Negligence: Rules, Decisions, Opinions

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v. Long, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 664.
A railroad cannot recover of a Pullman Palace Car Company for per- mitting disorderly person to enter its car, as the railway company's own conductor has control over it. Houston &c. R. Co. v. Perkins, 21 Tex.
Civ. App. 508.
Passenger who stumbles over valise in the aisle of a car sufficiently lighted to have disclosed the obstacle has no right of action against the ■company. Stimson v. Milwaul-ee &c. R. Co., 75 Wis. 381.
XIII. Injuries from Assault of Other Pass
...engers.
A carrier is not liable for the wrongful acts of a passenger, but is hound to use the utmost vigilance in maintaining order and guarding passengers against violence. It may refuse to receive, or may expel, one who endangers the safety or interferes with the reasonable comfort and convenience of the other passengers, .and the police power the con- ductor is bound to exercise with all means at his command. The fact that an individual has drunk to excess will not always warrant his ex- pulsion, but he miTst be dangerous and annoying to others; but the con- ductor must be apprised of the circumstances requiring his action, or the facts must be such that he cannot fail to recognize them.


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