Solomon v. Pennsylvania R. Co.
Decision Date | 05 April 1951 |
Citation | 96 F. Supp. 709 |
Parties | SOLOMON v. PENNSYLVANIA R. CO. et al. |
Court | U.S. District Court — Southern District of New York |
Conrad J. Lynn, New York City, for plaintiff.
Stewart & Shearer, New York City, (James J. Mennis, New York City, of counsel), for defendants.
Wilhelmina Solomon sues the Pennsylvania R. R. and Atlantic Coast Line R. R. for damages sustained by being forced to give up her reserved seat and other accommodations in one car and to accept a seat and inferior accommodations in another car reserved for Negroes.
The evidence, which was largely uncontested, clearly established the following facts which are accordingly found.
On March 26, 1948, plaintiff, a Negro lady, purchased from defendant Pennsylvania a coach ticket for transportation from New York City to Lakeland, Florida, and return. The ticket entitled her, at no extra charge, to seat #9 in car CW43 on the "Champion", which departed Pennsylvania Station at 3:05 P.M. March 27, 1948. At Richmond, Va. the train was taken over and thereafter operated by defendant Atlantic Coast Line. Pennsylvania was merely the agent for Atlantic Coast Line in the sale of the ticket for that part of the journey which was made over the latter's tracks. None of the acts complained of was done by Pennsylvania's employees.
Plaintiff occupied her reserved seat without disturbance until the train reached Savannah, Georgia, at about 8:00 A.M. on March 28. At that time a conductor employed by the Atlantic Coast Line, after asking plaintiff her destination and inspecting her ticket directed her to move five cars forward to a car restricted to Negroes. There were several other passengers in car CW43 at the time. The plaintiff objected but the conductor, though polite, was firm. He told her that she must move. A porter, who accompanied the conductor, asked her to identify her baggage, which she did. He picked it up and started away. Thereupon she left her reserved seat and, escorted by the porter, who carried her bags, was directed to a seat in the restricted car designated CW36. The incident, occurring in the presence of the other passengers, exposed plaintiff, a lady of refinement, to public humiliation and caused her to become upset.
Both coaches, built in 1946 by the same manufacturer, were air-conditioned and had reclining seats. However, there were substantial differences in other respects. CW43 is an all-passenger coach for 54 persons. It has commodious accommodations in the ladies' retiring room, including a large sofa. CW36 is a combination car. It is divided into three sections. One is for baggage and mail storage; another in the center of the car contains sleeping and toilet accommodations for some of the train crew. A two-foot passage along one side of this section opens on to the third section which is for passengers. This is 20' 7¾" long and 9' 3¼" wide, with an aisle through the center. A part of this section, 6' 1½" long, is called a lounge. One side of it contains a table running out from the side of the car, with rigid seats for two people on each side of the table. Across the aisle is another smaller table in front of a settee along the side of the car. Glass partitions on each side of the aisle partially separate the lounge from the remainder of the section which has fourteen reclining seats similar to those in car CW43. The ladies' retiring room in car CW36 is smaller and has no sofa. The accommodations which the plaintiff was forced to accept clearly were substantially inferior to those which she was compelled to leave.
The proof failed to establish any cause of action against Pennsylvania and so the complaint as to it must be dismissed.1
The defense of Atlantic Coast Line is that plaintiff was removed pursuant to the railroad's rules and regulations, among which was the following, in effect south of Richmond, Va.: Atlantic Coast Line claims the right to adopt reasonable rules and regulations providing for the segregation of white and Negro interstate passengers2 and urges that the question whether they are reasonable must first be determined by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Thus it argues that this court lacks jurisdiction to try this action.
The plaintiff has not brought the question before the Commission. Accordingly, if there were no more here than the mere question of the rule's reasonableness under the Interstate Commerce Act,3 there might be some merit to the defendant's position in view of the following statement in Mitchell v. United States:4
Mitchell, a Negro, had filed a complaint with the Commission charging that the railroad's regulation was an unreasonable discrimination against Negroes in violation of the Interstate Commerce Act. He asked that the Commission order the railroad to cease and desist from such violations and to provide reasonable facilities for Negroes in the future. The Commission having dismissed the complaint, Mitchell sued in the District Court to set aside the Commission's order. He was challenged as having no standing to sue and the District Court dismissed the complaint on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction. It was in the course of holding that the District Court did have jurisdiction in a suit by Mitchell to review the Commission's action, that the Supreme Court made the foregoing statement.
The question there before the Court, however, was whether Mitchell had standing to sue in the District Court for review of the Commission's order entered on his complaint. The Supreme Court was not called upon to decide and accordingly did not pass upon the District Court's jurisdiction in a suit for damages sustained through enforcement of the railroad's regulation.5 The decision certainly does not hold that a person claiming such damages cannot...
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