident and personal injury, is valid. P.
260 U. S.
468.
289 Mo. 163, reversed.
Certiorari to review a judgment of the Supreme Court of Missouri
affirming a judgment recovered by the respondent from the railway
company in an action for personal injuries suffered by her, in that
state, while she was traveling from Kansas to Oklahoma by means of
a free pass which had been issued to her as the mother of one of
the company's employees.
Page 260 U. S. 466
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case presents the effect of a condition in a free pass
issued by petitioner to respondent and used by her in
transportation in interstate commerce -- whether determined by the
provisions of § 1 of the Hepburn Act (34 Stat. 584) or by the
laws of Kansas and Missouri.
There is practically no dispute about the facts. The pass was
authoritatively and gratuitously issued, and she sustained injuries
in Missouri while using it in an interstate journey. This injury
she alleged, and prayed judgment against the railway company in the
sum of $25,000.
The railway company opposed the pass to the action. It contained
the following condition: "The person accepting and using it,
thereby assumes all risk of accident and damage to person and
baggage."
The company averred that it was an interstate carrier by rail
and issued the pass "under Article 5 of the federal law known as
the Interstate Commerce Act," and it was to be "interpreted and
controlled in its effect and operation by decisions of the federal
courts" construing the act.
To the defense respondent replied that, at the time of receiving
the pass, she resided in Kansas, and that, in accepting it, "she
did not and could not assume the risk of accident or damage to her
person and baggage caused by the negligence" of the company, and
that the condition upon the pass expressing such effect was void
under the provisions of Art. 3, c. 98, of the General Statutes
of
Page 260 U. S. 467
the State of Kansas of 1915, relating to railroads and other
carriers, and that, under the statutes and the common law of
Kansas, the condition was against public policy.
She further pleaded that, under the laws of Missouri, the
condition was also against public policy and void, and that the
action was not, and is not, brought
"upon any federal statute or under any federal law, but upon the
common law liability in force in Missouri, and that the action was,
and is, brought in the circuit court of Jasper County, Missouri,
under the laws of the State of Missouri,"
and that the company's liability to her was to be determined by
the laws of that state.
The trial court took took and expressed the view that the
condition upon the pass was void under the laws and public policy
of both states, and ruled that the condition upon it constituted no
defense to the action, and excluded it from the case. Declarations
of law recognizing the relevancy and controlling effect of the
condition were refused.
The court thereupon found for respondent (plaintiff) and fixed
her damages at $8,000 -- that amount having been stipulated as
representing her injury. Judgment was entered for that amount, and
was affirmed by the supreme court of the state.
The supreme court discussed at some length the Hepburn Act, the
extent of its regulation, and what it permitted to state powers or
excluded from them, and said, adopting the language of the railroad
commissioner of the state:
"Our conclusion is that Congress has not legislated on the
subject of the rights and liabilities of the parties in cases of
interstate carriage of passengers under free passes, not coming
within the prohibition of the Hepburn Act, or respecting the
validity of stipulations or conditions annexed to such passes
exempting the carrier from liability, and that therefore these
matters remain the subject of regulation by the several states.
"
Page 260 U. S. 468
The comment concedes the supremacy of federal control, and
leaves only the inquiry: has control been exerted in the Hepburn
Act?
The act was passed June 29, 1906, and was an amendment to the
Interstate Commerce Act of 1887. It was, as the act it amended was,
a regulation of carriers in interstate commerce, and it provided
that no common carrier subject to its provisions
"shall, after January 1, 1907, directly or indirectly, issue or
give any interstate free ticket, free pass, or free transportation
for passengers, except to its employees and their families. . .
."
And a carrier violating the act is subject to a penalty, and any
person not of those excepted, who uses the pass is also subject to
a penalty.
The provision for passes, with its sanction in penalties, is a
regulation of interstate commerce, to the completion of which the
determination of the effect of the passes is necessary. We think,
therefore, free passes in their entirety are taken charge of, not
only their permission and use, but the limitations and conditions
upon their use; or, to put it another way, and to specialize, the
relation of their users to the railroad which issued them, the fact
and measure of responsibility the railroad incurs by their issue,
and the extent of the right the person to whom issued acquires, are
taken charge of. And that responsibility and those rights, this
Court has decided, the railroad company can control by conditions
in the passes. Antecedently to the passage of the Hepburn Act, we
decided that a passenger who accepts a free pass may exempt a
carrier from responsibility for negligence, and no public policy is
violated thereby.
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Adams,
192 U. S. 440;
Boering v. Chesapeake Beach Railway Co., 193 U.
S. 442.
Those cases were considered and applied as giving validity to
the stipulations of passes issued under the act
Page 260 U. S. 469
in
Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Co. v.
Thompson, 234 U. S. 576,
according thereby freedom of transportation to the possessor of a
pass and giving assurance to the railroad company that its gratuity
will not be given the consequences of compensated right and its
incident obligations, and be a means of exacting from the company
indefinite damages. In this case, the prayer was for $25,000; the
recovery was for $8,000. Circumstances might have made it the
larger sum, and this, it is the contention and decision, is the
determination of state laws which could neither permit nor forbid
the gift. We cannot assent. The pass proceeded from the federal
act; it is controlled necessarily in its incidents and consequences
by the federal act, to the exclusion of state laws and state
policies, and such is the effect of the cited cases.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.