Whiteside v. Southern Bus Lines, Inc. Transcript of Record
Public Court Documents
July 27, 1948 - August 4, 1948
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Whiteside v. Southern Bus Lines, Inc. Transcript of Record, 1948. 33da130b-c99a-ee11-be36-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/403c0086-b75c-40c9-9e06-6baf110d78ca/whiteside-v-southern-bus-lines-inc-transcript-of-record. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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No. 10,799
United States Circuit Court of Appeals
For the Sixth Circuit
ELIZABETH WHITESIDE,
Appellant,
vs.
SOUTHERN BUS LINES, INCORPORATED,
Appellee.
APPEAL PEOM. THE DISTRICT COURT OP THE UNITED STATES
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OP KENTUCKY
TRANSCRIPT OF RECORD
J oseph S. F reeland,
Attorney for Appellant,
Paducah, Kentucky.
George R. E ppinger,
T hos. S. W aller,
H enry 0 . W hitlow,
..Attorneys for Appellee,
Paducah, Kentucky.
I N D E X
PAGE
Complaint ____________ ______________________________ 1
Summons ____________________________________________ 7
Return on Service of Writ _________________________ 7
Motion ______________________________________________ 8
Order _______________________________________________ 8
Answer____ i________________________________________ 9
Order __ _____________________________________________ 15
Plaintiff’s Interrogatories to Defendant ____________ 16
Defendant’s Answer to Plaintiff’s Interrogatories____ 17
Amended Complaint ________________________________ 18
Order _______________________________________________ 20
Trial O rder_________________________________________ 20
Notice to Take Depositions _________________________ 21
T estimony fob, P laintiff (D epositions)
H. J. Erwin:
D irect_______________________________________ 23, 34
Cross ___________________ 1___________________ _ 38
Redirect_____________ _________________________ 45
Leslie B. Howell:
D irect________________________________________ 25
1 Cross________________________________ ,________ 30
Transcript of Evidence_______________ ____________ 51
11
T estimony eoe P laintiff (T rial)
Dr. G. A. Davis :
Direct ______
Cross ______
Redirect____
Recross_____
Mary E. Whiteside:
Direct ______
Cross ______
Redirect____
Recross_____
PAGE
56
61
66
66
67
93
105
107
T estimony for Defendant (T rial)
J. B. Martin:
Direct ------------------------------------------------------------- 111
Cross ________________________________________ 128
Redirect ____________________________________ 141
Recross ______________________________________ 143
F. S. Keaton:
D irect_____________ 144
Cross --------------------- 152
Martin Robinson:
D irect________________________________________ 154
Cross _________ 160
Redirect______________________________________ 160
F. S. Keaton:
Recalled:
D irect_____________________ 163
Cross _____________________ 165
Redirect_________________________ 170
page
Jess Sullivan:
D irect_______________ __.________________________ 171
Mildred Swain:
D irect_____________________________________ 173
Cross _____ 176
Redirect_____ _________________________________ 177
L. E. Carter:
D irect___ ______________________________ ______ 178
Cross ------------------------ 180
R ebuttal:
Mary E. Whiteside:
D irect--------------------------------------------------- ..._____ 181
Motion to Dism iss___________________________________ 110
Statement of Mrs. C. C. Swain ________________________ 184
Plaintiff’s Exhibit (No. 1) ___________________________ 187
Plaintiff’s Exhibit (No. 2) ________________________ ...___ 188
Defendant’s Exhibit _____ 189
Findings of Pact, Conclusions of Law and Judgment...,. 202
Motion and Grounds for New Trial _________________ 204
Order Overruling Motion for New Trial _____________ 205
Notice of A ppeal_________________ 205
Bond for Costs on Appeal ____________________ 206
Appellant’s Designation of Record _______________ 207
Motion ______________________________________________ 207
Order Extending Time for Piling Record on A ppeal__ 208
Clerk’s Certificate __________________________________ 208
I l l
Proceedings op the D istrict Court op the United States
for the W estern D istrict op K entucky, at a R egular
T erm Begun and Held at the F ederal Court H all in
the City op P aducah on the 15th D ay op A pril, 1946.
Present:
H onorable R oy M. Shelbourne, J udge, United States
D istrict Court por the W estern D istrict op K entucky.
E lizabeth W hiteside,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Southern Bus L ines, I ncorporated,
Defendant.
Be it remembered, that heretofore, to-wit, on the 27th
day of July, 1946, came the plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside,
by Joseph S. Freeland, her counsel, and filed in the Clerk’s
Office of said Court her petition, which is in words and
figures as follows, to-wit:
Complaint
(Filed July 27, 1946)
I
The plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside, is a citizen of the
State of Kentucky, and the defendant, Southern Bus Lines,
2
Incorporated, is a corporation organized and existing under
the laws of the State of Louisiana. The matter in contro
versy in this action exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs,
the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00).
II
The plaintiff says that the defendant is a common car
rier engaged in the transportation of persons by motor bus
in interstate commerce, from St. Louis, Missouri, to Pa
ducah, Kentucky, via Cairo, Illinois, and Wickliffe, Ken
tucky, and between various other states of the United States,
and was so engaged at all times hereinafter mentioned.
The plaintiff, who is a colored person, says that on or
about the 6th day of May, 1946, she purchased from the
agent of the defendant at St. Louis, Missouri, a ticket en
titling her to transportation to Paducah, Kentucky, via
Cairo, Illinois, and Wickliffe, Kentucky, over the motor bus
line operated by defendant between said points, and that
she traveled from St. Louis to Cairo upon one of defen
dant’s buses. She says that at Cairo, as required by de
fendant’s schedule, she changed to another bus operated by
defendant, which bus was bound for Paducah, Kentucky, via
Wickliffe, Kentucky, and on which bus she was entitled to
be taken to Paducah as the holder of said ticket. She says
that said bus which she boarded at Cairo bore the number
“ 346” , and the ODT number “ 11,580” , and that she is un
able to give a more particular description or identification
of said bus. She says that on boarding said bus she took a
seat which was the sixth seat behind that occupied by the
driver of the bus, said seat being one of the seats provided
for passengers thereon. She says that when said bus, with
Complaint
Complaint
this plaintiff as a passenger thereon, arrived at Wickliffe,
Kentucky, the driver of said bus, whose name is unknown
to this plaintiff, but who was at said time and at all times
hereinafter mentioned an agent, servant and employee of
the defendant, and acting in the course of his employment
and scope of his authority, ordered this plaintiff to leave
the seat in which she was then sitting, which was the seat
which she had taken at Cairo as hereinbefore stated, and to
take a seat in the rear of the biis. She says that said driver
did so arbitrarily and without right and because this plain
tiff was a colored person, and for no other reason. She says
that she declined and refused to change her seat as so
ordered and directed by said driver, and that thereupon
said driver, with the assistance of some person to this plain
tiff unknown but who represented himself to be a peace
officer, who, however, had no warrant for the arrest of this
plaintiff, forcibly and with great force and violence and
unlawfully and without right ejected this plaintiff bodily
from the said motor bus of the defendant, and threw her
luggage off after her, and thereafter refused to permit this
plaintiff to board said bus again or to continue her journey
to Paducah thereon. She says that by reason thereof she
was greatly inconvenienced and was delayed in her journey
for a considerable length of time and was forced to pur
chase a ticket to Paducah from Wickliffe on another bus
line, not the defendant’s, and to complete her journey to
Paducah via said other bus line.
Ill
This plaintiff says that in ejecting her from said motor
bus as aforesaid, the said driver, being at said time and
4
place and at all times in this complaint mentioned an agent,
servant, and employee of the defendant, acting in the course
of his employment and scope of his authority, did with
great force and violence and unlawfully and without right
assault, batter, bruise, beat, and injure this plaintiff on and
about the limbs and body of this plaintiff, in the presence
of numerous persons, and that plaintiff was thereby greatly
humiliated and mortified, and suffered and still suffers from
said assault, battery, bruising, beating, and injuries great
mental and physical pain and anguish.
IV
This plaintiff says that in ejecting her from said motor
bus as aforesaid, the said driver, being at said time and
place and at all times in this complaint mentioned an agent,
servant, and employee of the defendant, acting in the course
of his employment and scope of his authority, unlawfully
and without right falsely arrested this plaintiff and re
strained and deprived her of her liberty to go where she
had a lawful right to go, by bodily seizing this plaintiff and
bodily dragging and carrying her from the said motor bus,
on which she had a right to be, and by preventing her, by
force and the threat of force, from again boarding said
motor bus, on which she had a right to be, all of which oc
curred in the presence of numerous persons, and that plain
tiff was thereby greatly humiliated and mortified, and suf
fered and still suffers therefrom acute mental pain and an
guish, in addition to the physical and mental pain and an
guish occasioned by the assault, battery, and beating here
inbefore mentioned.
Complaint
5
V
This plaintiff says that in so ejecting her from the said
bus, and in so assaulting, battering, and beating this plain
tiff as hereinbefore mentioned, the said driver, being at
said time and place and at all times in this complaint men
tioned an agent, servant, and employee of the defendant,
acting in the course of his employment and scope of his au
thority, did forcibly and unlawfully and without right
break, tear, soil, and damage the clothing, personal orna
ments, personal accessories, and luggage of this plaintiff,
to the damage of this plaintiff in the sum of One Hundred
Dollars ($100.00).
VI
This plaintiff says that each and all of the wrongful acts
hereinbefore complained of occurred at Wickliffe, in the
State of Kentucky, on the 6th day of May, 1946; that each
and all of said wrongful acts were committed by the said
driver of the said defendant, who on said date and at said
place and at all times in this complaint mentioned was an
agent, servant, and employee of the defendant; that under
the operating rules of the defendant the duties and au
thority of the drivers of the defendant, including the said
driver, include and included at all times in this complaint
mentioned, the supervision and direction of the seating of
passengers upon the buses of the defendant, including the
said bus from which plaintiff was ejected, and include and
included at all times in this complaint mentioned, the ejec
tion from said buses, including the said bus, of any and all
passengers violating or refusing to obey the instructions of
the said drivers of the defendant with reference to seating,
Complaint
6
and that each and all of said matters and things was within
the course of employment and scope of authority of the said
driver at all times in this complaint mentioned. Plaintiff
says, however, that each and all of the acts and injuries
hereinbefore complained of, each and all of which were done
and committed by the defendant by and through its said
agent, servant, and employee, were unlawful, arbitrary,
capricious, wrongful, willful, wanton, malicious, and with
out right on the part of said defendant, its said agent, ser
vant, and employee. She says that at all times hereinbefore
mentioned, this plaintiff was orderly, peaceable, and law-
abiding, and that at no time hereinbefore mentioned did
this plaintiff violate any lawful duty owed by her to the de
fendant as a passenger upon its said motor bus.
W herefore, the plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside, prays
judgment against the defendant, Southern Bus Lines, In
corporated, in the sum of F ifty Thousand and One Hundred
Dollars ($50,100.00), and for her costs.
/ s / J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Complaint
Summons
(Issued on 29 July 1946)
(Executed on 30 July 1946)
To the above named Defendant:
You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon
Joseph S. Freeland, plaintiff’s attorney, whose address 516
Citizens Savings Bank Bldg., Paducah Kentucky, an answer
to the complaint which is herewith served upon you, within
twenty days after service of this summons upon you, exclu
sive of the day o f service. If you fail to do so, judgment by
default will be taken against you for the relief demanded
in the complaint.
/ s / W. T. B eckham, Clerk of Court
By M. N. H ogan, Deputy Clerk
(seal)
Date: July 29 1946
(On reverse side of Summons:)
Return On Service of Writ
I hereby certify and return, that on the 29 day of July
1946, I received the within summons at Louisville, Ky.,
and executed same on July 30-1946 by delivering to Irvin
Marcus Process agt for Southern Bus Lines Inc. a true copy
of this Summons & Complaint.
/ s / L. E. Cbanor, United States Marshall.
Motion
(Filed August 17, 1946)
Comes the defendant, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
by attorneys and moves the Court that the time for filing
any pleading herein shall be extended to and including Sep
tember 15, 1946, and that no pleading be required of it until
said time and that this Court make its proper order hereon.
W ali.ee, T hrelkeld & W hitlow
By T. S. W aller
Attorneys for Defendant
The plaintiff, by her attorney, does not object to the
granting of additional time until September 15, 1946, in
which the defendant may plead, and concurs in defendant’s
motion above. This August 16, 1946.
J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff
Order
(Entered August 17, 1946)
Shelbourne, J.
Upon the motion of the defendant, Southern Bus Lines,
Incorporated, by its attorneys, and the concurrence therein
by plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside by her attorney,
I t is ordered by the Court that the defendant, Southern
Bus Lines, Incorporated, may have until and including Sep
tember 15, 1946, in which to plead herein.
9
Answer
(Filed September 13, 1946)
I.
Defendant admits the allegations of Paragraph I of the
complaint.
II.
Defendant admits that it is a common carrier engaged
the transportation of persons by motor bus in interstate
commerce from St. Louis, Missouri, to Paducah, Kentucky,
via Cairo, Illinois, and Wickliffe, Kentucky, and between
various other states of the United States, and was so en
gaged at all times hereinafter mentioned. Defendant ad
mits that plaintiff is a colored person, but denies that on
or about the 6th day of May, 1946, plaintiff purchased from
the agent of the defendant at St. Louis, Missouri, a ticket
entitling her to transportation to Paducah, Kentucky, via
Cairo, Illinois, or Wickliffe, Kentucky, or over the motor
bus line operated by defendant between said points, or that
she traveled from St. Louis to Cairo upon one of defen
dant’s busses. Defendant denies that at Cairo, or as re
quired by defendant’s schedule, or at all, plaintiff changed
to another bus operated by defendant, which bus was bound
for Paducah, Kentucky, via Wickliffe, Kentucky, or on
which bus she was entitled to be taken to Paducah, Ken
tucky, as the holder of said ticket, but defendant admits that
plaintiff' took a bus of this defendant at Cairo, Illinois.
Defendant admits that said bus, which plaintiff boarded at
Cairo, bore the No. 346 and the O. D. T. No. 11,580. Defen
dant is without knowledge or information sufficient to form
a belief as to the truth of the averment and, therefore,
denies that plaintiff, on boarding said bus, took a seat which
10
was the sixth seat behind that occupied by the driver of the
bus, but admits that the seat taken by the plaintiff was one
of the seats provided for passengers thereon. Defendant
admits that when said bus, with plaintiff as a passenger
thereon, arrived at Wickliffe, Kentucky, the driver of said
bus, who was at said time and at all times hereinafter men
tioned an agent, servant and employee of the defendant and
acting in the course of his employment and scope of his
authority, ordered plaintiff to leave the seat in which she
was then sitting. Defendant is without knowledge or infor
mation sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the
averment and, therefore, denies that said seat was the seat
which plaintiff had taken at Cairo as stated in plaintiff’s
petition, but defendant admits that said driver ordered
plaintiff to take a seat in the rear of the bus. Defendant
denies that said driver did so arbitrarily or without right,
but defendant admits that said driver did so because plain
tiff was a colored person, and because of the rules of the
defendant as hereinafter set out. Defendant admits that
plaintiff declined and refused to change her seat as so
ordered and directed by said driver and that thereupon said
driver, with the assistance of a peace officer who had no
warrant for the arrest of plaintiff, ejected plaintiff from
said bus, but defendant denies that said driver, with the
assistance of a peace officer, or at all, forcibly, or with great,
or any, force or violence or unlawfully, or without right,
ejected plaintiff bodily from said motor bus of the defen
dant, or threw her luggage off after her, or thereafter re
fused to permit plaintiff to board said bus again or to con
tinue her journey to Paducah thereon. Defendant denies
that by reason thereof, or at all, she was greatly, or at all,
inconvenienced or was delayed in her journey for a con
siderable, or any, length of time, or was forced to purchase
Answer
11
a ticket to Paducah from Wickliffe on another bus line not
the defendant’s or to complete her journey to Paducah via
said other bus line.
Answer
III.
Defendant denies that in ejecting plaintiff from said
motor bus the said driver, being at said time and place and
at all times in plaintiff’s complaint mentioned an agent,
servant and employee of the defendant acting in the course
of his employment and scope of his authority, did with
great, or any, force or violence or unlawfully, or without
right, or at all, assault, batter, bruise, beat or injure plain
tiff on or about the limbs or body of plaintiff in the presence
of numerous, or any, persons, or at all, or that plaintiff was
thereby greatly, or at all, humiliated or mortified or suf
fered, or still suffers, from said alleged assault, battery,
bruising, beating or injuries, or at all, great, or any, mental
or physical, or any, pain or anguish.
IV.
Defendant denies that in ejecting plaintiff from said
motor bus the driver, being at said time and place and at
all times in plaintiff’s complaint mentioned an agent, ser
vant or employee of the defendant acting in the course of
his employment and scope of his authority, unlawfully or
without right, or at all, falsely, or at all, arrested plaintiff
or restrained or deprived her of her liberty to go where she
had a lawful right to go by bodily, or at all, seizing plain
tiff or bodily, or at all, dragging or carrying her from the
said motor bus, or by preventing her by force or the threat
of force from again boarding said motor bus; denies that
all or any of which occurred in the presence of numerous,
12
or any, persons, or that plaintiff was thereby greatly, or at
all, humiliated or mortified or suffered, or still suffers,
therefrom acute mental, or any, pain or anguish in addition
to the alleged physical and mental pain and anguish oc
casioned by the alleged assault, battery and beating men
tioned in plaintiff’s complaint.
V.
Defendant denies that in ejecting plaintiff from said bus
or in allegedly assaulting, battering or beating* plaintiff, or
at all, the said driver, being at said time and place and at
all times in plaintiff’s complaint mentioned an agent, ser
vant and employee of the defendant acting in the course of
his employment and scope of his authority, or at all, did
forcibly or unlawfully, or without right, break, tear, soil
or damage the clothing, personal ornaments, personal ac
cessories or luggage of plaintiff to the damage of plaintiff
in the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars or any sum,
or at all.
VI.
Defendant denies that each or all, or any, of the alleged
wrongful acts occurred at Wickliffe in the State of Ken
tucky or on the 6th day of May, 1946, or at all; denies that
each or all, or any, of said alleged wrongful acts were com
mitted by the said driver of said defendant, but defendant
admits that said driver on said date and at said place and
at all times in plaintiff’s complaint mentioned was an agent,
servant and employee of the defendant. Defendant admits
that under the operating rules of the defendant the duties
and authority of the drivers of the defendant, including said
driver, include and included at all times in the complaint
Answer
13
mentioned the supervision and direction of the seating of
passengers upon the busses of the defendant, including the
said bus from which the plaintiff was ejected and include
and included at all times in plaintiff’s complaint mentioned,
the ejection from said busses, including the said bus, of any
and all passengers violating or refusing to obey the in
structions of the said drivers of the defendant with ref
erence to seating and that each and all of said matters and
things was within the course of employment and scope of
authority of the said driver at all times in the complaint
mentioned. Defendant denies that each or all, or any, of
the alleged acts or injuries complained of in plaintiff’s
complaint, each or all or any of which were done or com
mitted by the defendant by or through its said, or any,
agent, servant or employee, were unlawful, arbitrary, ca
pricious, wrongful, willful, wanton, malicious or without
right on the part of said defendant, its agent, servant or
employee. Defendant denies that plaintiff at all or any
times mentioned in the complaint was orderly, peaceable or
law abiding, or that at no time mentioned in plaintiff’s
complaint did plaintiff violate any lawful duty owed by her
to the defendant as a passenger upon its said motor bus.
VII.
Defendant states that at the time and upon the occasion
complained of in plaintiff ’s complaint there was in effect a
rule of this defendant, of which rule all of the drivers of
this defendant, including the driver mentioned in plaintiff’s
complaint, were advised, which rule required that white and
colored passengers in Kentucky and other southern states
be loaded and seated separately, with white passengers at
the front of the bus and colored passengers at the rear of
Answer
14
the bus, and it was the duty of said driver to require all
passengers to be so seated. Said rule had been in effect for
many months prior to the time complained of by plaintiff
and was, and for many months prior thereto had been, well
known to the general traveling public and to the plaintiff.
At the time and place and upon the occasion complained of
by plaintiff in her complaint, the driver of defendant’s bus
explained said rule to plaintiff and requested plaintiff to
move to a seat at the rear of the bus, which seat was of equal
convenience, comfort, protection and accommodation to the
seat then occupied by plaintiff, but plaintiff, after repeated
requests by said driver, failed and refused to comply with
said rule or to leave said bus or seat, whereupon the said
driver, pursuant to said rule, refunded to plaintiff the un
used portion of her transportation and, with the aid of a
peace officer, required plaintiff to leave said bus. In re
quiring plaintiff to leave said bus, said driver gave plaintiff
more than ample time to respond to his requests and direc
tions, but plaintiff refused to move to the rear of the bus
or to leave said bus, and said driver and said peace officer
used only such force as was necessary to require plaintiff
to leave said bus; and neither plaintiff nor her clothing,
luggage or accessories were at all injured or damaged there
by. The said rule of the defendant, and the enforcement
thereof by said driver and peace officer, is and was reason
able and necessary for the convenience, comfort, health and
safety of defendant’s passengers and was and is promul
gated and enforced pursuant to defendant’s duties to the
general traveling public as a common carrier. All the acts
of said driver were done pursuant to said rule, and all of
said acts of said driver and the rules of the defendant under
Answer
15
which he acted were reasonable and necessary for the con
venience, comfort, health and safety of defendant’s passen
gers on said occasion and were reasonable and necessary
in the exercise of defendant’s duties to the general traveling
public as a common carrier.
W herefore, defendant demands that plaintiff’s petition
be dismissed and that she take nothing thereby. Defen
dant further demands that it be awarded its costs and any
other relief to which it may appear to be entitled.
Davis, B oehl, V iser & Marcijs
By George B. E ffixger
W aller, T hrelkeld & W hitlow
By Hexry W hitlow
Attorneys for Defendant
Answer
Order
(Entered November 18,1946)
SwiNFORD, J.
On motion of the Plaintiff, it is ordered that this case
be continued until further orders of this Court.
16
Plaintiff’s Interrogatories to Defendant Under Rule 33
(Filed April 2, 1947)
Plaintiff’s interrogatories to defendant, to be answered
in writing and under oath by any officer of defendant com
petent to testify in its behalf, within fifteen (15) days after
the service hereof, pursuant to Rule 33 of the Rules of Civil
Procedure:—
1. State the name and residence of the driver of de
fendant’s bus mentioned in Paragraph VII of the answer.
2. State the name, residence, and official capacity of the
peace officer mentioned in said paragraph of said answer.
3. State in what manner the defendant’s alleged rule as
to the seating of colored passengers, referred to in said
paragraph of the answer, was made “ well known to the
general traveling public” at or prior to the time com
plained of by plaintiff.
J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff.
17
Defendant’s Answer to Plaintiff’s Interrogatories
Under Rule 33
(Filed April 18, 1947)
Now comes the Defendant and answers under oath
Plaintiff’s interrogatories, pursuant to Rule 33 of the Rules
of Civil Procedure.
1. The name and residence of the driver of Defen
dant’s bus is: J. B. Martin, 449 Baltimore Street, Jackson,
Tennessee.
2. The name, residence and official capacity of the peace
officer mentioned in paragraph 7 of Defendant’s answer is:
Martin E. Robinson, Wickliffe, Kentucky, Town Marshal.
3. The defendant’s rule as to the seating of colored
passengers referred to in paragraph 7 of Defendant’s an
swer is published in the Rules and Regulations Tariff on
file with the Kentucky Division of Motor Transportation,
Frankfort, Kentucky, filed on the 15th. of November, 1938.
The rule of the seating of passengers is on file with the In
terstate Commerce Commission in the Defendant’s Rules
and Regulations Tariff filed on the 15th. of November,
1938; and also on file with the Kentucky Division of Motor
Transportation in its Rules and Regulations of the Local
Passenger Tariff on November 15, 1938.
Defendant further states that it has, from time to time,
issued instructions to its drivers, which instructions are
well known to the traveling public because of the custom,
usages and universal practice and has been followed for
many years by the Defendant and the traveling public. The
instructions being that colored passengers will be seated
in different sections of the motor coach than white pas
sengers.
T. L. B axter,
Assistant Secretary.
18
Amended Complaint
(Filed April 21, 1947)
Comes the plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside, and by leave
of Court amends her complaint heretofore filed, and for
amendment says:—
That by the words “ scope of his authority” as used in
her complaint, there is meant, wherever said expression is
employed, the scope of the authority to act for the defen
dant, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated, as conferred by
said defendant upon the driver of the motor bus mentioned
in the complaint; but plaintiff does not admit or concede,
by the use of said expression in her pleading, any right on
the part of the defendant, as against this plaintiff, to com
mit any of the acts complained of by her in the complaint,
either by the said driver or by any other of its agents, ser
vants, or employes, or at all.
That by the following allegations in Paragraph VI of
her complaint, to-wit:—
“ —that under the operating rules of the defendant
the duties and authority of the drivers of the de
fendant, including the said driver, include and in
cluded at all times in this complaint mentioned, the
supervision and direction of the seating of passen
gers upon the buses of the defendant, including the
said bus from which plaintiff was ejected, and in-
19
Amended Complaint
elude and included at all times in this complaint
mentioned, the ejection from said buses, including
the said bus, of any and all passengers violating or
refusing to obey the instructions of the said drivers
of the defendant with reference to seating,— ”
there is meant that, under the said operating rules of the
defendant, the said duties and authority to act for the de
fendant in all of said matters had been and were, at all
times mentioned in the complaint, conferred by the defen
dant upon its said drivers, including the driver of the
motor bus mentioned in the complaint; but plaintiff does
not admit or concede, by the use of said language in her
said complaint, any right on the part of defendant, as
against this plaintiff or any of the defendant’s passengers,
to commit any of the acts complained of by her in her com
plaint, either by the said driver or by any other of its
agents, servants, or employes, or at all.
Plaintiff now reiterates and incorporates herein by ref
erence thereto each and all of the allegations of her said
complaint, as so understood, as though the same were fully
set out herein verbatim and at length.
W herefore, she prays as in her said complaint.
J oseph S. F eeeland
Attorney for Plaintiff.
20
Order
(Entered April 21, 1947)
S helbottrne, J.
By agreement of counsel on both sides, it is ordered that
this case be continued to the special term of this court to
be held May 12, 1947.
Trial Order
(Entered May 14, 1947)
Shelboubne, J.
This cause came on for trial by the Court without a
jury on May 14, 1947. Both sides announced ready. Joseph
S. Freeland appeared as counsel for the plaintiff, and
Thomas 8. Waller, Henry 0. Whitlow and George Effinger
as counsel for the defendant.
Opening statements were made by counsel for each side,
after which witnesses were introduced and depositions pro
duced as evidence by the plaintiff. At the conclusion
thereof the defendant introduced and concluded its evi
dence, and the Court not being sufficiently advised, i t is
o r d e r ed by agreement that a transcript of evidence and
proceedings be prepared, one copy each for the Court, Clerk
and plaintiff and twro copies for the defendant, both plain
tiff and defendant are to pay cost of its copy or copies.
Upon receipt of transcript, each side will prepare Brief
within a reasonable time and file with this court.
21
Notice to Take Depositions
E lizabeth W hiteside, i
Plaintiff I the District Court of the
J ’ [ United States for the Western
against V District of Kentucky, at Padu-
/ cah, Kentucky.
SOUTHERN BlJS L in e s , I n c ., I Civil Action No. 419.
Defendant. I
To the above named Southern Bus Lines, Inc. and its at
torneys Waller, ThreUceld & Whitlow
You are Hereby Notified, That depositions of witnesses
L. B. Howell, M. D., and H. E. Erwin, M. D., St. Louis, Mo.,
to be read in evidence in the above entitled cause, on the
part of the Plaintiff will be taken at the law office of David
N. Grant, Esq., Boom 310, 11 North Jefferson Ave. in the
City of St. Louis and State of Missouri on the 2nd day of
April, 1947 between the hours of eight o ’clock in the fore
noon and six o ’clock in the afternoon of that day; and that
the taking* of said depositions, if not completed on that day,
will be continued from day to day, at the same place and
between the same hours, until completed.
/ s / J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff
We received copy of above this 3/21/47
/ s / W aller T hrelkeld & W hitlow, Attys.
Deposition set for 5 :50 p. m.
22
Testimony
IN' THE
DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES,
F oe the W estern D istrict oe K entucky.
E lizabeth W hitside,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Southern Bus L ines, Inc.,
Defendant.
Civil A ction N o . 419
Depositions of H. J. Edwin and Leslie B. Howell, taken
on behalf of plaintiff, pursuant to attached notice, before
Lois McMullin, a Notary Public, at the law office of David
M. Grant, Esq., Room 310, 11 North Jefferson Avenue, in
the City of St. Louis and State of Missouri, commencing on
the 2nd day of April, 1947, at 5 :50 p. in., and being con
tinued by agreement of counsel to April 10, 1947, at 3:00
p. m., and completed on that day, in a certain cause now
pending in the District Court of the United States for the
Western District of Kentucky, between Elizabeth White-
side, plaintiff, and Southern Bus Lines, Inc., defendant, on
the part of the plaintiff.
Appearances:
David M. Grant, Esq., for plaintiff;
Moser, Mabsalek, Dearing & Carpenter, by Byron
G. Carpenter, Esq., for defendant.
23
EL J. E rwin, of lawful age, being produced, sworn and
examined on behalf of plaintiff, deposes and says:
Direct examination by Mr. Grant.
Q. Doctor, state your name, please? A. EL J. Erwin.
Q. And what is your business or profession? A. Psychi
atrist.
Q. What schools did you attend, Doctor? A. Meharry
Medical School.
Q. Any others, Doctor? A. Well, postgraduate, yes.
Q. Where? A. At the College of Physicians and Sur
geons, Columbia University, New York.
Q. Did you specialize in any work there? A. Yes.
Q. In what work did you specialize? A. Neurology and
Psychiatry. And Harvard Medical School.
Q. And did you specialize in any work there? A. Yes.
Q. What? A. Psychiatry and Neuropathology.
Q. Do you hold any degrees from Columbia University
or Harvard? A. No. I have a Specialist rating with the
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
Q. And do you hold any positions in the City of St.
Louis? A. Yes, at the moment I am the Acting Director of
the Psychiatric Division of the Homer Phillips Hospital.
Q. And what is the bed capacity of Homer Phillips Hos
pital? A. Well, around 780, something like that.
Q. And you are the Director of the Psychiatry Division
of that hospital? A. Division, yes.
Q. What kind of hospital is that, Doctor, private, or
city? A. It is city, municipal hospital.
Q. Doctor, did you have an occasion to observe or di
agnose or treat Elizabeth Whiteside? A. Yes, we observed
her at the Homer Phillips Hospital.
Deposition of II. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Direct
24
Q. You observed her at the Homer Phillips Hospital?
A. Yes.
Q. And was that ease referred to you, Doctor, or did
she come in as just a regular patient, or did she come in on
the service of a physician? A. Well, she was admitted as a
routine admission on the ward, but a physician had made
efforts to get me to see the patient on the outside and had
failed.
Q. Who was that physician? A. Dr. L. B. Howell.
Q. Do you have your records, or have you consulted
your records touching your observation and treatment of
Elizabeth Whiteside? A. No, I don’t have the records
here.
Q. Have you consulted them recently? A. No, I haven’t.
Q. Do you have any independent recollection of the
treatment? A. I have independent recollection that she
was on the ward for the treatment of nervous diseases, and
without referring to the record I couldn’t be too specific.
Mr. Grant: Off the record.
(Discussion off the record.)
Mr. Carpenter: Doctor, now we have been dis
cussing off the record the need for a continuance of
the deposition. Mr. Grant would like to have it con
tinued and I am interposing no objection to it. Now,
do you mean you will refer to the hospital record or
your own private records?
Witness: There are no private records.
Mr. Carpenter : There are hospital records?
Witness: Yes.
Mr. Carpenter: Is there any way, if we continue
this, for you to have those records here?
Witness: Oh, yes.
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Direct
25
Mr. Carpenter: Will you do that?
Witness: Yes.
Mr. Grant: All right, then, suppose we pass it to
next Thursday, April 10th, at 3 :00 p. m.
(Thereupon the witness was excused until Thurs
day, April 10,1947, at 3 :00 p. m.)
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Direct
L eslie B. Howell, of lawful age, being produced, sworn
and examined in behalf of plaintiff, deposes and says:
Direct examination by Mr. Grant.
Q. What is your name? A. Leslie B. Howell.
Q. And what is your profession? A. Medicine.
Q. Medicine? A. And Surgery, yes.
Q. Are you a physician? A. Yes.
Q. And what school or schools did you attend? A.
Meharry Medical College, graduated in 1925.
Q. Did you attend any other schools or institutions? A.
I spent three years at Hospital No. 2 in advance work.
Q. What is Hospital No. 2 called now? A. City Hos
pital, Homer Phillips.
Q. Did you follow any particular branch of work, ad
vanced work? A. Yes.
Q. What was that? A. Gynecology and Obstetrics.
Q. Are you a practicing physician now? A. Yes.
Q. And are you on the staffs of any hospitals? A. All
the hospitals in the city, in my group.
Q. Will you name those hospitals? A. St. Mary’s,
Homer Phillips, and Peoples Hospital.
Q. Those are the only hospitals in St. Louis openly ca
tering to colored? A. That is right.
26
Q. Are there any other types of hospitals in the city
that are open to colored? A. No.
Q. Doctor, do you know Mary E. Whiteside? A. Yes.
Q. How did yon come to know her? A. Her aunt works
for me, has worked for me for seventeen years.
Q. You have met Mary through her Aunt? A. Through
her Aunt and through her mother and through the whole
family.
Q. You are familiar with her whole family, is that right?
A. Yes, that is correct.
Q. Did you ever have occasion to treat Mary Whiteside ?
A. Yes.
Q. You say they worked for you, Doctor. Did you have
any other relationship with her family? A. Other mem
bers in the family that I have treated and her mother, who
came from Paducah, Kentucky, for my medical advice.
Q. Well, I am trying to ask you, Doctor, are you the
family physician? A. That is right, yes.
Q. Now, as family physician to the Whitesides, how
long have you known Mary? A. I have known Mary for a
period of five years or more.
Q. And during that time have you treated her from time
to time? A. Yes, I have.
Q. Now, did you have an occasion to observe or treat
Mary after the 6th of May, 1946, or within a reasonable
time thereafter? A. Yes.
Q. And do you remember what that observation and
treatment was for? A. Yes.
Q. Will you please tell us? A. I saw Mary, she having
no ostensible wounds that I could point to, had to do with
surgical dressing. Well, she gave me a history of what had
happened to her, and she had female difficulties, irregular
menstrual.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Direct
27
Q, What did she tell you happened to her, Doctor1? A.
Well, as near as I can figure, that she was handled, man
handled, very severely.
Mr. Carpenter: I ask that be stricken as a con
clusion of the doctor.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) What did she tell you, Doctor, had
happened to her that caused here to come to you? A. She
was ejected from a bus. She was manhandled. What I
mean by that, he just went right ahead and picked her up.
Q. When you say she was manhandled, what do you
mean by that? A. Well, in other words, they picked the
kid up and threw her off the bus.
Mr. Carpenter: Same objection and ask that the
answer be stricken on the ground it is a pure con
clusion on the part of the doctor, not based on any
personal knowledge of the occurrence.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) What did she come to you com
plaining with, Doctor, if anything? A. Menstrual disturb
ances and backache.
Q. Menstrual disturbances and backache? A. That is
right.
Q. And did she give you any report of what she be
lieved had caused this ? A. Yes.
Q. What did she say happened to her? A. As near as
I can remember, she was ejected from this bus.
Q. Did she give you any history of a recent trauma that
she suffered? A. Yes.
Q. Well, please tell us what that is. A. She had never
before had any menstrual disorders prior to this.
Q. What was the trauma that she described? A. Back
and lower portion of the abdomen.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Direct
28
Q. And how did she say she had this trauma! A. She
was manhandled. Pardon me for using that term.
Q. Well, by who! A. The employees of the bus. In
other words, the poor kid—-
Q. What did she say they did to her! A. They ejected
her and slapped her and threw her out.
Q. Physically threw her out! A. Yes, sir, threw her
out; yes.
Q. Now, over how long a period did you observe and
treat her, Doctor? A. I treated her for a period of six
months.
Q. And did you recommend any sort of specialized ob
servation or treatment! A. Yes.
Q. What recommendation did you make? A. This pa
tient went into a nervous condition; she went off.
Q. You say she “ went o ff” , what do you mean? A.
Well, she had hysteria, some form of mental.
Q. All right, what did you recommend? What special
ized service or treatment did you recommend, if any? A.
Dr. Erwin, neuropsychiatrist.
Q. And do you know where he observed her? A. Yes.
Q. Do you know where? A. Yes.
Q. Where? A. At Homer Phillips Hospital and at her
home on North Garrison.
Q. Did he make a written report to you? A. No, not
as yet.
Q. He did not. Had you at any time during the five
years prior to May 6, 1946, and during your treatment and
observation of Mary Whiteside as her family physician had
cause to suspect or believe or had you noticed any symptoms
of hysteria or any nervous ailment? A. No.
Q. What treatment did you give her, Doctor? A. For
her back and for her menstrual disorder, I gave her med-
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Direct
29
icine to correct those kind of things; and treated her even
for her nervous condition to the time I had to call in Dr.
Erwin, when it got out of my control.
Q. Did the menstrual condition improve? A. Slightly,
yes.
Q. Was there improvement in the back condition? A.
Yes.
Q. Now, you stated that the nervous condition got out
of your control? A. Yes.
Q. Did you mean by that that it did not improve? A. It
came up, it was a sequela; in other words, this followed her
original condition, see.
Q. Did you notice this nervous condition at your first
observation subsequent to May 6, 1946? A. No.
Q. Do you recall about how long it was after your first
observation subsequent to May 6th, ’46, that you noticed
this nervous condition developing? A. Yes.
Q. About how long afterward? A. Approximately three
or four months now. This was not present at that time.
Q. Did it seem to become progressively worse, the ner
vous condition? A. Yes.
Mr. Carpenter: Let the record show that an
swer came in before I had time to object. I object
to the question on the ground it is leading and sug
gestive.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) Well, you say you first noticed it
about four months after— A. Approximately, yes. It
might have been before or after that.
Q. Did you attempt to treat it? A. Yes.
Q. Did the condition respond to your treatment? A. Not
mine.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Direct
30
Q. When is the last time you saw her, Doctor! A. I last
saw her, as near as I can remember, about three weeks ago.
Q. About three weeks ago? A. Yes; three or four
weeks; I don’t remember just.
Q. Did you see her professionally at that time? A. No.
Q. When did you last see her professionally? A. I last
saw her professionally, it has been at least two months
ago.
Q. Did you observe whether or not there was any change
in this nervous condition you have described? A. Yes.
Q. Will you tell us what that change was? A. She had
improved.
Q. She had improved? A. Yes.
Q. Have you been paid for your treatment of her? A.
Partially.
Q. How much? A. I don’t remember the exact amount,
because her aunt works for me, and this family—
Q. Do you remember what your total bill was for treat
ment? A. I don’t remember at this time, no.
Mr. Grant: I think that is all.
C ross exam in ation by M r. C a rp en ter .
Q. Doctor, as I understand it, now, you are a long time
friend and associate of this family? A. That is correct.
Q. And you have known Mary Whiteside a long time per
sonally, as well as from a professional standpoint? A. That
is correct.
Q. How old is she? A. I don’t remember right now. I
have got her card in my office, but I think she is about
twenty-three or so.
Q. Now, that brings to mind that inquiry, Doctor, you
say you have cards in your office? A. Yes.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Cross
31
Q. Now, you knew you were subpoenaed—you were sub
poenaed to come down here this afternoon, were you, or did
you come voluntarily? A. No, Mr. Grant called me.
Q. You came down without a subpoena to testify? A. I
haven’t seen any subpoena.
Q. I say, you came down on telephone call from Mr.
Grant, Miss Whiteside’s attorney? A. That is correct.
Q. And you knew, what you were coming here for ? A.
That is correct.
Q. Did you consult your records before you came? A.
No.
Q. When did you last consult them? A. Probably two
months ago.
Q. A while ago on direct examination you said “ As near
as I can remember, Miss Whiteside said that she was ejected
from a bus.” Now, would you have taken any history from
her and have recorded it on your records in your office? A.
Yes.
Q. Don’t you think you could have better advised us on
this if you had your records ?
Mr. Grant: I object to that as being argumenta
tive.
Q. (By Mr. Carpenter.) Well, at any rate, you didn’t
bring your records down here today, did you? A. No.
Q. Well, when did you first see Miss Whiteside follow
ing May 6, 1946, on what date? A. I don’t remember.
Q. Can you give us any idea how long after May 6th it
was when you first saw her? A. Approximately three or
four weeks.
Q. Your records would show that had you brought them
down, wouldn’t they? A. Yes, they would show it. I think
it was in June.
Deposition of Leslie B. Dowell—For Plaintiff—Cross
32
Q. In June some time? A. Yes.
Q. Now, you say you found no objective signs of injury
about her? A. No lacerated wounds.
Q. Or bruises or anything like that? A. No.
Q. In other words, the things you did see and you have
testified to were matters subjectively given to you by the
plaintiff, Miss Whiteside? A. By my findings and her
story.
Q. You didn’t see any objective signs of injury about
her ? A. I found no open wounds, but I did find—
Q. Did you find any marks about her at all? A. No.
Q. Have you any idea how many times you saw her pro
fessionally and treated her after May 6th? A. Approxi
mately, I couldn’t answer that, because—
Q. Your records, again, would have shown that had you
brought them down? A. No, they wouldn’t because, you
see, in the family, being my Secretary.
Q. Do you keep records of treatments for the purpose
of billing? A. Not people that are near to me.
Q. When had you last had occasion to treat or observe
Miss Whiteside before May 6th, Doctor? A. It must have
been about a month ago.
Q. You mean, a month before May 6, 1946? A. No, I
mean—
Q. I am talking about, now, before May 6, 1946, when
was the last time prior to that, that you had occasion to
treat her ? A. I am unable to answer the approximate elate.
Q. Your records would perhaps show that? A. Maybe
they would, maybe they wouldn’t.
Q. Do you recall what you treated her for prior to May
6th? A. Yes.
Q. What? A. I treated her for menstrual disturbances.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Cross
33
Q. You understand my question, Doctor, you are not
confused in giving me these answers? A. Well, maybe I
had better ask you—
Mr. Grant: Let the reporter read the question to
him.
(Question read by reporter: “ Do you recall what
you treated her for prior to May 6th?” )
A. Oh; prior to.
Q. (By Mr. Carpenter.) Is that correct, Doctor? A.
Oh; prior to May 6th?
Q. Yes. A. I am not correct in that. It might not have
been anything at all, as much as I can remember.
Q. I just wanted to be fair with you. Did you ever have
her in the hospital before? A. No.
Q. Now, you say that when she first came to you follow
ing May 6th she showed no evidence of being nervous at
that time, that didn’t develop for three or four months? A.
As near as I can remember, it must have, but these other
symptoms she had, and these other things came on as a
sequela.
Q. And the last time you saw her professionally, two
months ago, she had cleared up from her nervousness at
that time? A. So far as I am concerned, she was better.
I don’t know whether she was cleared or not.
Q. But she appeared to be normal? A. To me, yes, but
I am not a neuropsychiatrist.
Mr. Carpenter: That is all.
Mr. Grant: I think that is all.
Deposition of Leslie B. Howell—For Plaintiff—Cross
/ s / D r. L. B. H owell
34
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 30 day of April,
1947.
/ s / D. M. Grant
Notary Public.
My term expires 3/10-1951 (seal )
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—-For Plaintiff—Direct
(Thereupon the taking of depositions was continued to
3:00 o ’clock p. m., Thursday, April 10, 1947, at the same
place.)
Pursuant to continuance above noted, the taking of dep
ositions was resumed on Thursday, April 10, 1947, at three
o ’clock p. m.
H. J. E rwin, being recalled in behalf of plaintiff, testi
fied as follow s:
D irect exam in ation by M r. G rant (C on tin u ed ).
Q. Your name is Dr. Erwin? A. Yes.
Q. And you are the same doctor who was previously
sworn on the second of April? A. Right.
Q. In this deposition. Doctor, have you since procured
your records with reference to Elizabeth Whiteside? A.
I have.
Q. And will you tell us what those records show with
reference to your first observation, treatment or diagnosis,
if any? A. Elizabeth Whiteside was admitted the first of
November 1946 on the psychiatric division.
Q. Of what hospital? A. Of Homer Phillips Hospital.
According to the record, the patient had been raving and
35
talking at random. She had been fairly nervous, was pull
ing her hair—
Mr. Carpenter: Just one moment, Doctor. Are
you reading from the record!
Witness: I am reading from the record.
Mr. Carpenter: Do you have any independent
recollection of that history being taken by you or
somebody else?
Witness: No, that record was taken by a doctor
under my supervision.
Mr. Carpenter: You didn’t take the history your
self?
Witness: Not that.
Mr. Grant: Proceed, Doctor.
Mr. Carpenter: Proceed.
A. This had been going on for a period of two or three weeks
without any relief. Now, my own contact with her on this
admission was a day later, when she said that in May of
1946 she was going to Paducah, Kentucky, and she was ac
costed by the driver of the bus and an associate, was taken
from the bus, handled by the men violently and threatened.
Since that time she had been frightened, had felt nervous
and jumpy, had been unable to sleep, had no energy, memory
has been poor, has been unable to sleep, and she had heard
noises when apparently there was no noise in the surround
ings. She complained of smothering and choking of the
breath in her chest. She experienced pounding heart beats
and cramps in the calves of both legs. The neurological ex
amination showed the pupils to be wide.
Mr. Carpenter: This was an examination made
by you ?
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Direct
36
A. Yes. And the fingers of the outstretched hands showed
fine tremors. The palms were moist, reflexes were brisk,
without pathological toe signs. The impression, or the di
agnosis, she was suffering from anxiety, or psychoneurosis,
traumatic in origin. She was given hemabarbital, that is
the medical, grains one and a half daily, and she was ob
served and discharged to our out pateient clinic for further
treatment.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) Have you finished, Doctor? A. I
have.
Q. Have you seen her since that time? A. Yes.
Q. When? A. Tuesday of this week.
Q. That would be April 8th? A. 1947.
Q. Did you make an examination of her on April 8th?
A. Yes.
Q. Will you tell us what your examination revealed? A.
The patient complained in a similar manner as to this writ
ten record. She is unable to sleep, she has lost weight, she
expresses that she is unable to stay put any place and feels
as though she wants to scream.
Q. Have you finished? A. I have.
Q. Aside from these symptoms, which I believe are
called subjective symptoms— A. Yes.
Q. —did you make any other physical examination of
her condition? A. Yes.
Q. What examination did you make ? A. We performed
a neurological examination.
Mr. Carpenter: When was this, Doctor?
Witness: April 8th.
Mr. Grant: That is, last Tuesday.
A. And as I pointed out, there were tremors of the out
stretched hands; the palms were moist. Her heart beat was
110 and the pupils were large, dilated.
Deposition of H. J. Ertoin—For Plaintiff—Direct
37
Q, Is that all? A. Her deep reflexes were faster than
normal, or were exaggerated.
Q. Have you finished? A. Yes.
Q. Now, these symptoms that you have just described
are objective, are they? A. They are.
Q. What do they indicate, or were you able on April
8th to make a diagnosis or to determine an opinion in your
own mind as to whether or not her condition had improved
over the period from November 1st to April 8th, whether
it had retrogressed or whether it wTas the same? A. In my
opinion, based on the history from the patient and from
the neurological examination, my opinion is that the process
is still about the same as November.
Q. It has remained about— A. About the same.
Q. About the same. No improvement or no retroges-
sion? A. No.
Q. A little while ago, Doctor, you stated that her present
neurological condition was traumatic? A. Yes.
Q. Am I right in assuming that trauma means from
some outside force, generally? A. Yes.
Q. Did this patient give you any history of ever having
suffered any violence to her person other than the violence
she complained of having suffered in May of last year at the
hands of the bus driver? A. No.
Q. Did you inquire into that ? A. I did.
Mr. Grant: I think that is all.
Mr. Carpenter: Just one moment, Doctor, until I
glance at this record, if you don’t mind, please.
Mr. Grant: Well, I will add this one question, if
I may, Mr. Carpenter.
Q. Could you at this time, based on your examinations,
give a prognosis with reference to her condition? A. Well,
Deposition of II. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Direct
38
there are three types of prognoses usually, good, fair and
guarded. When a patient is going to recover you say the
prognosis is good, when the outlook is not so positive you
say it is fair, and when you are pretty sure they are not
going to recover, why, it is guarded. I believe she has a
fair opportunity to get well, with careful treatment.
Mr. Grant: That is all.
C ross exam in ation by M r. C a rp en ter .
Q. Doctor, how old is this girl, do you recall? A. Well,
she is a young women, I think under thirty.
Q. This that you have just handed me is the record of
the Homer Phillips Hospital on this case ? A. That is right.
Q. That is a public record, and you brought it with you
for the purpose of refreshing your recollection as to the
treatment of this woman? A. Yes.
Q. This record shows she is twenty-three years of age.
Is that about right? A. Approximately that age.
Q. The record shows she was admitted on November 1,
’46, and was discharged on November 4, ’46? A. 4th.
Q. And I believe the record states here “ Admission di-
agonis Psychoneuroses—type unknown” , is that correct,
Doctor—what do you mean by “ type unknown” there? A.
Well, at that moment the physician wasn’t able to tell the
contributing factor to the illness.
Q. That was the admission diagnosis then, was it? A.
Yes.
Q. Now, Doctor, it is true, isn’t it, that there are many
causes for neurosis, isn’t that correct? A. Oh, yes.
Q. It may be because of worry of most any kind, is that
correct? A. Yes.
Q. A neurosis is just functional? A. Yes.
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Cross
39
Q. No disease of the nervous system or involvement of
the organic nervous system at all? A. It is not an organic
disease.
Q. You didn’t find any organic involvement. In other
words, the neurological tests you gave her, consisting of
her reflexes, etc., her tremors, etc., those were all functional
disturbances, weren’t they? A. There were no anatomical
changes to cause it.
Q. Now, as you say, there are many origins of that con
dition. Did you take a history from her as to whether or
not she had ever had any of these symptoms before ? A. In
the last contact with her she indicated all the clinical signs
had occurred since this unfortunate incident in Kentucky.
Q. Are you testifying, Doctor, from an independent rec
ollection, or from these hospital records? A. No, I am tes
tifying from an interview with the patient April 8th.
Q. I am talking about the time she first came into the
hospital or she first came under your observation. Did you
relate from the records there, or from your independent
recollection ? A. There is a yellow sheet in the record which
contains my findings.
Q. Well, I notice here on November first an item in the
hospital record: “ Case history” . Now, that is where the
examiner puts down the history of her case as she gives it,
is that correct? A. That is the routine hospital procedure
for internes, yes.
Q. I note here under that note “ Case History” here:
“ Patient has been acting nervous, pulling her hair and talk
ing at random. The beginning of this condition, began
about two weeks ago.” That would make it about the mid
dle of October, 1946, is that correct? Is that correct, Doc
tor? A. Yes, two weeks from that is about October.
Deposition of II. J. Erwin—-For Plaintiff—Cross
40
Q. Continuing, “ She became worse last night and a doc
tor was called and patient was given a sedative, which gave
her a little relief. She had never had any such attacks be
fore. Informant states that patient has been deeply con
cerned about her mother. ” That is according to the history
she gave, according to the record here, is that right? A.
According to her record.
Q. Then, continuing under that same admission case
history note, I find these words: “ Dysmenorrhea admitted
marital: Never married. Child admitted at age of 14 years. ’ ’
Is that correct, Doctor? A. That is the record.
Q. Then, the record further shows an operation in De
troit in 1940. Pus tubes were removed. Is that correct,
record showing? A. That is the note the record shows
there.
Q. Did your examination show there had been an opera
tive soar, Doctor—what does it mean, “ pus tubes” ? A.
It is an inflammatory condition.
Q. Of the uterine tubes ? A. Fallopian tubes.
Q. Can a condition of that kind, removal of tubes, Doc
tor, cause a neurosis such as you found in this woman? A.
By and large, most women who have tubes removed do not
develop a neurosis.
Q. By and large, isn’t it a fact, Doctor, that unless a
woman continues to take shots after removal of her tubes
or female organs she is going to be in a highly nervous state,
sometimes bordering on insanity? A. Not the tubes.
Q. Then you say the removal of tubes has no effect on
the nervous system? A. The removal of the tubes has no
effect.
Q. Does the condition which necessitiates the removal
of the tubes have any effect on the nervous system?
Mr. Grant: I object that.
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—-Cross
41
Q. (By Mr. Carpenter.) The condition which it says in
this record caused the removal of her tubes, does that have
any effect on her nervous system ? A. I said, no.
Q. Now, I note on page 5 of this hospital record an entry
reading as follows. I beg your pardon, that is on page 6.
“ Reflexes at this time are all normal. No hyperactive re
flexes are noted.” Is that the record showing there, Doc
tor? A. Yes.
Mr. Grant: What date is that ?
Mr. Carpenter: That all shows the.date Novem
ber 1st, according to this record.
Q. Isn’t that true, Doctor, November 1, 1946? A. She
was admitted on November first.
Q. Well, all these entries, look over it and see, are be
hind the date November first, is that correct? A. Yes.
Q. Now, a further entry, on page 7 of the hospital rec
ord, under the head “ Admission notes” , date November 1,
1946: “ This 23 year old” —I am reading from the record,
Doctor, and if I am wrong stop me, please—“ This 23 year
old female accompanied to the Ward by her Aunt. The Aunt
states that about two weeks ago the patient began to get
quite nervous and irritable and at about the same time
patient’s mother came home after being in this hospital
several weeks. The Aunt states that patient has always
been quite devoted to her mother and when mother was in
the hospital patient was quite normal. Patient has become
progressively more irritable during the last two weeks.”
Is that correct, now, Doctor? A. If you are reading it cor
rectly.
Q. All right; that is a part of the record? A. Yes.
Q. I am reading from page 9 of the record, under the
topic or heading “ Physical Examination. Heart. Rate of
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Cross
42
heart normal. No evidence of murmur or cardiac enlarge
ment.” Is that right on the record here, Doctor? A. That
is in the record.
Q. The last entry that I read here says: £‘ Her course in
the hospital has been uneventful. Patient discharged im
proved to return to clinic.” Is that correct, Doctor? A.
Correct.
Q. Now, aside from this typewritten sheet which bears
your signature, at the very end of this hospital record here,
do you find anything in the whole record, Doctor, that re
fers at all to a bus affair or to being manhandled on a bus?
A. No.
Q. And the parts of the hospital record that I read to
you, those records were made by physicians other than
yourself, I take it, is that correct? A. That is right.
Q. The only writing in there that has to do with your
treatment is a yellow' 8^x11 sheet which you have inserted
in the hospital records, is that correct? A. That is a part
of the hospital records.
Q. I say, you inserted it in there, did you not? A. Yes.
Q. To your knowledge she gave no history to any other
members of the hospital staff about this bus affair, is that
correct, Doctor? A. No. I don’t know.
Q. Doctor, I may be mistaken, and probably am, but am
I to gather that it is your opinion, and is it a fact that a
person with a functional neurosis, one of the symptoms of
that is a dilation of the pupils? A. That is a little difficult
to answer in one word, but the whole neurosis is a disorder
of a part of a person’s nervous system, and dilation of the
pupils represents a disorder.
Q. It was my impression you had a contraction of the
pupils when you had a condition of that sort. Is that wrong?
A. Yes, I think that is an error.
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Cross
43
Q. A dilation of pupils can also be the result of the use
of belladonna or atropin or drugs of that character, can’t
it? A. Sure.
Q. Was this patient referred to you by someone? A.
She was in the hospital.
Q. You don’t know who sent her to the hospital? A.
Unless it says there.
Q. You have no independent recollection of Dr. Howell
referring her to you or to the hospital, do you? A. I saw
him visit the patient at the hospital.
Q. Well, did he personally refer that case to you as a
psychoneurosis expert? A. Well, he said to me he sent the
patient to me, but she never reached my office.
Q. Oh, I see. You happened to run across him at the
hospital and that is when he made that statement to you?
A. This ward happens to be the ward I am in charge of.
He came to visit the patient and I saw him there. I never
treated her on the outside.
Q. Doctor, did you find any external signs of injury to
this woman at all at any time? A. I made no examination
of her for injuries.
Q. And yet you conclude her nervous condition as you
found it was of traumatic origin? A. Yes. I tried to ex
plain what that trauma means.
Q. Well, trauma is the application of force? A. Not
necessarily.
Mr. Grant: Let him explain.
Mr. Carpenter: Well, I have a right to examine
and then he can explain if he wants.
A. Anything that insults the individual is considered, in
our way of thinking, traumatic.
Deposition of IT. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Cross
44
Q. You mean, then, it is not necessary to have any phy
sical violence at all in order to sustain a traumatic injury?
A. Yes.
Q. You mean that? A. I mean that.
Q. Well, your understanding and mine are entirely dif
ferent, but we won’t quibble about that. At any rate, your
diagnosis of traumatic origin, then, is based upon a finding
by you from your history and from your examination that
she had been insulted? A. Yes.
Q. You don’t mean to infer anywhere through here,
then, that your prognosis or conclusion was based on the
assumption that she had a physical insult? A. When I
speak about trauma I am not talking about being whipped
or something.
Q. I see. Or struck? A. No.
Q. Did you have any history from Dr. Howell that he
found or did not find any physical effects of injury? A. No.
Q. Would it make any difference in your conclusions,
diagnosis or prognosis if it were to be the fact that Dr.
Howell found no evidence of trauma or physical damage?
I don’t mean trauma in the sense you mean it, but I mean
marks of physical violence about her. A. Would that in
fluence my conclusions ?
Q. Yes. A. No.
Q. Then, as I understand it, you have taken from her
the history she was insulted, you have taken the story of
her condition, and coupled that with your findings of ex
aggerated reflexes, etc.? A. Yes.
Q. And you have concluded she has a neurosis which is
of traumatic origin? A. That is right.
Q. And at this time you have also known from the hos
pital record that she has had her tubes removed, that they
were pus tubes, you knew she was very much concerned
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Cross
45
over her mother’s illness, you knew she was unmarried and
had a child, and you knew these other things I have read
you from the record. Don’t those factors come into your
consideration, Doctor, in arriving at a diagnosis of her con
dition! A. Her concern for her mother does, but the con
nection of the tubes is obscure.
Q. Yet, with knowledge of all these other circumstances,
you conclude the condition. you found her in as late as
November 1, ’46, was the result of being insulted and not
the result of something else? A. Yes. I think you will find
these symptoms she complained of, according to her, were
present after the accident and not before.
Q. No, that is what I don’t find, Doctor. The hospital
records as I read them to you showed those symptoms had
their origin two weeks before she entered the hospital; isn’t
that correct! A. That is what you read.
Q. I want you to assume further the history this woman
gave Dr. Howell is that she didn’t become nervous until
four month after the accident. Now then, can you still say
that condition you found her in was the result of an insult
back in May, 1945! A. That is my impression.
Mr. Carpenter: All right, that is all, Doctor.
R ed irec t exam in ation b y M r. G rant.
Q. Doctor, the removal of Fallopian tubes is not an un
common operation, is it? A. No.
Q. Would you say it was rather common? A. It occurs
often enough. I mean, it is not a rarity by any means.
Q. I believe this history showed a removal of Fallopian
tubes in 1940 at Detroit. Well, there was no history given
you or no history in this record of any of these neurological
symptoms being present or having occurred between the
Deposition of II. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Redirect
46
period in 1940 when the pus tube operation was performed
and in September or October of 1946! A. No.
Q. May I read further from this record. It begins un
der “ Admission Note. 11-1-46. This 23 year old female” ,
etc., which was read by Mr. Carpenter. There is the further
notation here you may have read, but I don’t recall your
having read it.
Mr. Carpenter: Go ahead and repeat it, it is all
right.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) “ Aunt returned from church and
found patient sitting in bed, screaming and pulling her hair.
Patient quite hyperactive at the time. L.M.D.” What does
that mean, Doctor? A. Local physician.
Q. “ Local Medical Doctor called and patient given tab
let which quieted her for a while. Patient aroused before
morning and began talking about dogs, horses and train
pickets.”
Mr. Grant: Does that look like “ pickets” !
Mr. Carpenter: That is what it looks like to me.
Q. (By Mr. Grant continuing.) “ As patient got no bet
ter she was brought to the hospital for B .X .” What is
that! A. Treatment.
Q. “ Patient went as far as 4th or 5th grade in school
according to Aunt. She had a child, who is still living and
well. Child eight year of age. Patient has always been
able to get along with friends and relatives. Patient works
at a confectionary at present time. Told by employer to go
home for a rest yesterday. Patient keeps jobs well. Anti”
—what is this ? A. Luetic.
Q. —“ treatment not received by patient as far as she
knows. This patient has never had bad blood.” Now,
“ Physical examination. Patient is a ” — A. Well developed.
Deposition of II. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Redirect
47
Q. “ Well developed” ? A. Well nourished.
Q. “ 23 year old female, lying in bed, quite hyperactive
and completely disassociated as to time and place. Patient
does not respond to verbal stimuli.” Now, may I ask you,
Doctor, where it says “ Patient completely disassociated as
to time and place” , what does that mean? A. It means
they have no recall as to their identification or the place
where they are at the moment. They don’t know whether
it is 1947 or 1920, much less the time of day. They have no
conception of time.
Q. What does it mean where it says “ Patient does not
respond to verbal stimuli” ? A. I f we ask: “ What is your
name?” “ Would you hold up your hand?” “ Close your
eyes.” I mean, it makes no impression at all.
Q. Now, Doctor, in response to Mr. Carpenter’s question
regarding trauma induced by insult and you said, “ That is
what, well, that is the trauma w e talk about” , were you
referring to neurologists? A. When I was talking about in
sults I meant anything, factor or circumstances, that influ
ences the human organism in a painful manner is considered
trauma.
Q. Is that primarily to neurogolists, Doctor? A. You
mean, that definition?
Q. That is right. A. Neurologists and psychiatrists, I
think.
Q. Neurologists and psychiatrists? A. Yes.
Q. Is it not a fact, Doctor, that the general practitioner,
physician, when lie uses the word “ trauma” , he is referring
to some injury caused by external, tangible force? A. Y es;
that is what he refers to.
Q. But neurologists and psychiatrists, recognizing, am
I right, that an intangible force such as an insult or an af
front can cause traumatic injury to the brain or the proc
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Redirect
48
esses of things—I am probably stating that very unintelli-
gently, but I am trying to clear up in my own mind— A.
Well, it is common knowledge that many, many thousands
of men in the last war suffered trauma when they were near
the environs of combat, when bombs exploded and the areas
nearby were strafed, not strafed at them, but the situation
was to precarious that acted as trauma.
Q. You mean these men were traumatically injured with
out having received any external physical force? A. Indeed
so.
Q. Violent force? A. Yes.
Q. Now, of course, Doctor, did you mean to exclude en
tirely any history or any findings from information gained
from the patient or otherwise that there was no other
trauma except this intangible thing, if I may use that word,
that we have described as insult, having been offered to this
patient? A. No. I think my answer to this question did I
find evidence of physical, of trauma on the patient ’s body,
and I said I didn’t examine for that.
Mr. Carpenter: That is right.
Q. (By Mr. Grant.) But she did give you a history, did
she not, of having been handled violently? A. Yes.
Q. And threatened? A. Yes.
Q. Doctor, except in the extreme sense, and possibly the
only sense of a neurologist or psychiatrist, violent handling
connotes physical, external force. Am I right in that? A.
Well, can I dilate on that more?
Q. May I reframe the question? A. I understand.
Q. When you put in your record dated November 2,
1946, which is a typewritten notation, and I quote, para
graph one: “ The above named patient gives a history
that in May of 1946 she was traveling on a bus to Paduach,
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Redirect
49
Deposition of H. J. Erwin—For Plaintiff—Redirect
Kentucky, whereupon she was accosted by the driver of the
bus and an associate and was taken from the bus, handled
violently and threatened” , were you referring there solely
to her having given a history of having been insulted, with
out any other violent physical force being applied to her?
A. No, I had this in mind, that she was actually handled by
and in such a way that it was considered abnormal.
Q. And violent? A. Yes.
Q. And in that paragraph you were not referring alone
to insult? A. No, not insult. She was actually made in
mechanical contact with somebody else who jerked her or
twisted her in a manner that caused her to be upset.
Q. And that is what this note reflects in your memory of
the information received from the patient that caused this
note to be made? A. Yes.
Mr. Grant: I think that is all.
Mr. Carpenter: That is all, Doctor.
/ s / TI. J. E rwin M. D. N. P.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 29 day of April,
1947.
/ s / D. M. Grant (seal)
Notary Public.
My term expires 3/10-1951
State of Missouri
City of St. L ouis
I, Lois McMullin, a Notary Public within and for the
City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, do hereby certify that
the foregoing depositions of H. J. Erwin and Leslie B.
Howell were taken on behalf of Elizabeth Whiteside, plain-
50
V erifica tion
tiff, at the law office of David M. Grant, Esq., Doom 310, 11
North Jefferson Avenue, in the City of St. Louis and State
of Missouri, commencing on April 2, 1947, at 5 :50 p. m. and
thereafter continued to April 10,1947 at 3 :00 p. m., at which
time the taking of depositions was resumed and completed,
pursuant to attached notice and agreement of counsel; that
said witnesses were by me duly and severally sworn and
cautioned before the commencement of their testimony;
that the testimony of said witnesses was taken stenographi-
cally by me and afterwards transcribed into typewriting
and signed by the witnesses; that plaintiff was represented
by David M. Grant, Esq., and that defendant was repre
sented by Byron G. Carpenter, Esq.; that I am not a relative
or employee or attorney or counsel for either of the parties,
nor a relative or employee of such attorney or counsel, nor
am I financially or otherwise interested, directly or indi
rectly, in the matter in controversy.
If t e s t im o n y w h e k e o f , I have hereunto set my hand and
seal this 5th day of May, 1947.
/ s / Lois M c M it l l in ( s e a l )
Notary Public.
Fees for taking depositions, to be taxed as costs in
favor of plaintiff:
Attendance and reporting______________ $ 5.00
41 pp. transcript @ .60__________________ 24.60
Oaths to 2 witnesses and certificate.-.____ 2.00
Postage________________________________ .25
$31.85
51
Transcript of Evidence
IN' THE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT,
W estern D istrict oe K entucky.
At Paducah
E lizabeth W hiteside,
P la in tiff,
vs. Civil N o. 419
Southern B us L ines, Inc.,
D efen d an t.
Transcript op E vidence
Paducah, Kentucky
May 14, 1947
Heard before:
Honorable R oy M. Shelbourne, District Judge of the
United States District Court, Western District of Ken
tucky, without a jury.
Appearances:
Joseph S. F reeland, for the plaintiff.
M r. Thomas W aller of the firm of W aller., T hrel-
keld & W hitlow, for the defendant.
Mr, Freeland: The facts, as the plaintiff understands
them are these. This plaintiff, Mary Elizabeth Whiteside,
is a young colored woman, some 24 years of age at the
52
present time, a citizen and resident of Paducah, who for
some years lias from time to time been employed away from
here in St. Louis, Chicago, and other places, in war work
and other work. About a year ago she had occasion to make
a journey from St. Louis, Missouri, where she was working,
to Paducah, where her home is. She made that journey by
motor bus over the bus line of the defendant. The defen
dant’s corporate name is Southern Bus Lines, Inc., and the
bus system is known as the Trailaway System. The plaintiff
purchased her ticket at St. Louis about midnight of May
5, 1946. She boarded a bus of the defendant at that point.
Her ticket called for her to travel from St. Louis to Paducah
over the Trailaway System the bus line operated by the
defendant, changing at Cairo. The bus from St. Louis goes
on down to Memphis, as I understand. To get to Paducah it
is necessary, however, to take another bus which leaves Cairo
about half past seven in the morning and go through Wick-
liffe and on to Paducah. She arrived in Cairo about 4:20
in the morning of May 6th. It was necessary there for her
to, and she did, change to the other bus of the defendant
going through Wickliffe to Paducah. She boarded this bus
and the driver took up the unused portion of her ticket
from Cairo to Paducah. She retained the stub. She got
on the bus. She was not quite the last person to get on at
Cairo, as I understand it—there were some 12 or 15 other
persons on the bus, all of whom were white and none of
whom she knew or knows. She took a seat on the left side
of the bus, that is, the side behind the driver. She will tell
your Honor that she took the sixth seat back behind the
driver. The seats are double on each side of the aisle and
she sat in the seat next to the window. No one was sitting
beside her. No one was sitting behind her. Nothing hap
pened and the trip was uneventful until they got up to
Transcript of Evidence
Transcript of Evidence
Wickliffe, Kentucky. They stopped at the bus station there.
I don’t know whether it is a building used entirely as a
station, or whether it is a store or something of the sort,
but in any event it is used as a station. They stopped there
and a white passenger, who also the plaintiff does not know,
boarded the bus and took a seat one seat back of her and
across the aisle from her. The driver was about to pull out
—to take the bus on to Paducah. Instead of doing so, how
ever, he came back to where the plaintiff was and he there
had a conversation with her about where she was sitting
and where he thought she should sit. She will tell your
Honor about this conversation. I will not undertake to
repeat the details to you now because I might get them con
fused or state them incorrectly, but she will tell your Honor
what he said to her and what she said to him and just what
happened. The up-shot of the thing was that he demanded
that she move to the rear of the bus and she, as she will
tell your Honor, stated that she would do so and she was
willing to do so if the driver would give her his name and
the bus number and he refused to do that, as I understand
the facts, and she then refused to move. The driver then
went off for the purpose of getting a peace officer, as he
stated at the time. He came back with a man purporting
to be a peace officer and we are informed was one, but we
know nothing about that of our own knowledge—whether
or not this man was an officer. At any rate, this purported
officer had no warrant for the plaintiff and did not arrest
her at that time. He simply assisted the driver, and I think
the pleadings admit, in ejecting the plaintiff from the bus.
There was some conversation about whether or not she
would be entitled to a refund for her fare or a transfer or
have her ticket given back, whatever it might be, but what
54
finally happened was that the driver, with the assistance of
this peace officer, or purported peace officer, bodily picked
this plaintiff up and carried or dragged her off the bus and
in doing so handled her with what we believe some degree
of violence, causing her bruises on her person and tearing
her clothing, I understand, and doing* some damage to some
luggage and personal accessories that she had with her.
They deposited her in the street and threw or sent her lug
gage off after her. She made some effort to get back on
the bus to get her luggage—that part that had not been
immediately placed down on the street— and she was not
permitted to re-board the bus. The remainder of her lug
gage was set down in the street and she was not permitted
to get back on the bus and the bus went on off to Paducah.
All of this of course happened in the presence of the people
on the bus, and people in the bus station. It was very hu
miliating and embarrassing to the plaintiff. She waited
around the bus station for some time—I don’t recall just
how long a time, not for any great length of time, however,
and she then purchased a ticket to Paducah by the Grey
hound line and came on in to Paducah by that line. Now,
that same day, May 6th, she went to Dr. E. A. Davis of
Paducah for examination of whatever physical effects there
might have been from this handling she had on the bus, and
Dr. Davis will tell your Honor about the injuries that she
had. Subsequent to that and after this suit was filed, in
fact, last fall, this plaintiff gets an illness of some sort in
St. Louis, which I believe she will describe to your Honor
as a nervous breakdown. She was treated by two doctors
there, one of whom is a psychiatrist or neuro-psychiatrist,
a specialist in that line of medical practice. She was in the
hospital there under his treatment for a short time—not
Transcript of Evidence
55
more than a week. The depositions of these doctors were
taken and one of them, I think that was the specialist, will
be particularly informative and the other one not particu
larly so. She will tell your Honor that she still is effected
to some extent by this nervous illness, or whatever you want
to call it, that came upon her at that time. The doctors, or
the specialist, particularly, attribute it to this experience
that she had.
Mr. Waller: On the morning of May 6th of this past
year, your Honor, the Southern Bus Lines, the defendant,
found among its passengers at Wickeliffe the plaintiff who
held a ticket from Cairo to Wickliffe. We know nothing
about the previous portion of her voyage and think it is im
material. They arrived at Wickliffe. The passengers were
unloaded who were destined for that place, leaving some 18
passengers still aboard going beyond Wickliffe. The plain
tiff was seated, the driver will tell you, three seats back
from the front—by that I mean three double seats. Maybe
we mean the same thing they do when they say six seats
back. At any rate, acting upon instructions from his em
ployer, the driver asked her to move to the rear of the bus.
The defendant operates a large system of motor coach lines
—in mileage I believe one of the largest in the nation. Much
of it is South of the Ohio River in the States of Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky. In their
published tariff, and as we think by law anyway, it is their
duty and their privilege to place the passengers. It is their
duty to put the passengers where all of them may ride with
safety and a maximum of comfort. One of the regulations
of the company, it may be verbal in this respect, is that
colored passengers be loaded from the rear forward—be
seated from the rear forward—they are all loaded from the
front, but they take the seats at the rear and come forward.
Transcript of Evidence
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Direct
The white passengers are loaded at the front and back
ward. That rule is in effect South of the Ohio River and in
such sections of the territory as the defendant thought was
conducive to safe travel for all of its passengers. So, at
Wickliffe, following that rule, the driver of defendant’s bus
said to the plaintiff he would like for her to move to the
rear. That brought on a discussion, the details of which I,
like Mr. Freeland, think the witnesses can tell you about
better than I could. The substance of it was that she de
clined to move and the driver insisted that she move.
Finally, he told her that unless she moved he would have to
ask an officer of the law to either remove her from the bus
or put her back in the rear of the bus. He called in the town
Marshal, Mr. Robinson, and they talked some more and she
declined to move. The town Marshal took hold of her to get
her to leave the bus and she wouldn’t, so he called on the
bus driver to assist him to lift her off. She then said she
would leave and she did. We think she was not injured, and
we think that no more force was used than was absolutely
required to enforce the rules of the defendant company. We
think she sustained no physical injury at all. That she sus
tained no mental injury or inconvenience. And we think
that the law is that the regulations are matters of control
for the carrier and that the carrier’s regulations were rea
sonable and enforced with mildness.
Dr. (}. A. Davis was called as a witness for the plaintiff,
and after having first been duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follows:
D irect exam in ation b y M r. F reelan d .
Q. Please state your name and age. A. Dr. G. A. Davis.
46.
57
Q. Where do you live, Dr. Davis? A. 1135 Clay—
offices at 821 Tennessee.
Q. That is here in Paducah, Kentucky? A, Paducah.
Q. State whether or not you are a regularly licensed and
practicing physician in the State of Kentucky. A. I am.
Q. How long have you been so ? A. 17 years.
Q. Did you attend a recognized medical college? A. I
did.
Q. And what college did you attend ? A. Meharry Medi
cal College, Nashville, Tennessee.
Q. Did you not graduate from that college with a degree ?
A. I did.
Q. Dr. Davis, do you know the plaintiff, Mary Elizabeth
Whiteside? A. I do.
Q. How long have you known her? A. For probably
ten years.
Q. Did you have occasion to make a physical examina
tion of her on or about May 6,1946? A. I did.
Q. At whose request was that examination made? A.
By her-—by the patient, herself.
Q. And for what purpose was the. examination made?
A. The purpose of the examination— she came because she
was in pain and bruises and she was seeking medical aid for
the same.
Q. Now, Doctor, you may refer to any record or memo
randum you made at the time for the purposes of refresh
ing your recollection and state to the Court what this ex
amination disclosed. A. May 6,1946, To whom it may con
cern—
Q. Are you reading now a memorandum you made at
that time ? A. At that time.
Q. All right—go ahead. A. To whom it may concern:
This is to certify that I examined Elizabeth Whiteside,
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Direct
58
which said examination revealed the following findings. A
large bluish discoloration on the inner surface of the left
arm near the wrist. Also, a bluish discoloration on the left,
just above the knee, inner surface. Small discoloration
on the left shoulder. Near these discolorations small, seem
ingly bloody scars existed. In my opinion, this person was
roughly handled to make these discolorations and lesions—
and adhesions. Yours truly, Dr. G. A. Davis.”
Mr. W aller: I don’t believe that is competent for
him to testify by reading a certificate or anything. I
think he might refresh himself.
Mr. Freeland: That is what I asked him to do.
Instead, he read it.
By the Court: I will overrule the objection.
Mr. W aller: That is all right.
Q. Now, Dr. Davis, what kind of discolorations were you
speaking of? A. Bluish discoloration—any time that you
have pressure of any nature to any member of the body or
limb you will find that you will have a venous oozing, that is,
from a venous capilary, you have a discoloration into the
dependent parts.
Q. Is that or not what Mr. Waller and I would call a
bruise? A. A bruise.
Q. Based upon your examination which you have testi
fied about, do you have an opinion as to the cause of these
discolorations or bruises and abrasions you have testified
about ?
Mr. W aller: I object to that.
By the Court: Yes, other than I think he might
state the nature of his examination was such that he
has an opinion as to the cause which may have pro
duced that condition.
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Direct
59
Mr. Freeland: I didn’t mean for him to tell your
Honor who did it, or anything like that. He knows
nothing about that, of course. I meant for him to
give his opinion—
Mr. Waller: He testified about a bruise—that is
about as far as he can go.
By the Court: He could tell what would cause
such an injury, couldn’t he ?
Mr. Waller: Yes, if that is what he means by
what caused it.
By the Court: I can’t tell what he means until
he answers the question.
Mr. Waller: I am not objecting to the answer.
I am objecting to the question.
By the Court: I think the question is all right,
provided counsel has the same ideas as to what he is
trying to elicit as I have.
Mr. Freeland: I think I do, sir, will you answer
the question now?
A. Would you mind repeating the question?
By the Court: What caused that condition in
your opinion? What could have caused it?
A. In my opinion what could have caused a condition of
that sort, as I say, bluish discoloration which means venous
extravasation, that is, out into the tissues—to get such a
lesion as that one would have to be roughly handled in
some description.
Mr. Waller: I move to exclude that answer.
By the Court: Exclude that answer.
Q. Doctor, you don’t know, of course, whether the plain
tiff was roughly handled or not. Can you express yourself
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Direct
6 0
in terms—in such terms as to convey to the Court whether
or not it would be necessary for any degree of force or pres
sure or anything of that kind to be applied? A. Had to be
a degree of force or pressure to apply to make such a lesion,
Mr. W aller: Well, you excluded that other, clidn’t
you?
Mr. Freeland: Yes, he did. You may ask him,
sir.
Mr. Waller: I don’t believe I want to ask him.
Mr. Freeland: Wait—-may I?
Q. Doctor, can you tell from examining a bruise of the
character you have testified about—is it possible to form an
opinion professionally as to whether or not such a bruise
is a recent one or an old one? A. Yes, you can.
Q. Do you have an opinion as to these bruises that you
have testified about—whether they were recent or old at
the time you examined her ? A. I do.
Q. State to the Court what that opinion is. A. My opin
ion they were recent bruises for the simple reason that
ordinarily in a fresh wound or bruise of that description
you find that your discoloration is deep, as also I did say in
the examination that along the edges or near those bruises
I could see some abrasion, which would also state that they
were recent. Usually, if you have a lesion of that descrip
tion, that is, of a bluish discoloration, if it is chronic, that
is, over a long time, you can see the difference in the color
if it starts to fading out, but a recent lesion of that descrip
tion is very dark and bluish as if freshly done.
Q. Was this discoloration of that character? A. It was
of that character.
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Direct
61
C ross exam ination by M r. W aller .
Q. Dr. Davis, you say there were some scratches on it!
A. I didn’t say scratches— some small abrasions, scars-like,
which were bloody in nature.
Q. Do you mean that the abrasions had penetrated the
skin! A. Abrasion in this particular case had not made a
sore or a wound. It was just probably the epidermis, top
layer. You might say a bruise or scratch.
Q. I asked you about scratch. A. It is not scratch in
itself. I mentioned scratch because probably you could see
the picture plainer by saying a scratch, but it is more of a
bruise, that is, you skinned the surface.
Q. Well, now, did she have any scratches or not! A.
She had some bruises.
Q. Did she have any scratches! A. She had some abra
sions, yes.
Mr. Freeland: I submit to the Court the word
“ abrasions” is a word of common usage and the wit
ness has a perfect right to use it to describe these
lesions, if that is the word that most accurately de
scribes it.
Mr. W aller: There was a lot of scratches before
there was any abrasions.
By the Court: I overrule your objection. You
can ask him.
Q. Just answer this—were there any scratches on her!
A. I wouldn’t call them scratches—I would say abrasions.
Q. Then there were no scratches? A. I didn’t see any.
Q. These abrasions—were they long or short ? A. They
weren’t long at all. They were, well just small abrasions.
They weren’t as if you would take any type of an instru
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Cross
62
ment or a pin—it wasn’t a scratch like that, it was just
merely a break in the skin. That is what we mean by an
abrasion, a merely break in the skin, it wasn’t a scratch at
all.
Q. Now, the skin was broken? A. It was broken.
Q. Where? A. On the left wrist— above the left wrist
where the bluish discoloration, I found some small abra
sion, and in those abrasions, did find that the blood had
extravasated into those small abrasions.
Q. Above the wrist—you mean toward the elbow? Was
it on the outside or the inside? A. Inner—inner surface
of the wrist.
Q. You say there was some skin removed? A. No, it
wasn’t necessarily removed—but it was just broken. To
remove it you would have to pull it off entirely and leave
a wound. It was just merely broken.
Q. You mean the skin was broken. How many of those
were there? A. I don’t recall— several. I don’t know the
exact number, I didn’t count them.
Q. Well, from your recollection. A. Several of them.
Q. Seven? A. Several—several.
Q. What does several mean to you? A. Several means
two or three.
Q. And they were on the left wrist? A. Left wrist.
Q. You said something about an injury to her knee.
What was the nature of that? A. Bluish discoloration.
Q. Any abrasion there? A. I don’t recall whether there
were or not.
Q. Your certificate didn’t recite any, did it? A. You
want me to refer to that?
Q. Yes, you may. A. Also, a bluish discoloration on the
left leg just above the knee—inner surface—small discolora
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Cross
63
tion on the left shoulder. Near these discolorations small,
seemingly bloody scars exist. I didn’t say just where these
scars were at each discoloration.
Q. What do you mean when you say ‘ ‘ bloody scar ” ? A.
I mean this—that sometimes in these particular places we
did have some blood, some extravasation of blood into these
particular lesions—just like with the bluish discoloration
above the wrist and above the shoulder and above the
inner surface of the knee. Merely have there where you
have the blood, venous due to pressure out into the tissue.
Where you have abrasion, the abrasion was deep enough
for this blood to extravasate into that particular scar.
Q. Did any of these places bleed externally? A. Not to
my knowledge—not externally, no.
Q. Then, like Mr. Freeland or I would say, she had some
bruises? A. Bruises, yes.
Q. That is all. You say she had some small bruises,
what do you mean by small bruises—big as a dime, a dollar,
or what do you consider small bruises? A. Well, a small
bruise that would be something that you didn’t consider it
in the category of a large bruise. You would say a small
bruise—when I say bruise now, don’t misinform me about
this. There is a bruise as well as a bluish discoloration.
Now, when I said bruise I meant that the—had a bruise as
well as the scars. They were fairly small probably just
about the size of a pinhead, probably a little larger. I don’t
want to recall just the exact diameter of it—I didn’t mea
sure it. But on the surface of each one of these bluish dis
colorations, did have the skin broken. That was altogether
separate from the discoloration—the broken surface of that
skin.
Q. You say that each of these three bruises was in your
opinion according to your recollection about the size of a
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Cross
64
pinhead? A. The abrasions—not the bruises. I didn’t say
the bruises. I said the abrasions.
Q. Do you mean there was a scuffed up place in the skin
on each one of them on the exterior of the skin that didn’t
bleed, but was about the size of a pinhead. How big were
the bruises, the discolorations? A. They were different
sizes. I can’t recall, but some of the bruises—discolora
tions, rather—you might say some were about the size of a
dollar, and probably if I recall I think on the shoulder was
just a little larger—I don’t know exactly. The discolora
tions were probably some the size of a dollar, maybe one a
little larger.
Q. What was the size of the discoloration on her wrist?
A. I don’t recall just the exact size, but if I can remember
correctly, probably—you know this discoloration just means
that venous blood due to pressure gets out into the tissues.
So, the only thing that I can remember, so far as the size
is concerned, I can’t be definite on that—just the exact
diameter.
Q. I don’t want you to be exact. Was it as big as a
batter cake? A. Oh, no, not that large. It would be, as I
said before, possibility about the size of a dollar, some
thing of that sort. I don’t mean to say now that the wound
was round, it wasn’t shaped like a dollar, but probably
would take in the same area as that size.
Q. Now, in the middle of that was a piece of scuffed-up
skin the size of a pinhead? A. In the middle of it—I
wouldn’t say that—near that area, yes.
Q. You mean inside the discoloration or outside? A.
Probably inside—mixed in. Some would be in and some
would be mixed up.
Q. This discoloration was blue. How long after a bruise
is received by a person in muscular tissues before it shows
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Cross
65
discoloration? A. Sometimes it can be a very short time
after you assert enough pressure on an individual that you
can get this bluish discoloration—that is what I mean—you
can put enough force of pressure on that dependent part
and in a very short time you would get the bluish discolora
tion. It doesn’t have to take a long time in some instances.
Sometimes it may take several hours before you get it.
Q. Now, on the left knee was the bruise located on the
upper side of the knee or the inside or the outside or the
lower side? A. Inside above the knee. Inner surface of
the knee.
Q. How big was that? A. It was a pretty good size. I
think that one on the knee was somewhat larger, if I can
recall, than that on the wrist, but just the exact size I don’t
recall.
Q. Big as two dollars? A. Oh, I wouldn’t say that. I
couldn’t make any definite answer just the size.
Q. Now, on the left shoulder, what size was it? A.
Small lesion,
Q. Small lesion? A. Small, I mean, discoloration.
Q. About how large was it? A. Oh, practically almost
the same as the other discoloration. They were all prac
tically the same size—not exact. Some may have probably
been a little smaller than others. Just the exact size I don’t
recall, just the exact size of the lesions.
Q. Doctor, you are a member of the colored race, aren’t
you? A. I am.
Q. And you are a graduate of Meharry College which is
an institution in Nashville devoted to the training of colored
people? A. Yes.
Q. And you have practiced here, to say, for 17 years.
You had known the plaintiff for ten years, you say. Had
Dr. G. A. Davis—For Plaintiff—Cross
6 6
you known her professionally or socially! A. Profes
sionally.
Q. What had been the treatments you had given her for
ailments previously! A. Previously. I knew the family
and have been in and out of their home, but now just so far
as the plaintiff is concerned, I don’t think I have ever
treated her in my life.
Q. She had never been to you professionally! A. Pro
fessionally.
R ed ir ec t exam in ation by M r. F reela n d .
Q. Doctor, on this occasion say whether or not the plain
tiff complained of any pain! A. She complained of some
pain in the shoulder.
Mr. Waller: I don’t believe that is competent
because he hasn’t testified as to any physical finding
that would be painful.
By the Court: A bruise is painful.
Mr. Waller: Sometimes it is and sometimes it
is not.
By the Court: He hasn’t said whether this one
was or not. He might say whether she complained
of pain. Overrule the objection.
Q. Doctor, did you have occasion to examine her after
this concerning the same thing! A. No, I didn’t.
R ecr o s s exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. Doctor, what treatments did you prescribe for the
conditions you found—the bruises! A. In those particular
cases, we tried to use some bland ointment of some descrip
tion.
Dr. 0. A. Davis—For Plaintiff— Redirect—Recross
67
Q. I ’m not talking about what yon ordinarily use. What
did you do for her? A. I said that is what w e did. I don’t
recall now the exact medication, but we used some bland
ointment and tried to alleviate as much as we could because
she did complain of some stiffness and pain in the shoulder
and tried to do something to alleviate that as well as some
mild ointment, I don’t recall now, to try to clear up that dis
coloration or that bruise.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
Mary Elizabeth W hiteside, was called as a witness for
the plaintiff, and after having first been duly sworn, was
examined and testified as follows:
D ire c t exam in ation b y M r. F reelan d .
Q. What is your name? A. Mary Elizabeth Whiteside.
Q. Are you the plaintiff in this action? A. Iam .
Q. Now, the name, I believe, is sometimes Whiteside and
sometimes Whitesides—it is used both ways? A. Correct.
Q. There are quite a number of Whiteside or Whitesides
families in this vicinity, aren’t there? A. That is right.
Q. How old are you, Miss Whiteside? A. 24.
Q. Where is your home? A. Paducah, Kentucky.
Q. How long have you lived here? A. I was born and
raised here. I have been away several times.
Q. You have lived here all your life, then, except some
times you have been away? A. That is correct.
Q. What was the purpose of your being away? A. I
went away to find me a job.
Q. You have worked away from home since you have
been grown, is that correct? A. I have.
Q. Where are you working now? A. Chicago.
Q. What is the nature of your work? A. Mixologist.
Q. Now, for the benefit of Mr. Waller, who I believe is
a prohibitionist, will you tell the Court what a mixologist
is? A. A bar maid.
Mr. Waller: A mixologist?
A. A mixologist, that is what they call me.
Q. How long have you been employed in that line of
work? A. 7 weeks.
Q. What place do you work in Chicago ? A. The Zombie
Lounge.
Q. Where were you working in May of 1946? A. St.
Louis, Missouri.
Q. How long had you been employed there at that time?
Approximately—don’t have to be exact. A. About five
weeks.
Q. What was the nature of your work at that time? A.
Clerk.
Q. In what sort of enterprise? A. Confectionary.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, in order that the record may
show it, and otherwise it would not, you are a colored per
son, aren’t you? A. That is right.
Q. And you are of a light complexion, apparently having
a large or even predominant mixture of white blood, is that
correct?
Mr. W aller: I object to that.
Mr. Freeland: Well, the Court can see for him
self.
Mr. Waller: Well, then, let the Court see for
himself.
Mr. Freeland: Well, the record will not show.
The Court can see for himself and I think the record
ought to show as it has some bearing on this case.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
69
Mr. Waller: She couldn’t possibly know how
much white blood she has.
Mr. Freeland: She certainly knows whether it is
predominant or not.
By the Court: I don’t think she knows the amount
or mixture of white blood. She may state that she
is light in color and that will indicate whatever it may.
I don’t believe she could have any means of knowing
the amount of white blood.
Mr. Freeland: Well, no more than a witness
knows what its age is. All I know or all your Honor
knows with respect to age is what has been told us,
yet the witness is competent to testify about age.
By the Court: I don’t know that the amount of
white blood would necessarily be indicated by color.
That is what I base my ruling on. I do not prevent
her from saying she is a person of light color. I can
see that, but as you say the record would not other
wise show it.
Q. I will ask you to say whether or not you are of a light
color or complexion? A. I am.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, on or about May 5th or 6th,
1946, did you or not have occasion to make a journey by
motor bus? A. I did.
Q. And from where and to where did you travel on that
occassion? A. From St. Louis, Missouri, to Cairo, Illinois.
I changed busses at Cairo and I travelled from Cairo to
Wiekliffe, Kentucky.
Q. And for what point were you bound? What was your
final destination? A. My final destination was Paducah,
Kentucky.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
70
Q. Via what bus line did you travel? A. From St.
Louis, Missouri, to Wickliffe, Kentucky, I traveled by Trail
way. From Wickliffe, Kentucky, I finished my journey to
Paducah, Kentucky, by Greyhound.
Q. By the Trailway Bus Line— do you know whether or
not that is the bus line operated by the defendant, Southern
Bus Lines? A. As far as I know, it is.
Q. I will ask you whether or not you bought a ticket for
this journey at St. Louis before you departed? A. I did.
Q. Do you have any portion of that ticket, such as stub,
at the present time? A. I do.
Q. You have handed me a ticket stub which I will ask
the reporter to mark as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1.
By the Court: Let it be marked.
Mr. Waller: Your Honor, this isn’t a ticket.
Mr. Freeland: I didn’t say it was a ticket. I
asked the witness if it was a stub.
Mr. Waller: I don’t know what it is, but it is
marked “ Identification Check, Not Good for Passage,
Form S. T.-2” .
By the Court: Let her say what it is. He was
only asking that it be marked for identification for
the purpose of interrogating the witness. When he
offers it, then you can make objection.
Q. Will you tell the Court where and from whom and
under what circumstances you received this paper which
has been marked Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1. A. This was
part of the ticket that was bought in St. Louis, Missouri,
May 5th, and that is stub I was to keep after giving my
ticket to the bus driver.
Q. And you bought that where ? A. St. Louis, Missouri.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
71
Q. And you have stated that your ticket was attached
to that? A. That is right.
Q. And what became of the ticket! A. I have the ticket
I gave the bus driver when I boarded the bus at Cairo, Illi
nois. I can’t say definitely it is the same ticket I gave the
bus driver, but it is the same ticket that was given back to
me when I was put off the bus at Wickliffe, Kentucky, and
ok’d by the bus driver.
Q. Well, at any rate, the ticket that was attached to this
stub that you have, what became of it—was it or not taken
up by the driver! A. One ticket -was taken up by the driver
when I boarded the bus at St. Louis, Missouri. When I had
to transfer to Paducah, Kentucky, at Cairo, I have that one,
when I boarded the bus at Cairo, Illinois.
Q. Miss Whiteside, when you got on the bus at Cairo,
what became of the ticket which was attached to this stub
at that time ? A. The bus driver took it.
Q. Did he or not leave you this part? A. That is right.
Q. You identified this Exhibit No. 1 as the stub which he
left you? A. That is right.
Q. Now, it is stamped on the back “ Trailways Depot,
May 5, 1946, St. Louis, Missouri.” Will you say, if you
know, when that was stamped on there? A. I can say it
was stamped on there when I purchased the ticket.
Q. It was on there when you got it? A. He stamped it
on there before I paid my money.
Q. Who did that? A. The ticket agent at St. Louis.
Mr. Freeland: Now, if your Honor please, I offer
this in evidence.
By the Court: Any objection?
Mr. Waller: Yes.
By the Court: On what ground?
Mary Elizabeth White-side-—Plaintiff—Direct
72
Mr. Waller: On the ground I don’t think this is
any proof at all that she had transportation. I
haven’t read it carefully, but as I understand it, it
is identification check.
By the Court: You admit in the pleading she had
transportation.
Mr. Waller: I know she did, but I haven’t ad
mitted this was it.
By the Court: Well, you don’t have to admit it.
You admitted that she purchased transportation.
Mr. Waller: She did purchase transportation
from Cairo, 111., to Paducah, Kentucky, but not from
St. Louis.
By the Court: You admit what?
Mr. Waller: We admit she purchased a ticket
over our line at Cairo, Illinois.
By the Court: She says that she purchased the
ticket in St. Louis and this identification slip was a
part of and attached to the ticket, the ticket having
been attached when she boarded the bus at St. Louis
and retained by the driver of the bus, is that correct ?
Mr. Freeland: Almost; she was given, as I under
stand, two sections or two tickets. This one relates
to her journey from Cairo, Illinois, to Paducah. She
purchased this at St. Louis, but she did not give up
the ticket until Cairo.
By the Court: This is what you retained when
you got on the bus at Cairo—not at St. Louis.
A. That is right.
By the Court: Let it be filed Exhibit No. 1.
(Document referred to was filed Exhibit No.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
1.)
Q. After you had bought your ticket, did you or not then
board the bus? A. St. Louis!
Q. Yes. A. After I purchased my ticket, it was an hour
before bus time and I did board the bus about ten minutes
before time for it to leave St. Louis.
Q. Do you recall what time that was that you left St.
Louis? A. I left St. Louis on central standard time. I f I
am not mistaken it was around midnight— 11:55—I am not
sure.
Q. At what time did you reach Cairo? A. I reached
Cairo at 4 :20 on the morning of May 6th.
Q. What did you do when you reached Cairo ? A. When
I reached Cairo I waited in the station until time for the
next bus to come in.
Q. You had been informed when you bought your ticket,
or had you discovered by consulting the bus schedule or the
driver, or otherwise, that it would be necessary for you to
change busses at Cairo in order to go to Paducah? A. I
didn’t notice until after I purchased the ticket that I would
have to change in Cairo.
Q. But you did discover then that you would have to
change in Cairo, is that correct? A. Yes.
Q. So you waited there in the station at Cairo until time
for the Paducah bus to leave? A. I did.
Q. Do you recall what time you boarded the bus for
Paducah at Cairo? A. It was around 7:30—7:20 or 7:30,
I am not sure— on the morning of May 6th.
Q. Now, on boarding the bus, what did you do with ref
erence to your ticket? A. When I got ready to board the
bus, I had some luggage and some boxes. I had the boxes
ready to ship by railway express, and they didn’t pick the
boxes up.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Direct
74
Q. I asked you about your ticket. A. Oh, I ’m sorry.
When I boarded the bus, I handed my ticket to the bus
driver.
Q. I see. Retaining the stub you have testified about?
A. That is right.
Q. Do you recall in what order you boarded the bus,
whether you were first or last, or just about where? A. I
do remember.
Q. Tell the Court now what you remember about that.
A. I remember I was going to wait for my luggage. I
couldn’t get it all on the bus and I had my overnight bag
and hat box on the bus with me, and I was going to stay
and be the last one on the bus in order to help put my lug
gage on the back of the bus, and the bus driver told me it
would be all right for me to go on the bus and he would put
them on the back of the bus for me in the compartment, lug
gage compartment. I was about the last one on the bus be
cause I was waiting in order to tell him about my luggage.
Q. You were about the last one on? A. I was.
Q. Do you remember now whether any one got on after
you or not? A. I really don’t remember.
Q. When you got on the bus, what did you do, Miss
Whiteside? A. I took a seat.
Q. Do you remember which seat it was? A. I do.
Q. Which one did you take? A. Including my seat, it
was the sixth seat back from the bus driver on the left-hand
side.
Q. Let’s be explicit about that. You took a seat on the
left side of the bus behind the driver. You say you sat the
sixth seat. Was that counting the driver’s seat or not—
did you count his seat as one or not? A. No, I counted the
first seat in front of the driver—I mean in back of the
driver.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside-—Plaintiff—Direct
Q. The first seat behind the driver was number 1? A.
That is right.
Q. Are those or not double seats on each side of the
aisle? A. As I can remember, they are double seats.
Q. In other words, there is a seat for two passengers side
by side on each side of the aisle and they run back one after
the other? A. That is right.
Q. Now, in counting six seats back, were you counting
those double seats as two seats or one seat? A. As one
seat.
Q. And you definitely state you took your seat the sixth
seat behind the driver, and counting the double seats as one?
A. That is right.
Q. Did you sit next to the aisle or next to the window?
A. Next to the window.
Q. Was there or not a seat between you and the aisle?
A. There was a seat.
Q. Did anyone sit in that? A. No, they didn’t.
Q. Did anyone sit in that anytime while you were on the
bus? A. No, they didn’t.
Q. Did you ever sit in any other seat than that one while
you were on that bus? A. No, I didn’t.
Q. You remained in that seat, then, during the whole
time you were on the bus? A. That is correct.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, you state the bus left about
7 :20 or 7 :30, what was the first point at which it stopped
after it left Cairo with you as a passenger? A. Wickliffe,
Kentucky.
Q. Do you know how far it is from Cairo to Wickliffe?
A. I don’t know exactly.
Q. Do you know how long it took from Cairo? A. It
didn’t take over a half an hour.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
76
Q. You crossed a bridge, I believe, over the Ohio River?
A. That is right.
Q. State whether or not that bridge is nearer to Cairo
or Wickliffe? A. I think it is about the same distance you
have to travel—you mean the city limits?
Q. No, I don’t think you understand me. On the road
from Cairo to Wickliffe, is the bridge nearer to Cairo or
nearer to Wickliffe? A. I think it is nearer to Wickliffe.
Mr. Waller: Why don’t you just stipulate that?
By the Court: The bridge is just outside the city
limits of Cairo, and the distance from Cairo to Wick
liffe is about 10 miles, isn’t it?
Mr. Waller: About 7.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, when the bus with you as a
passenger arrived at Wickliffe, what happened? A. When
the bus arrived at Wickliffe, Kentucky, I was reading, I had
a magazine—I was reading a magazine.
Q. Mill you say whether or not the bus stopped at Wick
liffe? A. The bus did stop at Wickliffe in front of a hotel,
which had in front of the hotel “ Greyhound Bus Lines” .
Q. Now, you were not riding on the Greyhound bus?
A. I was not—I mean at this hotel it had—in front of which
the Trailway bus stopped.
Q. You were riding on the Trailway bus? A. That is
right.
Q. The bus stopped— did anyone get on? A. One man.
Q. Was he white or colored? A. He was a white man.
Q. Where did he take a seat? A. He took a seat on the
back of me on the opposite aisle.
Q. Do you recall how many seats back of you he was?
A. He was one seat back and across the aisle.
Q. Did you know him? A. I did not.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Direct
77
Q. What other passengers were there on the bus—how
many do you recall? A. To my estimation there were only
12 or 15 as far as I can recall.
Q. Were they white or colored or both? A. They were
all white.
Q. Did you know any of them? A. I did not.
Q. Do you know now who any of them were? A. I do
not.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, after this passenger got on the
bus, did the bus then leave or not? A. The bus driver was
ready to pull out and he stopped. He came back to my seat.
Q. What did he do then? A. I was reading and he came
back to my seat and I looked up at him. He said you will
have to move, and I asked him why. He said because I said
so. I said why would I have to move because you said so.
Then he asked me—what are you? I asked Mm what did he
think I was. His answer was that he didn’t have to think
because he knew.
Q. He said he didn’t have to think, he knew. A. That
is right.
Q. What happened then? A. Then I asked him if he
knew why should he ask me what I am.
Q. Did he make any response to that? A. He said any
way you will still have to move to the back.
Q. And what happened then? A. So I asked him why
would I have to move to the back and he gave me the same
answer-—because he said so. And I told him I hadn’t done
anything wrong and why should I have to move. He tells
me I would still have to move. I asked him for his name
and his number. His name was not over where the number
was. He refused to do so, and I told him I wouldn’t move.
I told him I would move if he would give me his name and
his number.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
Q. Did he then do that or not? A. He refused to do so
and said then that he would get the Deputy Sheriff to put
me off—to make me move—correction, I am sorry. He
started off the bus, he got to the door, turned and came back
to me and asked me whether or not I was going to move,
and I told him no. He goes off and brings the man on. I
did not see his star. He represented himself to me as being
a Deputy Sheriff.
Q. Did he tell you he was Deputy Sheriff or a police
officer? A. He said he was a Deputy Sheriff. When he
came on he asked me what was the trouble.
Q. You are not reading from something, are you? A.
No.
Q. You were looking down. A. He asked me what was
the trouble. I told him there wasn’t any trouble, but the
bus driver wanted me to move to the rear of the bus. I
hadn’t done anything wrong. I told him I told the bus
driver I would move provided he gave me his name and his
number. The Deputy Sheriff tells me I would have to move,
and by this time the bus driver says I don’t want her to
move. In fact, I don’t even want her on the bus. I want
her off. I said I am not going to get off the bus and the bus
driver said yes you are. The Deputy Sheriff told the driver
you will have to give her a ticket back. The bus driver said
I will not give her ticket back. I will give her a transfer.
I said I will not take a transfer or a ticket. You give me
my money back.
Q. Well, did he do that? A. He did not. The Deputy
Sheriff told him again— repeated the same that he would
have to give me my ticket back, whereas the driver said he
would give me a transfer, not a ticket. And when the bus
driver told the Deputy Sheriff again that he didn’t want
me on the bus, at this time the bus driver had walked up to
79
his seat, the Deputy Sheriff grabbed my right arm. When
the Deputy Sheriff grabbed my right arm, I tried to take
it away from him, and when I did so he called the bus driver.
When he called the bus driver, the bus driver grabbed my
left arm, my wrist, rather, he twisted my wrist with both
hands. After he twisted the wrist with both hands, he
twisted it as far as he could get it, and he held it with, one
hand, and in doing so and holding it with one hand he took
his other hand and jerked my foot from underneath me.
That is the way they took me off the bus. The bus driver
held my left foot and wrist, the Deputy Sheriff holding my
right arm.
Q. How did they get you off the bus then ? A. They took
me off like that. The bus driver was in front dragging
me with my left foot and left wrist, and the Deputy Sheriff
was holding to my right side, and he was in the back of the
bus driver, and taking me off the bus.
Q. You said that they dragged you. Do you mean while
they were doing that, any part of your person was in con
tact with the floor of the bus? A. That is right.
Q. It was? A. That is right.
Q. And you say that is the way they got you off the bus?
A. That is right.
Q. Now, did you resist them? A. I tried to.
Q. How? A. I tried to pull back from them.
Q. And what else? A. When the bus driver grabbed my
wrist and twisted it, I tried to bite him. I couldn’t get to
him.
Q. You tried to bite him, but you were unsuccessful?
A. That is right—-he jerked my foot from under me.
Q. Now, you have testified about the officer, or pur
ported officer, whom the driver brought back with him as be
ing a Deputy Sheriff, now do you of your own knowledge
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside:— Plaintiff—Direct
80
know w’hether or not lie was a Deputy Sheriff? A. I do
not know.
Q. Your recollection is he told you he was Deputy
Sheriff? A. That is right.
Q. Did he have a warrant for you? A. I didn’t see one.
Q. Did he offer to read one to you ? A. He did not.
Q. Did he arrest you ? A. When they got me off the bus,
I tried to re-enter the bus to get my luggage. I had an over
night bag and a hat box on the inside of the bus. My brace
let had been twisted off my wrist by the bus driver—it was
lying on the floor. I tried to re-enter the bus to get my
bracelet and my luggage, whereas the Deputy Sheriff
stopped me and wouldn’t let me enter, and while he block
aded the doorway to keep me from re-entering, the bus
driver was getting my luggage. He threw them off the
bus at my feet and took my large bag and the two boxes
that was in the luggage compartment and left them in the
middle of the street in the front of this place.
Q. Did this officer at any time undertake to arrest you
for any violation of the law? A. When they took me off the
bus, I told the Deputy Sheriff, I asked the Deputy Sheriff
why did they do me like that. I told him he knew it was
wrong, and he told me if I opened my mouth one more time
that he would lock me up.
Q. Did he lock you up? A. I didn’t open my mouth any
more.
Q. So he didn’t lock you up and you were not taken be
fore any court down there? A. No.
Q. Miss Whiteside, while you were seated on the bus
and before you were thus ejected, did you notice where the
other passengers were seated—the white passengers? A.
All the seats weren’t taken. In the front of me and on
each side of the aisle.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Direct
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside-— Plaintiff—Direct
Q. All the seats were not taken? A. The double seats
were not all taken, but the single seats were. What I mean
by that—it was a person in each seat and in some there was
two.
Q. But there were not two persons in each seat? A. In
each seat—no.
Q. Do you recall whether or not any of these people were
sitting behind you until this passenger at Wickliffe came
on? A. No.
Q. You mean you don’t recall or there weren’t any? A.
There wasn’t anyone in the back of me.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, who was present when this in
cident occurred. What people were there? A. I wouldn’t
remember any of them.
Q. I don’t mean any o f the names. Who was around
there that saw it? A. There was two women at this place
in front of where the bus stopped.
Q. And the people on the bus—the other passengers—
were they there? A. The people on the bus witnessed it,
yes.
Q. Do you know whether or not any of them turned
around to look? A. They did.
Q. How did this incident make you feel with reference
to whether or not it humiliated you or embarrassed you?
A. It was a great embarrassment because of the way I was
put off the bus. I had on a slack suit, it was torn.
Q. Don’t tell about any damage to clothing—tell about
your feelings. A. I ’m sorry. I was very humiliated be
cause of the way the people were all looking at me. I was
defendless. When I got off the bus, I tried to get a phone
call through—
Q. Don’t tell about that. A. Well, I was hurt very
badly. My feelings were hurt and I was greatly embar
rassed.
82
Q. Do you recall now whether or not you were crying
any? A. I did cry.
Q. Did you cry while this was happening or afterwards ?
A. I cried after they got me off the bus.
Q. Do you remember now how long you continued to
cry? A. I was crying when I entered the other bus on my
journey home. I cried quite sometime after I got on the
bus.
Q. How long after you were ejected from the Trailway
bus, the bus of the defendant, before you could obtain trans
portation on a Greyhound? A. If I am not mistaken, I
think I caught the Greyhound bus about a half an hour or
forty minutes later.
Q. And you went on to Paducah by Greyhound bus ? A.
That is correct.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, you have testified something
about your clothing, tell us about that? A. I had a light
coat—light green. I had just gotten it out of the cleaners
and where they drug me off the bus the coat was very dirty
and showed where it had been drug.
(At request of Mr. Waller, above answer was read
by reporter.)
Q. Now, go on and tell us about anything that happened
to your clothing or anything besides your coat? A. I had
a brown leather purse—the handle was torn completely off.
One ring that held the strap on to the bag was lost on the
bus. The other one I found. It was hanging on the handle.
The bus driver twisted the bracelet off of my arm and
knocked one of the stones out.
Q. Did you ever find that? A, I did not.
Q. What sort of stone was that? A. It was imitation of
a ruby.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
83
Q. Anything else— any other damage to your clothing or
personal accessories? A. When my arm was twisted, I
split the seams of my slack suit up the arm.
Q. Anything else! A. That is all.
Q. Have you had any of these things repaired? A. No
more than just having the coat cleaned and the sleeves fixed
on the slack suit.
Q. Do you know how much it cost you to do that! A.
I haven’t tried to have the bag and the bracelet fixed. I
wouldn’t know.
Q. How much did it cost you to have your coat cleaned?
And the seams sewed? A. Well, I don’t recall.
Q. That is all right. Now, you have stated that you
waited there at the bus station for some thirty or forty
minutes until you could obtain passage on the Greyhound.
A. That is correct.
Q. During that time where did you wait? A. I waited
—they had a colored waiting room there. I waited inside.
Q. Did anybody talk to you while you were there? A.
One of the women that was in the station was very nice.
She talked to me.
Q. You don’t know who she was? A. No.
Q. Did anybody make any comments after you got off
the bus? Did anybody make any comments about what
happened? A. The Deputy Sheriff and this other lady that
was inside the bus station held a conversation regarding
what happened on the bus.
Q. Well, don’t tell what they said. Were they discussing
you? A. They were discussing me.
Q. Anything else that happened while you were there?
A. After I boarded the Greyhound bus, the Deputy Sheriff
said if I didn’t sit on the back of the Greyhound bus he
would lock me up, anyway.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
84
Q. I see. So did you then sit on the back of the Grey
hound bus ? A. I sat the second seat from the long seat on
the back of the Greyhound bus.
(At request of Mr. Waller, reporter read this
answer back.)
Q. How long did the officer stay around there? A. He
stayed until the last bus left, this bus that I boarded, he
stayed until it left.
Q. Did he make any statement why he was staying
there? A. Yes, he made a statement that he was going to
stay and see that I sit in the back of this bus.
Q. Do you recall—did you purchase a ticket on the Grey
hound? A. I did.
Q. Do you recall what that cost you? A. I don’t.
Q. It was just from Wickliffe to Paducah? A. That is
correct.
Q. Miss Whiteside, you have testified something to the
effect that the driver when he ejected you or had it done
said that he would give you your ticket back—I believe you
testified something to that effect. A. The Deputy Sheriff
told the driver he would have to give me my ticket back.
The driver said he would give me a transfer back, but he
did at the last give me a ticket back. I can’t say it was the
exact ticket I gave him, but it was a ticket from Cairo to
Paducah, punched by the bus driver and ok ’d by the bus
driver, and handed back to me by the bus driver.
Q. Do you have that ticket with you that he gave back
to you? A. I do have with his ok on it.
Q. Do you know what he meant by that? A. I do not
know.
Q. He seems to have written something on here. It
looks like either Mattin or Martin or Matthews— do you
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
know what he wrote on there? A. To my estimation, is
is “ ok Martin” . I can’t make out his handwriting.
Q. Do you know whether this is the same ticket you
handed the driver when you boarded the bus? A. No, I
couldn’t be certain of that.
Q. You say, though, this is the one that he handed back
to you. A. That is the one that was handed back to me by
the driver.
Mr. Freeland: I will ask the Reporter to mark
this for identification as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, the ticket which I have just
mentioned to you and you have been testifying about was
handed back to you by the driver, and which has been
marked for identification by the Reporter as Plaintiff’s
Exhibit Number 2, I will now ask if your Honor please to
introduce that in evidence.
By the Court: Let it be filed, marked Plaintiff’s
Exhibit No. 2.
(Document referred to was filed and marked.)
Q. Now, Miss Whitesides, I will ask you whether after
you were thus ejected from the defendant’s bus you felt
any pain in any part of your person? A. When I really
felt the pains was the day after.
Q. Did you feel any pain at the time or shortly after
wards? A. I had a slight pain in my shoulder and in my
back.
Q. You stated that you really felt the pain the day after.
Where was that pain ? A. I was sore—my whole body was
sore. I was very stiff in the knee. The fact of the business
I couldn’t stand straight on my leg. It was bruised and it
was very sore and I had quite a few pains in my back.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
Q. How long did that continue? A. I had the pains
around three days.
Q. Beginning the day after? A. That is right, and I
was in the bed those other three days.
Q. I see. Did you go to any doctor for examination and
treatment? A. I did. You mean on the first day?
Q. Yes. A. On the first day after the trouble hap
pened I went back to the bus station, from the bus station
I went to the City Hall and from there I went to the doctor,
which meant I got to the doctor around five o ’clock, I guess,
in the afternoon.
Q. I see. Now, what doctor was that? A. Dr. Davis.
Q. Was that the Dr. Davis who testified here? A. That
is correct.
Q. And the examination about which you are testifying
is that the examination about which he was testifying? A.
That is correct.
Q. You heard his testimony about the bruises and abra
sions he discovered. Tell the Court whether or not you
did have such bruises and abrasions as he described them.
A, I did have the bruises as Dr. Davis described.
Q. You might tell his Honor just where these bruises
were, how large they were, if you recall. A. The bruises
on my shoulder was the exact print of a hand—you could
see the fingers on my shoulder right here. My wrist was
bruised and it showed where my bracelet had been twisted
off my wrist because the bracelet was on my bare wrist and
when it was twisted off you could see where it was twisted
off. I don’t remember how my leg got bruised as it was,
but it was on the inside of my left leg just above the knee,
it was bruised, and the place where it was bruised it was
as if someone had stuck their finger in there and it was as
if you would touch it the blood would come out. It didn’t
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
87
bleed, but the blood was in spot like that whereas if you
would touch it the blood would come out—that is the way
it looked.
Q. Had you had any of these bruises or abrasions be
fore this happened? A. No, I had not.
Q. How long did you continue to have them? A. The
bruise on my shoulder and wrist went away first, but the
bruises on the inner side of my left leg it was about six
weeks before the color really came back to my leg.
Q. Could you say how long you continued to have pain
in any degree? A. Well, in my back I had pain for about
three days, as I stated.
Q. Did you have any degree of pain after three days?
A. In my shoulder—not stabbing—continuously pain.
Q. How long did that continue? A. Well, I have had
pains in my shoulder off and on.
Q. The same pain? A. Well, they aren’t steady pains,
but just pains like run through your shoulder—I can’t de
scribe it.
Q. Did you ever have any pains of that kind before that?
A. I never have.
Q. How long since you last had one? A. I don’t recall.
Q. You don’t remember whether it was a week or month
or— A. I don’t remember.
Q. They are not frequent, then? A. No, just once in a
while.
Q. How long, Miss Whiteside, did you continue to feel
humiliated and embarrassed by this experience that you
testified about? A. It was a great embarrassment every
time I went out or every time I would think about it. People
would confront me with the trouble that I had—
Q. Don’t testify about the people. A. Well, anytime
I would think about it— everytime it would run across my
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
mind—I would picture myself— and I would feel very badly
about it.
Q. Will you say whether or not you still feel that humil
iation to any degree? A. No, only when I think about it.
I can’t describe how I feel whenever I do think about it,
but I don’t feel like myself, like I should feel.
Q. Sometime after this happened to you, did you re
turn to St. Louis? A. I did.
Q. What method of transporation did you use for that?
A. By train.
Q. When was that? A. September, 1946.
Q. How long did you remain in St. Louis? A. I re
mained in St. Louis from September, 1946, until last of
March of this year.
Q. Now, between May, when this happened, and Sep
tember, when you returned to St, Louis, where were you?
A. Benton Harbor, Michigan.
Q. What were you doing there? A. Salad girl at a
summer resort.
Q. You returned to St. Louis the first of September?
A. That is correct.
Q. After that, did you have an illness of any kind? A.
I did have.
Q. Will you tell the Court what that consisted of and
when did that begin? A. The illness occurred in October.
Q. What part of October? A. Around the first of Octo
ber.
Q. What did it consist of? What way did it manifest
itself ?
Mr. Waller: We object to that, unless it is con
nected up.
Mr. Freeland: I propose to do so, your Honor,
by these depositions I intend to read.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff-Direct
89
By the Court: Overruled, subject to it being-
later connected.
Q. State in what way this illness occurred or showed
itself, what was it? A. Well, the day this happened to me
on the bus it had something to do with my menstrual period.
I have been having trouble with that ever since, and that
is the trouble, that is what brought on the sickness.
Mr. Freeland: Well, let’s not—
Mr. Waller: I object to that—that should be ex
cluded.
By the Court: I will exclude that.
Mr. Freeland: The Court understood what she
said.
By the Court: You talking about your period.
When was it this trouble you referred to first began?
A. The day this trouble happened it started.
By the Court: You mean you began to menstru
ate ?
A. Two weeks early.
By the Court: That was two weeks before your
time?
A. That is right.
By the Court: All right. What happened later?
A. From that time on, I was always off.
By the Court: What do you mean “ o ff” ?
A. I mean I never was on time and I never did feel like
I should. I went to a doctor in St. Louis when I got back
and he doctored me for that.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
90
Q. Now, what doctor was that? A. Dr. L. V. Howell.
Q. All right. Go ahead. A. It was delayed upon me—it
worked on my nerves.
Mr. W aller: I object to that.
By the Court: What do you mean “ worked on
your nerves” —the menstruation?
A. That is right. I have had trouble with it ever since, it
started the day it happened.
By the Court: Some have trouble with it nearly
always—all women have trouble with it. Do you
mean you menstruated too frequently or too infre
quently or painfully or how? Speak right out.
A. Painfully.
By the Court: And that began when?
A. The same day I had the trouble.
By the Court: You mean the same day you were
put off the bus?
A. That is right.
Q. Now, what other symptoms?
Mr. W aller: You mean the day you were in this
bus at Wickliffe you had your menstrual period
start?
A. Bight after, it did.
Mr. W aller: After you got home?
A, Yes, right here in Paducah.
Mr. W aller: And during that day?
A. That is right.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Direct
91
Q. What other symptoms of this illness that yon com
plained of and for which these doctors treated you showed
themselves? A. At the time I was working my nerves were
bad. I went to the doctors for my nerves and he gave me
some nerve medicine.
Q. What was it about your nerves? A. During the time
before my nerves really got bad, I had severe headaches
and that other— and the doctor said it was from—
Q. Now, don’t tell what the doctor said. A. I went to
the doctor and he treated me for that.
Q. Was that Doctor Howell? A. Doctor Howell. A
week later, after I went to Dr. Howell in October, I took
sick on Halloween night—what the doctors called a nervous
breakdown—and they took me to the hospital.
Q. You took sick in what way—-what happened to you?
A. My nerves just went down on me.
Q. What did you do about that—-what do you mean—can
you tell what you did or not? A. I knew what I did up
until the night before they took me to the hospital—I don’t
know. Is that what you are referring to?
Q. What happened that caused you to be taken to the
hospital? Why were you taken? A. My nerves had gone
had on me and that nig*ht it looked like everything I would
eat would back up in my throat. I would try to eat any
way, and when I did try to eat, it looked like it stopped
right there and tried to choke me. They called a doctor
and the doctor gave me some more medicine, but later on I
just went into hysterics.
Q. What doctor was that? A. Doctor Howell.
Q. Where is he? A. In St. Louis.
Q. This happened in St. Louis ? A. It did.
Q. After you went to the hospial, what happened? A.
They took me to the hospital.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiffs—Direct
92
Q. While at the hospital, who treated you? A. Dr.
Erwin.
Q. Where is he? A. St. Louis.
Q. What hospital were you in? A. Homer G. Phillips.
0. Do you know whether the city owns that or not! A.
A. Well—
Q. If you don’t know, that is all right. That is all right.
Do you know how long you stayed there? A. About a week,
if I am not mistaken.
Q. Do you recall what day you went there? A. Thurs
day or Friday morning—I took sick on Halloween night.
Q. Do you recall what day you were released from the
hospital. A. It was Monday or Tuesday-—it was one day
the next week. I wasn’t there over a week.
Q. What did you do then? A. I returned to my aunt’s
house in St. Louis.
Q. Is that where you were staying? A. I stayed with
my aunt.
Q. Did these doctors continue to treat you? A. They
did.
Q. For how long? A. Until I left St. Louis to go to
Chicago. I was supposed to go to see Dr. Erwin once be
fore I left and he was out of town. Therefore, I didn’t get
to see him.
Q. What is your condition now with reference to these
symptoms you have described—do you still have them to
any degree.
Mr. W aller: We object to that.
By the Court: Overruled. What is your condi
tion now?
A. Well, I just can’t stand any excitement now or anything,
to worry me.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—-Plaintiff-—Direct
Q. What do you mean—you can’t stand it? A, I f any
thing should frighten me or anything like that, I cry now.
I used to didn’t be like that—just this year I have been like
that.
Q. You still do that? A. Yes.
Q. Anything else now still exist? A. No.
Q. Tell the Court whether or not you still have any
trouble with your periods you testified about? A. I do
have.
(Recess.)
Q. These symptoms you have testified about that you
have had since this occurrence happened, the irregularities
in your periods, this tendency to cry when certain things
happened, and I forget what other things, the hysterics on
one occasion, these things you have mentioned, did you have
those in any degree before this incident? A. No, I didn’t.
Mr. Waller: I want to move to exclude all of her
testimony about her hysteria and other symptoms
having any connection with the difficulty at Wickliffe
on May 6, 1946.
By the Court: Overruled for the present.
Mr. Freeland: That was admitted with the under
standing we would connect it up.
C ro ss exam in ation by M r. W a ller .
Q. You are 24 years old? A. I am.
Q. You were 23 then a year ago? A. That is correct.
Q. When you boarded the bus at Cairo on the morning
of May 6, 1946, can you tell us approximately how many
passengers there were on the bus? A. As well as I can
recall, it was between 12 and 15 passengers.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Cross
94
Q. Did you board it as one of the first ones or how did
you enter the bus— how many were on it? A. As I can
recall, I was about the last one entering the bus. I was the
last one because I had my bags to go into the luggage com
partment, and I wanted to speak to the driver about my
luggage going into the compartment, and that is why I
waited.
Q. Where was the luggage compartment in that particu
lar bus ? A. It was in the back of the bus—not on the side.
Q. Was it loaded from the outside or the inside? A. It
was loaded from the outside.
Q. Did he load your luggage in the luggage compart
ment? A. He did.
Q. And then did you take any luggage on the bus with
you? A. I did.
Q. What? A. An overnight bag and a hat box.
Q. An ordinary size hat box? A. Ordinary for one hat.
Q. Was there any stop of the bus between the time it
left Cairo and the time it arrived at Wickliffe? A. Stop at
some place—no.
Q. Then you left Cairo with 12 or 15 passengers and
arrived at Wickliffe with the same number? A. As well
as I can recall, it was 12 or 15.
Q. Now, where were you seated on the bus with refer
ence to the rear of the bus and with reference to the other
passengers at the time you left Cairo? A. I was in the
sixth seat back on the left side of the bus behind the driver.
Q. How many seats were back of you? A. I didn’t count
them.
Q. Was there that many or more or less? A. I couldn’t
be sure as to whether it was more or less, because I only
counted from the front back.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
Q. What is your best recollection about it? A. I really
couldn’t say.
Q. Were there any unoccupied back of you ? A. All the
seats were unoccupied in the back of me until this one pas
senger got on at Wickliffe, Kentucky. He sat in the back
of me in the opposite aisle— the next seat back across the
aisle.
Q. Were there several unoccupied compartments back
of you? A. The seats in the back of me were empty.
Q. Were there several of them? A. I couldn’t say. I
couldn’t even give an estimation. I didn’t count them.
Q. When you got to Wickliffe, did any of the passengers
leave the bus before you got into the difficulty with the
driver? A. I didn’t see any passengers alight from the
bus after we reached Wickliffe. Because when we reached
there I was reading a book.
Q. When you looked around, was there about the same
number there had been? A. To the best of my estimation,
there was.
Q. Were any passengers taken on at Wickliffe? A. One
man boarded the bus at Wickliffe.
Q. Were there any others about to board it? A. No.
Q. You had lived in Paducah all your life? A. I was
born and raised in Paducah. I lived out of Paducah for a
short while—I would go away on jobs and I would always
come back.
Q. How long had you been living in St. Louis prior to
May 6, 1946? A. You mean up to the time I left to come
here—I only went there in April, the first of April.
Q. Prior to that time you had traveled by bus a number
of times, had you not? A. I traveled by bus only once prior
to the time I was on this bus.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
96
Q. Where was that! A. Coming from St. Louis to
Paducah once before on the Greyhound line.
Q. When the bus driver came to you at Wickliffe and
asked you to sit in the back you knew what he meant and
why, didn’t you ? A. I knew what he meant when he asked
me I should move back and why I should move back. He
didn’t ask me to move back. He told me I had to move back.
Q. Did you know why? A. I asked him why and my
answer to the question was when I asked him why was
because he said so.
Q. Did you knowT he was referring to your color as the
reason why he asked you to move back? A. Yes, I did.
Q. You have lived in Paducah all of your life until that
time and you knew that South of the Ohio River there were
regulations on bus companies that required the colored peo
ple to sit in the back of the bus and the white people in the
front of the bus?
Mr. Freeland: I object, if your Honor please, to
him asking her about her knowledge of any regula
tions of any bus companies other than the defendant
company.
By the Court: Overruled.
Mr. Freeland: I guess it is not necessary to ex
cept.
A. I didn’t know anything about—I didn’t know there was
a segregation on the busses as they say they are because
there is no discrimination on the busses here in Kentucky
and there weren’t any curtains or anything on the bus to
show that'the colored were discriminated from the front of
the bus, and when the driver told me I would have to move
he didn’t say anything about the law that I won Id have to
sit in the back. He didn’t say anything about that being the
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
law whatsoever. He said it was because he said so that I
should have to move.
Q. I didn’t ask you that—what I want to know was that
you knew that on the bus line of the defendant and other
bus lines when they came into Kentucky they would ask
the colored people to sit in the back and the white people
in the front? A. I couldn’t say that I knew because I rode
the bus once before— the Greyhound lines—-and I was sit
ting the third seat back and there was no discrimination
and I rode all the way from St. Louis to Paducah on the
third seat from front, and I didn’t hear anything about
discrimination, and I was sitting six seats back on the
Trailway bus.
Q. Did you not know by hearsay, by understanding, by
having lived in Kentucky all your life that there was cus
tom or rule or regulation or law or something whereby
colored people sat in the back of the busses? And white
people sat in the front?
Mr. Freeland: Object, your Honor, about him
asking about customs.
By the Court: I sustain objection as to customs
—you can say about regulations. Overrule objection
as far as questions relating to regulations.
Mr. Waller: I don’t know, your Honor, but that
is all right. I will rephrase the question.
Q. You knew then that by reason of some regulation
of the company or o f law that colored people sat in
the back of the bus and white people at the front of the bus
in Kentucky, in that portion of Kentucky? A. I didn’t
know there was a law for that in Kentucky. Is that what
you are referring to?
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
98
Q. Did you know there was a regulation as to that by
the bus company? A. No, I didn’t.
Q. You were widely traveled, weren’t you? A. That is
right.
Q. You had been to California? A. That is right.
Q. You had been to St. Louis a number of times—you
had been to Chicago, been to Detroit, been to Memphis, and
you had been to New Orleans? A. No.
Q. What other places had you been? A. That is all.
Q. Had you ever been to Nashville? A. No.
Q. Louisville? A. No.
Q. Your travels had begun at what age of your life?
A. I take trips every year, so I really couldn’t say exactly
what age I was as to the places—I did travel and I went to
when I was traveling. I couldn’t say definitely the age.
Q. In the several years immediately preceding May of
1946 you had taken a trip each year ? A. I had.
Q. The matter of your seating in the bus had been a mat
ter of particular conversation between you and people of
your race, had it not?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. It hadn’t been frequent conversation with me because
it is the second time I had traveled by bus. I had always
traveled by train, and that conversation I hadn’t been hav
ing with anyone regarding the discrimination on the busses
in the State of Kentucky.
Q. You hadn’t talked with anybody about that? A. No
because—no more than when you hear— like you hear of
a case or something like that and you talk about it, that is
all.
Mary Elizabeth, Whiteside— Plaintiff-Cross
99
Q. You had talked— it was a matter of general conversa
tion and information with you that such regulations did
exist?
Mr. Freeland: I object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. Not in the State of Kentucky.
Q. Now, when this bus driver came to you and asked you
to move to the rear, you well understood it was because you
were a colored person, didn’t you? A. I guess so.
Q. And you refused because you didn’t like the regula
tion, didn’t you?
Mr Freeland: Object—he hasn’t proved she knew
any regulations.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. Repeat the question, please.
Q. You refused for the fact—because you didn’t like the
regulations? A. I refused to move because of the way he
told me I would have to move to the rear of the bus, and
he told me I would have to move, and when I asked him
why, he said because he said so. Then he wanted to know
what nationality I was. He asked me what are you, any
way—which meant he wanted to know what nationality I
was.
Q. You have already testified about that. What I
wanted you to answer was what I asked you—the reason
you didn’t want to move back was because you objected to
the regulations?
Mr. Freeland: I submit she has already answered
that.
A. It was because of the way he asked me to move, that I
refused to move to the rear.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Gross
1 0 0
Q. Then you didn’t object to the regulations? A. I
didn’t object to the regulations—no.
Q. Then you have no complaint of anything here ex
cept that you didn’t like the way the bus driver spoke to
you?
Mr. Freeland: I believe I will object to that be
cause the pleadings show—
By the Court: Let him cross examine her, though,
as she has testified about this.
Mr. W aller: Here is the difficulty. The gentle
man has pleaded a thing he doesn’t want me to ask
about.
By the Court: I can amend it.
Mr. Waller: He pleaded about these regulations.
Mr. Freeland: I have not pleaded anything at all
about the regulations—you pleaded.
Mr. W aller: Well, then, we pleaded about them.
Q. Now, you refused to move back? A. That is right.
Q. There were plenty of seats back of you? A. All the
seats were empty in the back.
Q. All of them of equal or identical accommodations
with the one you were occupying—is that right? A. As far
as I could tell— they were the same.
Q. There were no curtains, no separation at all, was
there? A. That is right.
Q. You say you were in the sixth seat from the front? A.
That is right.
Q. Are you now able to recall about how many there were
back of you? A. I can’t recall—no.
Q. Were there as many as 3, 4, 5, 6—
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
101
By the: Court: Now, Mr. Waller, she said she
doesn’t know— she has said that three times.
Mr. Waller: Well, it is rather important, Judge.
By the Court: Regardless of its importance, this
witness says she doesn’t know—can’t recall— she has
said that three distinct times.
Q. All right. Did you know there were just six rows of
seats in that bus ? A. Six rows— six double rows or six sin
gle rows?
Q. Six double rows. A. Such as what? May I ask what
do you mean by that?
Q. I mean counting them like you counted them and be
ginning at the driver and coming back. Did you know there
were only six rows of seats ? A. There were more than six
rows of seats the way that I counted them back. I can’t re
call how many seats were in the back of me, but I wasn’t on
the back seat.
Q. Could you be mistaken about the number of seats you
were from the front? A. I couldn’t be mistaken.
Q. You couldn’t possibly have been sitting in the third
seat from the front? A. No, I couldn’t
Q. Were you trying to sit at the rear of the bus? A. I
didn’t count the seats when I entered the bus. When I en
tered the bus there were two seats vacant in front of the
seat that I was taking. When I did count the seats was
when he went off to get the Deputy Sheriff. I counted the
seats to make sure how many seats I was sitting back in
the back of the driver. I counted them and wrote it down
in lipstick on my paper to be sure.
Q. Did you count each seat as two seats ? Or one seat ?
A. I counted each seat as one seat.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
102
Q. You remember when we took your deposition you
said you were five seats back? A. I said six seats from the
driver because I have it written down. I counted my seat as
being sixth seat.
By the Court: Did you mean by that you were on
the sixth row?
A. That is right. The seat I was in I counted that as being
the sixth seat.
By the Court: On the side on which you sat—on
that side of the bus ?
A. That is right.
By the Court: There were two seats in a row—
each row had two seats, and you were on the sixth
row next to the window?
A. That is right.
Q. Now, you say you went out to see Dr. Davis when you
got out to Paducah? A. I went to see Dr. Davis. I didn’t
go to see him at first got here.
Q. You went about five o ’clock that afternoon? A. That
is right— somewhere—I can’t be too certain of the time but
it was around that time when I went to see Dr. Davis.
Q. Did you tell him that you had an irregular menstrual
period at the time? A. I started when I got back home,
and I was two weeks ahead of time when I did come around,
and I stayed around more than double the period of time I
should have stayed.
Q. You didn’t tell Dr. Davis about this? A. I came
around after I got back home.
Q. You said you stayed in bed two or three days with a
backache after you saw Dr. Davis? A. Three days.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Cross
103
Q. Isn ’t that quite normal for you to stay in bed two or
three days with a backache at your menstrual period? A.
I ’ve never had a backache during that period and I never
had to go to bed with my period—never. I ’ve never had
any trouble with my period before. I ’ve always been regu
lar and never over a few days and never no trouble with my
back or stomach before that happened to me.
Q. You did have your Fallopian tubes removed in an
operation in Detroit in 1940, didn’t you ? A. I had appendix
operation but no tubes removed.
Q. You had what? A. Appendix operation—my appen
dix was removed, that is all.
Q. When you entered the hospital in St. Louis in October
or November of 1946, didn’t they take from you a history of
your physical condition through the years? A. No, they
didn’t get it from me. They questioned my aunt— the aunt
I was staying with in St. Louis. They didn’t ask me.
Q. Was it not a part of the history of your case in the
hosiptal at St. Louis that in an operation in Detroit, Michi
gan, in 1940, that your tubes were removed? A. My ap
pendix were removed—no, no tubes.
Q. No tubes—you didn’t have any pus in your tubes? A.
No, I have never had any tubes—pus.
Q. Did you know that your history says you have been
a mother? A. I am a mother yet.
Q. You are? A. Yes, my child was born right here in
Paducah.
Q. How old is she? A. She is ten years old.
Q. You never had any female trouble at all? A. No, I
never had any female trouble.
Q. Do you remember what time you arrived in Paducah
on the morning of May 6, 1946? A. I can’t recall the exact
time—it was around ten o ’clock.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
104
Q. Where did you alight from the Greyhound bus at
Paducah ? A . At the bus station.
Q. That is at 5th— A. And Kentucky Avenue.
Q. Did anyone meet you there? A. I got a cab—no one
meet me there, no.
Q. A taxicab? A. That is correct.
Q. And where did you go? A. I went home.
Q. To your mother’s? A. That is correct.
Q. Where was that? A. 916 South Tenth Street.
Q. Now, what did you do when you got there? A. When
I got home I told my mother what had happened. Then I
was going down to the bus company and she told me she
would go with me, and my mother went with me to the bus
station— Trailway. So we got to the Trailway bus station
I was going to report to the President or the manager or
whoever would be there what had happened, and they told
me that the manager wasn’t in, but they expected him back
in about an hour and a half, if I am not mistaken, later, and
said that this bus driver had already reported as to what
had happened, and I told them that I wanted to see him
about it, so they told me it would be about hour and a half
before the manager or superintendent or whoever he was,
I can’t recall, would return. So, in the meantime, I—no
need of me waiting for him, so I went to the City Hall to
see—I don’t remember his name— a lawyer. We waited
there a long time, I guess, until I got a chance to see him—-
I can’t recall how long we waited. After I saw him he told
me to be back at his office at 5 o ’clock. Instead, I went
home and then I went to see Dr. Davis—that is when I went
to see Dr. Davis.
Q. When you came from your home to the bus station,
did you come by taxi? A. I did.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Cross
105
Q. From the bus station to the city hall—did you walk!
A. I did.
Q. When you went from the city hall to your home, how
did you go ! A. On the city bus.
Q. When you went from your home to Dr. Davis ’ office,
how did you go? A. I walked.
Q. How far is that! A. It is a little better than two
blocks.
Q. What did you do that night? A. My mother rubbed
me in the salve that he had given me. I drank a hot tea and
went to bed. The next morning my mother massaged me
with this again and put hot towels on my body, the places
where I was sore.
Q. When you entered the hospital in St. Louis in Oc
tober or November of 1946, you did not give any case his
tory? A. No, I didn’t give any history myself.
Q. To anybody? A. No.
R ed ir ec t exam in ation b y M r. F reela n d .
Q. Miss Whiteside, how many trips have you made on a
motor bus—I don’t mean here in the city—I mean between
cities? A. Two.
Mr. W aller: She has already testified about that.
Mr. Freeland: Well, you asked her about many
things she had already testified about.
Mr. Waller: Well, you objected to all of them.
That is the reason I objected to this.
By the Court: She has gone all over it. She said
she made one other one—on a Greyhound bus—rode
on the third seat—trip was uneventful.
Q. Now, when you came from Wickliffe to Paducah on
this occasion when this happened to you via Greyhound bus
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Redirect
106
after you had been ejected from the defendant’s bus, I be
lieve you testified you rode in the rear? A. I did.
Q. Were there any other colored people on the bus be
sides you? A. There were.
Q. How many? A. The bus was filled. There were peo
ple standing in the aisles. The long seat in the rear was
filled. The seat I was on—I was sitting next to the window
on this one— and a man occupied the seat next to me. There
was colored on the seat in front of me, and there was colored
and white standing in the aisles of the bus.
Q. Colored and white in the aisles. How about the seats
in the back? Where there or not any white people there?
Mr. W aller: I object to that.
By the Court: I just can’t see any connection in
the world with the Greyhound bus.
Mr. Freeland: Your Honor allowed Mr. Waller
to inquire of the witness whether she knew anything
about the regulations of bus companies in the south.
By the Court: I excluded any customs, too.
Mr. Freeland: I understand that—but he asked
about the regulations of the companies.
Mr. Waller: I don’t think so.
By the Court: Yes, you asked about this com
pany and other companies about regulations. This
would pertain more to customs.
Mr. Freeland: I will withdraw the question.
By the Court: No, I will sustain it.
Q. Miss Whiteside, did you at any time until you were
ejected from this bus on this occasion have any knowledge
at all of any regulation of this company requiring colored
passengers to sit in the rear of the bus? A. No, I didn’t.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Redirect
107
R ecr o s s exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. You did know and so stated in substance a while ago
that this driver was telling you on account of your color he
wanted you to move back? A. I said he came to me and
said I would have to get in the back of the bus and when I
asked him why, he said because I said so—which meant the
driver meant because he said so. That is why I had to
move—he didn’t tell me it was the law I would have to sit
in the back. I had to sit in the back because he said so, and
after I told him I wouldn’t move, he asked me what was I,
and after I asked him what did he think I was, and he told
me he didn’t have to think, he knew, and I would still have
to sit in the back of the bus, but he didn’t at one time men
tion the law-—he only mentioned it was because he said so
that I would have to move. He didn’t ask me—he told me
I would have to move.
Q. But he did let you know and you did understand that
he was asking you to move to the back of the bus on account
of your color? A. After he asked me what was I, then I
knew. Still he didn’t say it was the law. He wanted me to
move because he said so.
Q. And it was after you knew that and you refused—
A. After he told me, that is when I told him I would move
if he would give me his number and his name, and he
wouldn’t do it.
Q. Then after all that came this ejecting you from the
bus and talking hold of you ? A. That is right.
Q. And he never did take hold of you until he went out
and got an officer ? A. That is right.
Q. And the officer asked him to help him? A. That is
right—when I told the officer I would move in the back he
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Recross
108
told the officer he didn’t want me on the bus at all, and that
is when they ejected me.
(Adjourned until 1 :30 P. M.)
1 :30 P. M.
By the Court: The plaintiff then produced and
offered to read the depositions of Dr. H. J. Erwin
and Dr. Lesler P. Howell taken on behalf of the plain
tiff at St. Louis, Missouri, on 2nd day of April, 1947,
and at a date subsequent to that agreed upon by
counsel. To the reading of the depositions of Dr.
Erwin and Dr. Howell the defendant objected on the
ground that the depositions contained statements of
opinions based upon the history of the plaintiff’s
alleged injury and condition claimed to have resulted
from such alleged injury given by the person other
than the plaintiff, and by agreement with counsel the
depositions are considered as now being read with
the understanding that in brief or argument hereafter
counsel for defendant may rely upon his objection
to the depositions as a whole and to each and every
question and answer contained therein because of
incompetency, irrelevancy, or otherwise.
Mr. Waller: Now, I want to move that the plain
tiff be required to file as part of the depositions the
hospital records about which they have testified or
copies certified by the custodian of those records at
the hospital.
Mr. Freeland: I don’t know whether we can do
so. We shall endeavor to comply with his request,
if the Court so directs. Some hospitals are very pe
culiar about letting records get out.
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside— Plaintiff—Beeross
♦
109
D iscussion
Mr. W aller: I f your Honor, please, they had the
records before them when they testified.
By the Court: You mean the doctors—were the
depositions taken at the hospital?
Mr. Freeland: No.
Mr. W aller: I f they can get them out to testify
from, they can get them out to let the Court know
what they contain.
Mr. Freeland: You don’t want the entire hos
pital’s records about this case. You just want the
particular papers they were testifying about.
Mr. Waller: I just want the hospital records,
whatever they wTere—that is what they testified from.
Mr. Freeland: I don’t think he is entitled to look
into all the records the hospital has. I think he is
entitled to have the papers they were testifying
about.
By the Court: Did you attend and cross examine ?
Mr. Waller: No, sir, some lawyers in St. Louis.
By the Court: Why didn’t they see to that?
Mr. Waller: I don’t know. I understand from
the depositions those records were there. I don’t
recall whether they were made part of this record or
not.
Mr. Freeland: They don’t appear to have been
filed in there. Some of it was at the instance of coun
sel for the plaintiff and some for the counsel of the
defendant.
By the Court: Of course, if a witness used a rec
ord in testifying, you have a right to see that record,
and you have an equal right to read that into the
depositions or require the plaintiff to supply it.
Mr. Freeland: It appears that counsel for the de
fendant did read into it certain portions. I didn’t
110
M otion to D ism iss
notice in the originals whether anything was filed
with them or not.
By the Court: I don’t find anything, Mr. Free
land.
Mr. Freeland: There doesn’t seem to be any ref
erence in my copy to the filing of anything.
By the Court: Here is the envelope in which they
came to the Clerk,
Mr. Freeland: I have no objection to furnishing
the Court insofar as I can anything that might en
lighten you in the case, but I don’t know now to what
extent I will be able to furnish it.
By the Court: I don’t believe that motion is
meritorious at this time because your attorney who
attended that deposition had a perfect right to ex
amine that record if the witness used it in testifying.
Also had a right to have it read into the record or
request then that it be made a part of the record, but
in view of counsel’s statement that he will attempt to
comply with your request and if he is able to obtain
the record from the hospital will file it, he will do
that without any determination, but so far as the
Court requiring that the records now be filed, I over
rule it because I think it is untimely.
Mr. Freeland: I will as soon as the hearing is
concluded write to my associate, Mr. Grant, and re
quest him to procure either the original record of
the hospital or a copy o f it certified by anybody who
is competent. Shall I send that to your Honor?
By the Court: Give it to the Clerk. Let it be
filed as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3.
Mr. Waller: I move now for dismissal.
By the Court: Overruled.
I l l
J. B. Martin was called as a witness for the defendant,
and after having first been duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follow s:
D ire c t exa m in a tion b y M r. W a ller .
Q. Please state your name. A. J. B. Martin.
Q. Mr. Martin, how old are you? A. 32.
Q. Where do you live? A. Jackson, Tennessee.
Q. What is your employment? A. Bus driver.
Q. For whom do you drive the bus? A. Southern Trail
way.
Q. Is that the defendant in this case? A. Yes, sir.
Q. How long have you been driving for that defendant
company? A. Four years and two months.
Q. Then you were a regular driver on May 6th of last
year? A. Yes, sir.
Q. How long prior to May 6, 1946, had you been on the
run from Cairo to Paducah? A. I had been on the run sev
eral different occasions. It wasn’t my run, but I had
swapped out on this date. I had pulled this run several dif
ferent times before then.
Q. Had you run it at all as a regular driver on that run?
A. Out of Cairo—around nine months.
Q. And for nine months you had run continuously or
regularly on that run from Cairo to Paducah ? A. Cairo to
Paducah—Cario to Jackson— and Cairo to St. Louis.
Q. On May 6, 1946, did the plaintiff become a passenger
on your bus for the Southern Trailway Company out of
Cairo, Illinois? A. She did.
Q. As you pulled out of Cairo that morning, approxi
mately how many passengers did you have? A. Between 18
and 20.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
112
Q, How far is it approximately from Cairo to Wickliffe 1
A. I would say seven miles.
Q. Is there any station or stop between those two cities?
A. No, sir.
Q. On that morning did you make any stop after leaving
Cairo before pulling up at the bus station in Wiekliffe, K y.f
A. I did not.
Q. When you arrived in Wiekliffe, did any of your pas
sengers alight at the station? A. I had three passengers
to get off.
Q. Did you have any passengers that were ready to
board your bus at Wiekliffe? A. I had, I believe, 3.
Q. Where was the plaintiff seated in your bus? A. In
the third seat behind the driver on the left-hand side. She
was sitting in the third seat next to the window.
Q. Now, the plaintiff has testified that you were driv
ing on that occasion and she was a passenger on a bus with
certain number and certain ODT number—were those num
bers correct? A. ODT numbers?
Q. You remember those ODT numbers on the bus? A.
No, sir, I do not.
Q. You remember the body number or the bus number?
A. The number of the bus was 347.
Q. How many seats for passengers are there on that bus
number 347 ? A. 29 seats.
Q. And how are they located in the bus?
Mr. Freeland: What number did he say?
Mr. W aller: 347.
Mr. Freeland: The pleading fixes it at 346.
By the Court: The number of the bus is 346.
Mr. Freeland: And the defendant admits it on
page 2.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
113
By the Court: Well, that is not material, is it—
the number of a bus!
Mr. W aller: Unless they are different.
Mr. Martin: Makes no difference—the busses are
identically the same— 346 and 347 are identically the
same.
Mr. W aller: The record has admitted it was 346,
so if they are identical, it will all right to handle it
as 346.
Q. Now, where is the driver’s seat located? A. On the
left front.
Q. And how many seats are there? From the front to
the rear back of the driver’s seat? A. On each side— six
reclining seats and the long seat in the back.
Q. Are those six reclining seats single or double seats?
A. They are double seats.
Q. That is on the left-hand side of the bus? A. There
are six seats on the left-hand side.
Q. Is there a center aisle in this bus ? A. There is a cen
ter aisle. No seats in the aisle.
Q. How many seats are on the right-hand side of the
aisle? A. There is six on the right.
Q. Double or single seats? A. Double.
Q. How many passengers may be comfortably seated at
the seat in the rear of the bus? A. Five.
Q. That makes the 29 passengers? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Mr. Martin, where is the bus of the defendant which
you were driving from Cairo to Wickliffe and on to Pa
ducah on May 6, 1946? A. That would be hard to answer.
It is probably in Jackson, Tennessee. 347 is down at the
station now.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
114
Q. Where is bus 347 today? A. It is on the run from
Cairo to Paducah today.
Q. Do you know when it will be in Paducah today? A.
It came in here at 1:13 and due out at 2:15 and it comes
back here this afternoon sometime and doesn’t leave until
8 :10.
Q. I f the Court wants to see it, it will be here this after
noon? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, Mr. Martin, when you left Cairo was the plain
tiff seated in a seat on the right or the left of the center
aisle as they face forward? A. She was on the left.
Q. Upon arrival in Wickliffc, Kentucky, had she
changed her seat? A. She had not.
Q. Will you tell the Court in which seat she was riding?
A. She was in the third seat behind me on the left-hand
side next to the window.
Q. I suppose it is a matter of calculation—but how many
double seats were in front o f her and how many double
seats were behind her' on the same side she was sitting on?
A. There would be two in front of her—there would be
two at right-hand side of her except for the one right across
the aisle from her.
Q. And how many would be behind her? A. There
would be three.
Q. Mr. Martin, from time to time have you received
any instructions from the officers and officials of the defen
dant as to seating arrangement and how you should seat
passengers in the bus?
Mr. Freeland: We will object to his testifying
about it unless it will be shown that plaintiff knew of
the instructions or reasonably should have known.
By the Court: Overruled on that.
J. B. Martin— For Defendant—Direct
115
Q. Did yon have any instructions from superiors of the
company for which you worked— officers or supervisors as
to the seating of passengers in the bus on that run? A.
Yes, sir. On all runs.
Q. Did those instructions and regulations of the defen
dant company have any directions to you as to the seating
of the colored and white passengers in the busses in West
ern Kentucky? A. Only to seat colored people from the
rear and white from the front.
Mr. Freeland: I move to exclude that, your
Honor, please. I did not anticipate he would go
ahead and tell what the instructions were-—the ques
tion was if any instructions had been given him, I
understand.
By the Court: First, had any instructions been
given you with respect to the method of seating
white and colored passengers?
A. Yes, sir.
By the Court: You said instructions or regula
tions. Now, which was it?
A. It would be instructions or regulations—our super
visors—
By the Court: Were they verbal or were they
written?
A. They was orally given to us.
By the Court: By whom?
A. By the supervisor.
By the Court: Who was the supervisor?
A. They have a supervisor of drivers.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
116
By the Court: Who gave them to you?
A. Paul Walters.
By the Court: When did he give them to you?
A. When I came up in this division about two years ago.
Q. What were those instructions with reference to seat
ing white and colored passengers in Western Kentucky?
Mr. Freeland: We object, your Honor.
By the Court: What is the ground of your ob
jection?
Mr. Freeland: In the first place, if the Court
please, there has been pleading here about regula
tions—no pleading of instructions. Whether or not
an instruction is a regulation, I am not at this time
prepared to say, but I am urging the objection that
it is not and I would like for the Court to consider
that. Then, in addition to that, I have the same ob
jection that I made before and that is that it would
not be competent to show this and not be binding
upon the plaintiff unless it be shown that she knew
of this or reasonably should have known at the time
and place complained of.
By the Court: For the present, I am going to
overrule your objection. I am not sure about oral
instructions.
Mr. Waller: We can give you a decision on that.
I would like to have leave to amend that pleading if
there is going to be any point raised between instruc
tions and regulations. I don’t know that there is any
difference.
Mr. Freeland: For the record, let me object to
his doing so.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
117
Mr. W aller: May we consider that as the Court
rules that it might be made?
Mr. Freeland: You mean consider the amend
ment to have been made?
Mr. W aller: Yes.
Mr. Freeland: I believe I would rather he make
it, your Honor, so that we might know just what it is.
Mr. W aller: Just put after the word “ regula
tions” wherever it is “ and instructions” .
By the Court: I don’t believe there is any dif
ference between regulations and instructions in view
of the method the witness said was used in giving-
instructions or regulations, whichever it may be.
Q. Now, the last question I asked you. Upon arriving
at Wiekliffe, did you have any conversation with the plain
tiff before the passengers were to alight at Wiekliffe had
left the bus? A. Before the passengers had left the bus?
No, sir.
Q. Did you have conversation with her before the pas
sengers that were getting on the bus at Wiekliffe had gotten
on it? A. I did.
Q. I will ask you to tell the Court what that conversa
tion was as nearly as you can, telling what you said to her
and what she said to you? A. As well as I remember, I
got up and went back and asked her would she mind mov
ing back. What she said to me was ask me what was all
the discrimination and so forth about. I told her there
wasn’t any, that it was our rules, and as far as safety and
so forth to ask her to move back.
Q. Do you know what she meant by this discrimination ?
A. I do not.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
118
Q. Please tell the Court the quality and character of
accommodations in that bus throughout, especially concern
ing the accommodations in the front or forward part and
those in the back part of the bus, as to whether or not they
were equal or similar, or dissimilar or unequal, as to com
fort, safety, general convenience and utility'? A. I sup
pose, as far as I know, all the seats are the same.
Q. Well, there is a difference in the seat across the back
in that it is five seats instead of two? A. Yes, sir, it is a
divan.
Q. Are all the seats in that bus upholstered alike? A.
Yes, sir.
Q. Are all of them ventilated alike? Or different? A.
All the seats down the asile are the same.
Q. At the time that you made this request of her to move
back further in the bus, will you tell us why you made that
request of her? A. Why I asked her to move back?
Q. Yes. A. I asked her to move back—-there was pas
sengers coming into Paducah, I was always loaded, and I
only asked her to move back so they could be together.
Q. Did you explain to her in your conversation why you
desired her to move further back in the bus? A. No, other
than just for comfort and safety was all.
Q. Did she agree to move back? A. She said she
wouldn’t move or wouldn’t get off.
Q. Did you ask her to get off? A. I asked her to move
back.
Q. What reason did she give for not complying with
your request? A. She didn’t give any.
Q. Where was she seated at that time with reference to
the white occupants of that bus? A. She was in the third
seat from the front on the left. There was passengers
seated behind her.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
119
Q. How many of your passengers on that day were
white and how many were colored? A. Well, there was
around eighteen whites and she was the only colored.
Q. Then the passengers seated behind her were white
passengers? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Would it have been possible to have seated all the
passengers you had ahead of her in the bus? A. I could
not have seated them.
Q. As a matter of fact you could only have had eight in
front of her? A. Eight.
Q. And you say there were eighteen on the bus? A.
Yes, sir.
Q. How long was your conversation with her? Have
you told all of it ? A. I only told her if she didn’t move back
that I would call the law. She told me to go ahead and call
the law— she didn’t care— she wouldn’t move and she
wouldn’t get off.
Q. Now, what did you do then? A. I got off the bus
and went in the station and asked the agent to call the law.
Q. By the law you mean some peace officer? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did they call some officer that had jurisdiction? A.
She did.
Q. And did one come? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Who was it? A. Well, I don’t recall his name.
Q. What position did he hold? A. I think he was a mar
shal—city marshal.
Q. Town marshal of Wickliffe, Kentucky. Now, did the
town marshal come there and enter the bus? A. He asked
me what the trouble was when he came up and I told him.
He went in and asked her to move and she told him she
wouldn’t move.
Q. Did you go in the bus with him? A. I did not.
Q. He entered alone? A. Yes, sir.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
120
Q. How many passengers were on the bus at that time?
A. There was probably seventeen.
Q. Was she still the only colored passenger! A. She
was still the only colored one.
Q. Did you hear the conversation between the plaintiff
and the Town Marshal of Wiekliffe? A. Not while he was
in the bus before he asked me to help him.
Q. Now, you say he asked you to help him. When was
that and what did he ask you to help him do? A. He just
asked me to help him get her out of the seat.
Q. Had you been where you could see him and her at
the time he was talking to her? A. I didn’t see them. I
was on the outside.
Q. Did he call to you or come to the door? A. He just
called.
Q. Now, tell the Court what happened when you went
back in there? A. I went on back. He had hold of her and
I taken her other hand and pulled her up out of the seat
and she decided we was going to put her off and she said
she would get off.
Q. Which part of her body did you have hold of? A.
I had hold of her arm.
Q. Which arm? A. Left one.
Q. Did you have hold of any other part of her body?
A. I did not.
Q. Did you at any time take hold of any part of her
body except her left arm? A. No, sir.
Q. Did the Town Marshal take hold of her? A. Not
that I know of. He didn’t while I was in there.
Q. He didn’t have hold of her at all? A. He had hold
of her right arm.
Q. Right arm. What part of her arm did he have hold
of ? A. I wouldn’t know what part of her arm he was hold
ing her by. I would say between the wrist and the elbow.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
121
Q. I don’t believe you said what part of the left arm you
had hold of. A. I got hold of her wrist. She was holding
the arm of the chair.
Q. Did she have a bracelet on the wrist you had hold of?
A. I didn’t see one.
Q. Did you see one on the other arm? A. I did not.
Q. Tell the Court how much force you and the Town
Marshal or either of you used on that occasion? A. Didn’t
use any more than to get her up out of the seat.
Q. She has testified that one of you pulled her leg loose
or kicked her leg loose, or something of that kind, did you
at any time touch her leg? A. I did not.
Mr. Freeland: She didn’t say anything like that.
Mr. W aller: That is what I understood—touched
her leg and bruised her.
By the Court: She testified she had a bruise on
the left side of her leg.
Mr. Freeland: Yes, but the leg hadn’t been kicked
loose.
Mr. W aller: I understood her to say it was kicked
loose.
By the Court: I don’t know about it being kicked
loose. Did you have hold of her leg in any way?
A. No, sir.
By the Court: Did you force her leg against any
thing?
A. No, sir.
Q. Where was the Marshal standing as he tried to get
her up? A. He was standing at the side of her and I was
at the front of her.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
122
Q. During that time or at any time did she try to bite
you as she said she did! A. She did when I taken hold of
her.
Q. After you and the Marshal pulled her up to a stand
ing position, is that what you said? A. That is right.
Q. What was said by her? A. Well, after we pulled her
up and started down the aisle while we probably moved one
seat, she said she would get off, she would get off herself.
Q. Did you or the Town Marshal or either of yon carry
her a distance as she testified? A. No more than after she
got up out of the seat—probably one seat—maybe a foot
and a half.
Q. How did you carry her? A. I don’t know as we even
carried her.
Q. Did either of you have hold of a arm and a leg? A.
1 had hold of her arm—I didn’t have hold of her leg.
Q. Did the Town Marshal have hold of her leg? A. He
did not,
Q. Did he have hold of her arm? A. He had a hold of
her arm.
Q. Did either of you have hold of any part o f her body
except the arm holds of which you testified? A. I didn’t
and I didn’t see him.
Q. Did you at any time touch her on the shoulder? A.
A. I did not.
Q. Did the Town Marshal so far as you know touch her
shoulder? A. Not while I was around.
Q. Did she leave the bus? A. She did.
Q. As you left the bus, how were you walking? Who
was in front and who was behind? A. I was the first one
out the door and then she walked out and the Marshal.
Q. Do you remember anything being said about giving
her a ticket back? A. She asked me to give her her money
back.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
123
Q. When was that request made? A. After she was off
the bus.
Q. Did you give her her money back? A. I did not. I
didn’t have her money.
Q. What did you give her back? A. I gave her back her
ticket.
Q. Was that the ticket she filed as Exhibit 2 with her
testimony this morning? A. The one with the three clip
holes in it.
Q. The one that had your signature on it? A. Yes, sir,
that is the ticket.
Q. That is No. 2. I show you Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1,
did you ever have that at all? A. I don’t remember ever
seeing the stub.
Q. What time did your bus arrive at Wickliffe, Ken
tucky, on the morning of May 6, 1946? A. Around 7 :80.
Q. What time had you left Cairo, Illinois? A. 7 :20.
Q. What time did your bus leave Wickliffe that morn
ing? A. Around 8:10.
Q. You had been there around 40 minutes? A. Yes, sir.
Q. What was your scheduled stop for Wickliffe? A. It
was just stop and right out.
Q. How much were you delayed—how much was your
bus delayed by reason of this altercation? A. I would say
40 minutes.
Q. After the plaintiff was outside the bus and standing
on the street pavement, did you have anything to do about
her baggage? A. We have a baggage compartment in the
back. I had taken the baggage out of the back and set it on
the sidewalk.
Q. She said you set it in the middle of the street, is that
true? A. No, I set it on the sidewalk.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant-Direct
124
Q. Where did you set it with reference to where she was
at the time? A. Well, she was at the front of the bus,
standing out on the walk and I set it from the rear of the
bus. The bus was parked long-ways with the street and I
just set it up on the sidewalk.
Q. Did she have any luggage with her inside in the pas
senger compartment of the bus? A. I think she had a box
and a magazine.
Q. Do you know what became of them? A. I don’t know
what became of them.
Q. Did you get them out? A. I didn’t get them out.
Q. Did she go back and get them? A. As well as I re
member, she did.
Q. Forty minutes from the time you arrived you left?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Mr. Martin, did you at any time twist the plaintiff’s
arm or any other part of her body? A. I pulled her loose
from the seat is all.
Q. Did you throw her luggage off the bus? A. I did
not.
Q. Did you have any conversation with the plaintiff after
she was out on the sidewalk in which she made any state
ment as to why she had done as she had? A. She told me
after I put the bags out and closed the baggage door and
started back in the bus that that was what she wanted us
to do was mistreat her or scratch her or bruise her.
Q. Did she say why she wanted you to do that? A. I
didn’t ask her.
Q. Has your company given your through its super
visors, superintendents and officers any instructions as to
seating passengers in the bus other than as to white and
colored passengers? A. Yes, sir.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
125
Q. What are some other instructions you have as to
seating passengers?
Mr. Freeland: I object, your Honor, unless it
has something to do with the issues in this case.
By the Court: What is the materiality of that,
Mr. Waller?
Mr. W aller: I don’t know, your Honor, except
that I just thought I would like to show that they
didn’t instruct them on that and nothing else.
By the Court: I will sustain the objection.
Q. Have you in your long experience as a bus driver
had occasion to observe the directions and regulations of
your company as to seating passengers? A. I have.
Q. Which is the more emphasis put upon— seating the
colored passengers at the rear or white passengers at the
front?
Mr. Freeland: I object to that on the same
ground.
By the Court: I think it is immaterial— but an
swer, what is it?
A. I have had just as much trouble one way as I have the
other. I have had to move the whites from the back.
Q. As an experienced bus driver operating in Western
Kentucky, do you think it is a salutary rule of your com
pany to require the separation of your white and colored
passengers?
Mr. Freeland: I will object.
By the Court: I will sustain the objection.
Q. Mr. Martin, ybu understand, do you not, that it is
the duty of you and your company to transport all passen
gers safely? A. I do.
J. B. Martin—•For Defendant—Direct
126
Q. State whether or not in your opinion the regulations
that require the separation of white and colored passen
gers in traveling on your coaches is a rule that promotes
the safety of their transportation?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. Under I. C. regulations and the company’s regulations
and rules, it is.
By the Court: What regulations do you have
reference to when you say “ I. C .” regulations!
A. We are required by the I. C. as far as old people and
children sitting on the front to move them back.
By the Court: You are referring to Interstate
Commerce Commission’s instructions with respect
to safety of operations!
A. Yes, sir.
By the Court: Do you have those regulations
with you?
A. I don’t have any with me, no, sir.
Mr. Freeland: I move to exclude that, your
Honor.
By the Court: All the regulations issued by the
Interstate Commerce Commission are in writing.
Mr. W aller: I didn’t ask him that.
A. I suppose they are.
By the Court: He answered it though. I per
mitted him to answer it.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Direct
127
Mr. Freeland: I would like to move to exclude
that answer.
By the Court: I will exclude that answer.
(Reporter reads last question.)
A. I don’t understand that question.
Q. Let me ask it in another way. Your company directs
its drivers that in Western Kentucky they seat the white
passengers from the front of the bus backward and colored
passengers from the back of the bus forward. You have
testified to that. In your opinion as an experienced driver
of busses in Western Kentucky, is that a regulation that
tends to make the travel of all your passengers a safe
travel ?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. As long as I have been driving a bus, I see that you have
to separate them if you are going to have a safe journey
and all of them have peace and comfort.
By the Court: Now, how does the separation of
the white and colored people affect the safety in the
operation of the bus?
A. Well, on several occasions we have had fights to start
on the bus.
By the Court: You mean it promotes quiet among
the passengers, and in that way promotes safety.
A. Yes, sir.
Mr. W aller: I meant to address my question as
to the safety of the passengers.
Mr. Freeland: Now, may I inquire whether he
personally knew about the fights.
J. B. Martin-—For Defendant—Direct
128
Mr. W aller: You ask him—you can cross examine
him.
Mr. Freeland: I would like to make an objection
now.
By the Court: I overrule it.
Mr. Waller: Just examine him now.
C ro ss exam in ation by M r. F ree la n d .
Q. I will ask you, Mr. Martin, on that point, you say
there have been several instances of fights arising between
passengers because of their not being segregated in seat
ing, is that what I understood you to say! A. I have. I
have had them on my bus.
Q. You have had them on your bus? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Have you not testified that your practice was to seg
regate them in seating? Let me ask you this way, you have
testified, have you not, that it is your practice to segregate
the seating of the passengers, segregate passengers, colored
and white, from each other in seating them on the bus, isn’t
that what you testified? A. For their safety.
Q. Well, regardless of the motive, that has been your
practice? A. That has been the practice in Kentucky.
Q. That has been your practice? A. It has been all the
busses’ practice.
By the Court: Say whether or not it has been
your practice.
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Nevertheless, these fights have occurred—is that true
or not? A. They have.
Q. So the segregation is not operated to prevent fights?
A. That is what we separate them for.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Gross
129
Q. But it doesn’t have that effect. Well, is that true or
not? A. I didn’t understand the question.
Q. Well, you stated that you separated the passengers
because it prevents fights arising to do so, but nevertheless
fig’hts occur? A. Well, not all together—for their pleasant
journey.
Q. Well, Mr. Martin, I want you to understand me. I
am talking about the fights. Whatever your other motive
might be, let’s direct our attention at this time to the fights.
You previously testified that your practice has been in Ken
tucky, while you have been driving for this company, to seg
regate the white passengers from the colored passengers
in seating—that is what you stated, is it not? A. We seat
them from the back, the colored, and the white from the
front.
Q. You have further testified that the purpose in doing
so is to avoid fights between white and colored people on
the busses.
Mr. W aller: I have no objection, but that is just
an argument.
By the Court: The witness hasn’t answered the
question yet.
Q. You testified that the purpose of your doing so was
to prevent fights occurring between white and colored pas
sengers on your bus, isn’t that correct? Isn ’t that what
you said? A. Not all together.
Q. Not all together, but that is one purpose? A. One
purpose, yes.
Q. That is the purpose you had in mind when you quoted
safety, is that correct? A. Yes.
Q. Safety and pleasant journey. Now, notwithstanding
that, you say that several fights have occurred on your bus
between white and colored passengers? A. I have had one.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
130
Q. I thought you said there were several. A. There
have been several on our busses.
Q. Well, I asked you if it was in your person knowl
edge.
By the Court: Now, he said there was one on
his bus, and there have been several on busses of
his company.
Q. Were you present at these other fights that occurred
on busses of your company? A. I was present on the one
I was driving.
Q. Just the one then. A. Just the one I was driving.
Mr. Freeland: I will ask then that the testi
mony about the others be excluded.
By the Court: I will overrule it.
Q. There has been one fight on your bus. How long ago
did that take place? A. Well, it was while I was on this
run from Cairo to Jackson, Tennessee.
Q. Where did it occur? A. Clinton, Kentucky.
Q. That was not on the run from Cairo to Paducah? A.
On the run from Cairo to Jackson, Tennessee.
Q. Is that the same run that turns around? A. It makes
connections on this run.
Q. You don’t go through Paducah to get to Jackson?
A. No, sir.
Q. Where have you driven besides in Kentucky? A. I
have driven in Louisiana, Mississippi, Illinois and Missouri,
Mr. Freeland: I should like to cross examine him
about the instructions that have been given him with
out waiving my objection.
By the Court: All right, you may do that.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
131
Q. Mr. Martin, yon have testified that some person,
Walters, I believe the name was, employed by your com
pany, instructed you to segregate the passengers in seating
them on your bus, is that correct ?
Mr. Waller: I don’t like that word “ segregate” .
There hasn’t been any testimony about any segrega
tion.
Q. Let’s put it this way. You were instructed to seat
the colored passengers from the rear forward and the white
passengers from the front backward. A. I was.
Q. And this gentleman who gave you the instructions,
what is his position? A. He is the drivers’ supervisor.
Q. What territory does he have in charge? A. He had
all the division in this territory and through Mississippi and
parts of Tennessee.
Q. Does he have charge of the run between Cairo and
St. Louis? A. He was the supervisor on that run at that
time.
Q. Have you ever driven that run? A. From Jackson
to St. Louis?
Q. Yes. A. I have.
Q. What instructions were given you by this gentleman
or anyone with authority about seating of white and colored
passengers in Illinois?
Mr. W aller: I object to that. That is not the law
suit here.
By the Court: This is from St. Louis, Missouri,
to Paducah, Kentucky.
Mr. Waller: That is all right. She rode where
she did ride until Wickliffe, Kentucky. She entered
this bus at Cairo. What the regulations are in Illinois
couldn’t be germinated here.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
132
By the Court: I don’t think it would be control
ling, but this man has testified from his experience
in the operation of busses.
Mr. W aller: In this vicinity.
By the Court: You didn’t confine it to this vicin
ity. I am going to permit him to be cross examined
on this. Overrule the objection.
Mr. Waller: Exceptions.
Q. What instructions were given you, Mr. Martin, about
the seating of white and colored passengers on the part of
the company’s line that you have run from Cairo to St.
Louis! A. We reserve the right to change our seating ar
rangements at any time at any point.
By the Court: That isn’t the question. What are
your instructions with respect to the loading of white
passengers from the front toward the rear and
colored passengers from the rear toward the front
in the State of Illinois, particularly on the run from
St. Louis?
A. As far as taking the State of Illinois, I have never heard
of them making any distinction in it.
By the Court: The same instructions and the
same regulations that you testified about prevail in
Illinois, is that right?
A. What I am trying to get at is they never told us any
thing about Illinois or Missouri as to what to do.
By the Court: The instructions or the regulations
that you testified about pertain to what territory?
A. Kentucky and the South.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
133
By the Court: South of the Ohio River?
A. Yes, sir.
By the Court: And you never had any instruc
tions or never was issued any regulations with re
spect to the seating arrangement in the State of
Illinois or Missouri or elsewhere than the territory
of South of the Ohio River?
A. Nothing more than safety.
By the Court: What was that? Was that with
respect to seating of passengers?
A. If there was old people on the front—
By the Court: I am not asking that. What were
your instructions or what regulations were issued
with respect to the seating of white and colored
people in your bus in territory other than South of
the Ohio River?
A. I don ’t remember what they had to say about it. They
didn’t tell me.
Mr. W aller: I assume my objection is overruled.
By the Court: Yes, go on.
Q. You drove the bus from St. Louis to Cairo and from
Cairo to St. Louis when you were on that run without any
specific instructions as to seating of white and colored pas
sengers, is that correct? A. As far as Cairo to St. Louis,
I don’t see any difference in it than anywhere else.
Q. There is no difference in driving from Cairo to St.
Louis than it would be from Cairo to Paducah? A. Cairo
from St. Louis, we never had any trouble up there.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
134
Q. You never had any trouble up there although the
company has given you no instructions about seating col
ored passengers in the rear part of the bus and white pas
sengers in the front? A. I never run that bus to St. Louis.
Q. I understood you to say you did. A. I have been to
St. Louis from Jackson, Tennessee, several times.
Q. Jackson, Tennessee? Doesn’t that run through
Cairo? A. It runs through Cairo.
Q. From Cairo North, from Cairo to St. Louis, you
stated you can’t tell any difference and never had any
trouble, is that right? A. I never have had any on my
busses up there.
Q. You never have had any on your busses in spite of
the fact your company has given you no instructions about
the seating? A. I suppose their instructions would be the
same. They didn’t make any distinctions in the states.
Mr. W aller: I didn’t hear that.
Mr. Freeland: He says now they didn’t make any
distinction in the states.
By the Court: What you mean to say, Mr. Martin,
is your instructions about seating colored passengers
from the rear of the bus forward and white people
from the front of the bus toward the rear was a gen
eral instruction as to all operators?
A. On the operations that I have been on, yes, sir.
By the Court: And you have been on the one
from Cairo to St. Louis? And St, Louis to Cairo?
A. At times, yes, sir. I never had the regular run from
Jackson, Tennessee, to St. Louis.
By the Court: These occasional trips you made—
how long ago did you take the first one?
A. I would say a year and a half ago.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
135
Q. So it has been within the past couple of years? A.
It has been within the past couple of years.
Q. When you wTere driving that run, what practice did
you follow?
Mr. Waller: Your Honor, please, that hasn’t a
thing in the world to do with this.
By the Court: I know it hasn’t, but it has some
thing to do with this cross examination. Overruled
for the time being. Answer the question.
Q. When you were driving that bus, Mr. Martin, what
practice did you follow from St. Louis to Cairo and from
Cairo to St. Louis? What practice did you follow concern
ing the seating arrangements? A. I never had very many
colored people on my bus.
By the Court: Where did you seat them when
you did?
A. I didn’t seat them.
By the Court: Where did they sit?
A. As far as I know, they went back in the bus and sat
down.
By the Court: Toward the rear or toward the
front?
A. Most of them sat to the rear.
Q. But as far as anything you did about it, Mr. Martin,
they sat wherever they pleased? A. If they were sitting
back there, why would I want to do anything about it?
By the Court: Suppose they were not sitting
back there? Did you say anything to them?
A. I never said anything to them, no.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
136
Q. Now, Mr. Martin, you have testified that the instruc
tions received by you required you to seat colored pas
sengers from the rear of the bus and white passengers from
the front. That is correct as far as instructions are con
cerned regardless of what you did—those were the instruc
tions'? A. That is what the instructions were.
Q. You have further testified that on this bus on each
side there are six double reclining seats'? A. On the 29-
passenger busses.
Q. The bus that this happened on? A. That is right.
Q. Does the company have others that are different?
Different in the number of seats? A. We have some 33’s
and some 37’s.
Q. Are those busses built on the same general plan?
That is, double reclining seats on each side back to the back
with a single bench across the back? A. They are the same.
Q. So, all of them are built along that line regardless of
the number of reclining seats—they all have a number of
reclining seats along the sides with a single or long bench
in the back? A. That is right.
Q. Now, this long bench or seat, it is the one to which
you would direct colored passengers in pursuance of your
instructions that they be seated from the rear, is it not?
A. Do you mean did I ask her to sit on the back— is that
what you mean?
Q. I am asking you about regulations at present or in
structions. A. It don’t necessarily mean to sit on the back
seat—it means from the back.
Q. When you load from the back, Mr. Martin, don’t you
start from the rear-most seat? A. I don’t say that they
would. If you had ten passengers on there, if you had ten
in the back and ten in the front, why would they have to be
in there?
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
137
Q. If your instructions were to begin seating at the rear,
wouldn’t you have to begin putting them on the back seat?
A. We don’t go back there and put them on there.
Q. I know you don’t do that, but you were supposed to
tell them to go back there, isn’t that correct? You don’t
go back and sit them down but your instructions are to re
quire them to begin seating at the back of the bus, is that
right? A. Yes, sir, we start loading from the back and
others from the front.
Q. Now, the bus just has one door, doesn’t it? A. Just
one door.
Q. Up in the front? A. Up in the front.
Q. And those passengers, then, according to the instruc
tions you have, are supposed to go in the front door, go all
the way in the back and begin seating from the back for
ward, those are your instructions, aren’t they? A. That is
our instructions.
Q. All right. Now, this back seat, you have testified
that it holds five? A. It holds five.
Q. Mr. Martin, it is just a single long bench, isn’t it?
There are no arm rests between these places for the five
individuals? A. There is no arm rest in between them, no.
Q. It is just a single long bench?
By the Court: He has testified to that.
Q. How about the reclining seats along the sides of the
aisles? They have arm rests, do they not? A. One on each
side is all—none in the middle.
Q. You mean there is none between the two double seats?
A. No, sir— none between them.
Q. Mr. Martin, this back bench, it is substantially higher
off the floor than the seats along the sides, is it not? A. Not
necessarily—it is all on the same floor.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
138
Q. There is no difference in the height of the back seat,
then, from the floor, or there is no step down from that back
seat? A. There is a step down but the seats are the same.
Q. I see, but there is a step down from where you put
your feet in front of that back seat to the main aisle of the
motor bus? A. Where you walk down to the aisle there is
a step down there—probably a foot.
Q. So to get to this back seat you must step up a step
of about a foot. You walk back along the length of the bus
approximately the length, and you step up about a foot? A.
Not about a foot—it is about six inches.
Q. About six inches, well. At any rate, there is a step
up there. That is occasioned by the back seat being over
the wheel, isn’t it? A. That back seat is not over the wheel.
Q. Do you know why the seat is constructed that way?
Why that step up is there? A. I don’t build busses—I don’t
know why it is that way.
Q. The back seat is not a reclining seat, is it? A. No,
sir, it is a divan.
Q. It is immovable and the back can’t be lowered or
raised ? A. I don’t think you can lower it or raise it.
Q. You never heard of it? A. I never lowered it or
raised it.
Q. Have you ever ridden as a passenger on a motor
coach? A. Yes, sir.
Q. It is a fact, isn’t it, that it is more comfortable to
have a reclining seat than one that is not reclining? A. Us
drivers have dead-headed on those busses a lot. I have laid
down and slept on those back seats a lot—300 miles.
Q. You can’t do that if there are five people on it? A.
That is right.
Q. It is true that it is not as comfortable to ride on? A.
That is not true. Did you ever ride the back seat of one?
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
139
Q. Yes, sir, I did. A. I have rode the back seat of sev
eral and I couldn’t tell any dfferenee.
Q. You can’t tell any difference—let me ask you this,
when you are sitting in a reclining seat, do you use the re
clining features of the seat! A. Do you mean do I use the
whole seat?
Q. No, I mean do you ever fix the seat to lie back in? A.
Some have—I don’t.
Q. I see. So, it wouldn’t make any difference to you, of
course, whether the seat would recline or not? A. It
wouldn’t with me.
Q. But to a person who did want the seat reclining, it
wouldn’t be as comfortable to sit on that back seat where
it can’t be so adjusted? A. The back seat is already ad
justed.
Q. What do you mean by that, Mr. Martin? A. The seat
was put in there for comfortable seat or they wouldn’t have
put it in that way.
Q. People have different ideas about comfort, isn’t that
true? A. I suppose they do.
Q. And the purpose of making the backs of the double
seats adjustable is so that they can be comfortable for peo
ple with different ideas, isn’t that correct? A. I wouldn’t
know what they put them on there for.
Q. Well, people do use them for that, don’t they? You
notice your passengers— some of them want to lean back
and some of them want to sit up—and they adjust the back
of the seat accordingly? A. They do.
Q. But they can’t do that to that seat in the back. It
is fixed permanently and the angle can’t be adjusted, isn’t
that true? A. It can’t be adjusted.
Q. You are sure that the plaintiff was sitting in the third
seat behind you? A. I am quite sure.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
140
Q. She stated that she counted the seats, did you count
them? A. I don’t have to count them.
Q. You just know without counting them? A. I know
without counting where she was sitting.
Q. You stated that you did not at any time, or, so far
as you know, the Town Marshal who assisted you in eject
ing the plaintiff, you did not at any time take hold of her
leg or her knee? A. I did not.
Q. And he did not ? A. He did not.
Q. You do not know then how her leg became bruised?
A. I didn’t see her leg or her knee— she had on slacks.
Q. She was wearing a slack suit consisting of a jacket
and a pair of what I would call pants? A. I know she had
on long pants—I don’t know about the jacket. I don’t
know what else she had on.
Q. I see. You stated you do not recall seeing a bracelet
on her wrist—was she wearing a jacket with sleeves in it
or not? Was part of her arms bare or covered? A. As
well as I remember she had some kind of a sleeve. I don’t
know whether it came all the way down or not.
Q. You don’t know now whether it came down far
enough that it would conceal that bracelet from your ob
servation? A. I do not recall.
Q. You have stated that after the plaintiff was put off
the bus or went off, whichever she did, that she told you
that that was what she wanted you to do— to mistreat her
and scratch her and bruise her. A. That is what she told
me.
Q. Well, now, did you mistreat her? A. I did not.
Q. Did you scratch her ? A. I did not.
Q. Did you bruise her? A. I didn’t bruise her.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Cross
141
Q. I f you didn’t do any o f those things, what do you
suppose she made that statement for? A. I wouldn’t know.
I didn’t ask her.
Q. How far out of Cairo is the Ohio River Bridge be
tween there and Wickliffe? A. I would say from the sta
tion to the river bridge a couple of miles.
Q. And from the river bridge to Wickliffe? A. Probably
five.
Q. The plaintiff had a ticket when she got on the bus,
did she not? A. She had a ticket, yes, sir.
Q. You took up her ticket? A. Yes.
R ed ir ec t exam in ation by M r. W a ller .
Q. How far is it from Wickliffe, Kentucky, to Clinton,
Kentucky? A. I don’t know exactly—probably 28 miles.
By the Court: 22 will get it.
Q. How far is it from Wickliffe, Kentucky, to Bardwell,
Kentucky, the home of the Judge? A. I think our run
shows 13 to 15 miles, something like that, from Cairo there.
Q. How far is it from Bardwell to Clinton, assuming
that the Court was right a while ago when he said it was 22
miles from Wickliffe to Clinton—it would be about 16 miles.
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Mr. Martin, this run you were on and the plaintiff
was on came from Wickliffe to Paducah by way of Bard
well, did it not? A. Yes, sir.
Q. That was the regular run? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Mr. Martin, you testified that the divan at the back
of these motor coaches of your company are raised some
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Redirect
142
six inches above the aisle that affords passengers a means
of travel between the two rows of seats of the bus, is that
right? A. The seat is not raised up any higher than the
other seats— it is all built on the same platform. There is
a little trough down through there that is an aisleway that
walks out.
Q. While it is true that this divan is six inches above the
aisle, every seat in your bus number 346 or 347 is raised the
same distance above the aisle, is it not? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Isn ’t it true that this divan at the rear and every seat
in the bus are on the same level? A. They are on the same
level.
Q. Is there any difference at all between the upholster
ing, the padding, the curvature of the back rest of the divan
at the rear of the bus and the other seats in front? A. None
other than the back—you can’t let the back back on it, the
seat is tin- cushion that you sit on is all the same.
Q. You never have the back of the divan to get down and
you can’t get it up or get up and you can’t get it down? A.
No, sir.
Q. It is just there all the time in a comfortable posi
tion? A. Yes, sir.
Q. You heard the plaintiff testify about a conversation
she had with you in your bus at Wickliffe, in which she
enumerated in detail what you said and she said, and then
what she said and what you said, did any of that occur
other than what you have told the Court here? A. To the
best of my knowledge not that I know of.
Q. I f there is anything you left out of the conversation
between you and her at any time, tell that to the Court now.
A. It wasn’t any other than what I told.
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Redirect
143
R ecr o s s exam in ation b y M r. F ree la n d .
Q. Mr. Martin there is just one question I would like to
ask yon. About these seats, these reclining seats, double
reclining seats on each side of the bus—
Mr. W aller: Now, if your Honor please, I think
we have a right smart fun with these seats.
Mr. Freeland: I can appreciate counsel’s re
luctance, but I don’t think it is clear.
By the Court: I don’t think it is either.
Mr. W aller: Of course, we have this afternoon to
kill, I guess.
By the Court: No, we are going to get through
with this.
Mr. Freeland: We are going to get through
right now.
By the Court: Mr. Martin, the back of this seat,
this divan seat has a straight back, doesn’t it?
A. No, sir, it is not straight, it is elevated.
By the Court: The back of it?
A. Yes, sir.
By the Court: What do you mean elevated?
A. It is not straight up that way.
By the Court: You mean it is slanted?
A. Yes, sir.
By the Court: Is it slanted in the same method
and with the same mechanism that the reclining seats
are?
J. B. Martin—For Defendant—Recross
A. Yes, sir, they are the same.
144
Mr. Freeland: Wait a minute. I don’t think he
understood your Honor. May I question him just a
moment.
Q. It is not adjustable, Mr. Martin, like a reclining seat,
is it? A. I f those reclining seats was up in an upright
position, like they are when—
Q. That isn’t what I asked you—is or is not the back
of that divan adjustable? A. You can’t move it out of the
bus—move it back to the rear.
Q. You cannot raise it or lower it? A. It is already.
By the Court: The backrest is not adjustable?
A. No, sir.
Q. That is not the question I wanted to ask him. I want
to ask you about these double seats. In one of these double
seats, consisting of two seats, is there one cushion or two
separate cushions side by side? A. There are two separate
cushions.
Q. Now, on this back divan, is there just one cushion all
the way across? A. Some of the busses and I believe some
of them has separate cushions just like the other seats.
Q. I see. Some of them are one way and some the other.
Do you recall about this bus? A. No, I don’t. I have never
been back there to look.
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
F. S. K eaton was called as a witness for the defendant,
and after having first been duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follow s:
D irec t exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. What is your name? A. F. S. Keaton.
145
Q. Where do yon live? A. Jackson, Tennessee.
Q. How old are you? A. 51.
Q. Mr. Keaton, what is your employment ? A. I am em
ployed by Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated.
Q. Is that the defendant in this litigation? A. It is.
Q. How long have you been employed with that com
pany? A. Since the first of 1934.
Q. What is your position with them? A. I am Vice
President in the company and General Manager of all of
its operations East of the Mississippi River.
Q. Did you hold that position on May 6, 1946, and for
some months prior to that time? A. I did.
Q. How long had you been manager of operations of
your company East of the Mississippi River? A. Since
December 1, 1945. I was an officer in the company prior to
that, and had charge of our northern region, which regional
office is located at Jackson, Tennessee.
Q. Mr. Keaton, I hand you a document that on the front
page of it says, among other things, “ Southern Bus Lines,
Inc., Rules and Regulations, Tariff No. 400-A ” , and so
forth, and bears the legend “ Issued February 1, 1946
Effective March 5, 1946” , and near the bottom of the page
says “ Issued by 0. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager, 619
Ardis Building, Shreveport, Louisiana ’ \ Will you tell the
Court what that is? A. That is Rules and Regulations
Tariff of Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated, which names
the rules and regulations governing passenger traffic in
connection with various tariffs on file.
Q. I will ask you if that is copy of the rules and regu
lations on file by your company with Interstate Commerce
Commission of the United States?
Mr. Freeland: I will object to that, your Honor
please, I don’t think that is the way to prove that.
F. 8. Keaton-—For Defendant—Direct
146
By the Court: I don’t believe it is either.
Mr. W aller: You mean I can’t ask that ques
tion?
By the Court: It is not a proper question because
it is not the proper way to prove an excerpt of tariff
on file with Interstate Commerce.
Q. Where did you get this ? A. I got that copy from the
depot here in Paducah.
Q. What was it doing there? A. It was on file there
with our other tariffs and regulations.
Q. Does this document have the approval of Interstate
Commerce Commission?
By the Court: Now, Mr. Waller, the Interstate
Commerce Commission issues regulations and I don’t
believe you can prove a document other than by its
submission.
Mr. W aller: I don’t want to disagree with the
Court, principally because it is always futile. How
ever, this is a document that is required by law to be
carried as the published tariff of this company at its
various stations.
By the Court: You haven’t asked that. You have
asked if this was approved?
Mr. W aller: That is right. I didn’t want you
to think it was a phony one.
By the Court: Approved by the Interstate Com
merce Commission. That is not a test by which you
can prove or disprove the Interstate Commerce Com
mission. They have a way of approving or disap
proving over the official signature of their secretary.
Mr. W aller: I am not prepared to argue that to
the Court, and I assume the Court is correct. How
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
147
ever, I can get myself worked up to suggesting that
the Interstate Commerce Commission’s orders bears
certain authenticity of themselves without the seals,,
and so on. A published tariff, I think, doesn ’t have to
have a seal on it. But I believe I can make this com
petent otherwise.
By the Court: Let’s hear you try it.
Mr. W aller: I admit I am somewhat discouraged.
Q. Now, this document that I have here was gotten by
you where? From where? A. From the local depot here
in Paducah.
Q. Why is that carried in your depot here? A. Well,
we are authorized by the Interstate Commerce Commis
sion—
Mr. Freeland: I object to that.
By the Court: Go ahead, Mr. Keaton.
A. —as a common carrier of passengers in the State of
Kentucky and other states over our system.
By the Court: What do you mean ‘ ‘ authorized ’ ’ ?
A. We are authorized by a certificate from those various
regulatory bodies—
By the Court: You don’t object to the fact that
they are a certificate for carrying of passengers?
Mr. Freeland: No, sir.
A. —When we are certificated, that certificate requires us
to meet the rules and regulations of the Interstate Com
merce Commission and all the other regulatory State Com
missions.
Q. Are you required and pursuant to that requirement
do you keep in your various offices the terms upon which
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
148
passengers are carried under your franchise or certificate?
A. We do in that order or certificate— our certificates are
all on file.
Q, Is this the rules and regulations that are published
by you and kept by you at your various offices including
Paducah and Wickliffe in this area?
Mr. Freeland: I will object to that.
By the Court: Is that the tariff you mean?
A. In our depots— they are on file in our depots. All our
tariffs and regulations are, subject to inspection.
By the Court: Gentlemen, we are wasting a lot
of time here.
Mr. W aller: I am ready to prove it, if you will
let me.
By the Court: I am going to let you.
Mr. Freeland: The Court understands I am still
objecting.
By the Court: I understand and I think you are
right, but I am going to' overrule it for the present.
Q. Is this a part of the tariff that you are required by
law to keep at your various stations? A. It is the tariff
we file to meet those rules and regulations of those regu
latory bodies. The tariff is approved by those regulatory
bodies and it is assigned a number which is the next number
in sequence from previous tariffs.
Q. Is this tariff the one in effect on May 6, 1946, at
Wickliffe? A. Yes, sir.
Mr. Freeland: The Court understands I am still
objecting.
By the Court: Yes, sir, I understand you are
objecting to each and every one.
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
Mr. Freeland: As long as they are on this line
of questioning.
Q. I will ask you using this to refresh your recollection
what were the rules and regulations as to seating passen
gers of your company on May 6, 1946, in the vicinity of
Wickliffe, Kentucky? A. I might quote Rule No. 15, sub
heading (b )—
Mr. Freeland: I want to object to that on an
other ground. This one is this—they have pleaded
regulations relating to the seating of colored passen
gers. There is no pleading at all about this regula
tion, which, according to its terms, gives him the right
to seat any passenger anywhere.
Mr. Waller: You are referring to paragraph 5.
Mr. Freeland: I am referring to what he is about
to read here.
By the Court: I am going to overrule this, too.
I am going to let him read this right now—go ahead.
A. —which reads ‘ ‘ This company reserves to itself full con
trol and discretion as to seating of passengers and reserves
the right to change such seating at any time during the
trip.”
Q. Was that your published rule and regulation at that
time? A. Yes, sir.
Mr. W aller: May I file this, sir?
By the Court: Yes, over the objection of the
plaintiff, subject to final competency.
(Document was marked Defendant’s Exhibit
1.)
Q. Mr. Keaton, how does your company instruct its
drivers as to the handling of passenger public on their vari
150
ous runs, that is, by writing, orally, or how? A. Well, we
do both. We have rules and regulations for our operators
and our drivers ’ supervisors particularly instruct all oper
ators orally and, that is, individually and collectively, such
as at safety meetings and other meetings of our company
operators.
Q. Will you tell some of the instructions that your
drivers have in the area of Wickliffe, Kentucky, with ref
erence to handling of passengers and seating—
Mr. Freeland: I object, if the Court please.
Many of those would have nothing to do with the
issues.
By the Court: Let’s get down to those that are
material in this situation.
Mr. Freeland: Further, w7e object to him telling
about any instructions, written or oral—we object to
him telling about any written instructions and we ob
ject to him telling about any oral instructions unless
he gave them himself or was present when given.
By the Court: It is the practice of the company
—overruled. Overruled as to the question if you will
narrow it down to the regulations involved in this
particular matter. We haven’t got time to go into
all the regulations issued by the company.
Q. All right, you answer what the Court wants. A. Do
I understand you to mean the seating of all passengers or
the seating of particular passengers?
By the Court: Seating of colored passengers.
A. In that territory colored passengers would be seated
from the rear of the bus. White passengers would be seated
from the front of the bus.
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
151
Mr. Freeland: The Court understands we object
to that.
By the Court: Yes, I understand. You mean by
that those are oral instructions given to the drivers?
A. That is generally and would apply at that point.
By the Court: What do you mean “ generally” ?
A. I mean those instructions are given to the operators
generally, and it would apply to that point at Wickliffe.
You asked that it be made specific at this particular place.
Q. Are you familiar with this bus—number 346 or 347?
A. Yes, sir, I remember those busses as flexible busses, 29
passengers.
Q. How many rows of seats are there on each side of the
center aisle of those busses ? A. There are six double seats
on each side of the aisle, making a total of 24 seats, or 12
double seats, six on each side of the aisle.
Q. As an operator experienced in the handling of pas
sengers on busses in the vicinity of Wickliffe, Kentucky,
state whether or not in your opinion the seating of colored
passengers from the rear forward and the white passengers
from the front to the rear is a reasonable and necessary
regulation and for the safety of your passengers?
Mr. Freeland: We object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. It is. It is very necessary for the safety and the com
fort and welfare of passengers, of all the passengers.
Q. I wish you would state what difference, if any, there
is between accommodations so far as safety and comfort
and convenience and in any other respect are concerned be
tween the seats at the rear and those at the front of the bus?
A. All the seats on that particular bus are on the same floor
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
152
level. The aisle is about six inches lower than the floor on
which the seats are stationed. The first 24 seats, or 12
double seats, in that particular bus, I believe are slightly
reclining. The divan seat across the back is not reclining,
but all the seats in my observation are apparently of the
same materials and I believe that particular bus would
carry head rest towels the same on the divan seat as it
would on the aisle seats.
Mr. Freeland: I move to exclude that unless he
knows.
By the Court: I overrule it.
C ro ss exam in ation b y M r. F ree la n d .
Mr. Freeland: Without waiving my objection, if
the Court please.
Q. You have stated that your drivers have instructions
generally have instructions to seat colored passengers to
the rear and white passengers to the front of the bus? A.
I said generally, yes.
Q. Are drivers in Illinois—
Mr. W aller: I object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. Our drivers who drive in Illinois are the same drivers
who may drive in Jackson, Tennessee, or Kentucky. In
fact, we have schedules from Jackson, Tennessee, to St.
Louis, and those drivers, as I say, would have general in
structions at some time or other from the regional office.
Q. So the driver driving from St. Louis to Cairo, Illi
nois, have the same instructions about the seating of colored
passengers as those driving from Cairo South— or Paducah,
or anywhere? A. You understand, I mean generally it is
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
153
system wide. These drivers operate these runs on a seni
ority basis. They don’t remain at one place all the time.
They move into whatever seniority district is determined
by.
Q. Yes, I understand that. But what you are saying is
that all of your drivers at some time or other are instructed
by the company that wherever they may be driving they are
to seat colored passengers from the rear and white pas
sengers from the front? A. I did not say that—wherever
they are driving. I said that generally, system-wide, that
they would have those instructions in a safety meeting or
while the drivers are grouped and that is what I mean by
generally they would have those instructions, but they might
be driving at any one of the places or divisions that they
may select according to their seniority with the company.
Q. But the instructions apply whether they are in Illi
nois, Kentucky, Missouri, or wherever they might be? Is
that correct? A. I wouldn’t say that. No, the instructions
are not the same.
By the Court: Well, what are they?
A. Individual and particular instructions would be different
from the general instructions.
By the Court: Your instructions to load white
people from the front and colored pepole from the
rear, to what extent does that apply and over what
territory is it applicable?
A. That is applicable through the territory South of the
Ohio River.
By the Court: And not in the territory North of
the river?
F. 8, Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
A. Yes.
154
Q. So your driver, Mr. Martin, is in error then when he
states he thinks there is no difference in instructions given
him about the way to seat passengers in Illinois and the
way to seat them South of the Ohio River? A. I didn’t
hear him say that.
Q. But if he did say that, he is mistaken, is that right?
A. Well, whatever the record shows on it.
By the Court: It is a matter of argument, Mr.
Freeland. Mr. Martin said one thing and Mr. Keaton
another—it is a difference between the two men.
Q. It is true about these busses that the rear seat, the
hack is not adjustable? A. It is not a reclining seat, no,
sir, it is a divan seat and in that bus, I believe, holds five
individual seats.
Q. And the back is not adjustable? On any of the
busses? A. I am afraid you are not getting to the con
struction of it. As far as a passenger reclining himself,
as one of five there he could not do it, but the seat is not
absolutely stationary. It is movable and is not reclining,
as I said a while ago.
By the Court: Well, now, Mr. Freeland, it is not
a reclining seat. Is that all you want? Stand down.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
Martin Robinson was called as a witness for the defen
dant, and after having first been duly sworn, was examined
and testified as follows:
D ire c t exa m in a tion by M r. W a ller .
Q. Please state your name. A. Martin Robinson.
Q. How old are you, Mr. Robinson? A. 56.
155
Q. Where do you live? A. Wiekliffe, Kentucky.
Q. What is your occupation? A. Now, I am working at
a pottery shop, at the present time, I am.
Q. What was your employment May 6, 1946? A. City
Marshal.
Q. Of what city? A. Wiekliffe, Kentucky.
Q. How long had you held that position? A. Three and
a half years.
Q. Are you what is known in that section as “ the law” ?
A. Yes, sir, city law.
Q. Mr. Robertson, on the morning of May 6, 1946, were
you called to the bus station o f the Southern Bus Lines,
Inc., in Wiekliffe? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Who called you? A. Mrs. Swain.
Q. Did you go immediately there ? A. As soon as I got
on my clothes— I were in the bed.
Q. When you got there, what did you find was the
trouble? A. A lady didn’t want to get moved back to the
back end, a colored lady.
Q. Was that this plaintiff here? A. That favors her.
Q. How was she dressed? A. Best I remember she
had on a slack suit.
Q. You mean shirt and breeches? A. That is right.
Q. Come clear down to the shoe tops? A. Well, yes.
Q. Mr. Robinson, where was she seated in the bus—in
what part of the bus? A. About the third row of seats
back from the driver.
Q. The third row of seats back from the driver. Did
you go in there and talk to her? A. I did.
Q. Tell the Court what you said to her and what she
said to you as nearly as you can. A. Well, all I said to her,
I asked her to get back, the driver had told me that she
wouldn’t get back. I asked her why she wouldn’t get back.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
156
She said she had as much right to ride up there as anyone.
I called the driver in then and talked to him. He said he
wanted to put her off, and I told him he would have to get
her her fare back if I had anything to do with putting her
off.
Q. Did he do that? A. He did. He gave her a ticket
hack. Of course, I never looked at the ticket.
Q. Now, what did you do and say and what did she do
and say? A. She refused and I told her she would either
have to get off or get hack— everybody else rode back there
in the way of colored folks, and she wasn’t any better than
anyone else, and she would have to get off or get back.
Q. What did she say she would do? A. Finally agreed
to get off.
Q. Did she get off? A. By us leading her.
Q. Leading her—now tell what you did. A. Well, I had
hold of her right arm, best I remember, and the bus driver
had hold of her left arm. He was ahead of her, I was be
hind her, and we led her off.
Q. She never did decide to go off of her own accord?
A. Oh, no.
Q. Did you twist her arm or bruise her? A. No, sir.
Q. Did you at any time have hold of her—you say you
had her right wrist? A. I think it was the right wrist.
Q. Did you ever have hold of any other part of her
body? A. No, sir.
Q. What part of her body did Mr. Martin have hold
of? A. He had hold of her left wrist.
Q. Did he have hold of any of the rest of her? A. No,
sir.
Q. She claims she had bruises on her shoulder. Did you
have any contact with that shoulder? A. None whatever.
Q. Did Mr. Martin? A. No, sir.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
157
Q. She claims she had a bruised place on the inside of
her left leg about the knee, did you make that? A, No, sir.
Q. Did Mr. Martin? A. Not while I was there.
Q. Did you grasp her wrist hard enough to make it turn
blue or bruise it or anything? A. No, sir, just held her
tight enough to keep her from jerking loose from me.
Q. Did you man-handle her? A. Nothing only just led
her along. She didn’t want to get off but she never tried
to fight except she tried to bite him once.
Q. Did you look over the bus and see whether the ac
commodations were better or worse in one part of the
bus than another? A. Well, no, not in particular in that
respect. Do you mean in the load balance?
Q. In any respect? Upholstering, comfort, ventilation,
convenience and so on.
Mr. Freeland: I think I will object to him tes
tifying as an expert, transportation expert.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. Nothing only this lady being a colored lady and she was
setting up there amongst the white folks, that was the only
thing, and everybody, all the colored folks had been riding
in the back end of the bus, that is, in the rear part of the
bus always down the line.
Mr. Freeland: I believe I will move to exclude
that.
By the Court: Overruled.
Q. Mr. Robinson, you say that in the vicinity down
there it has always been customary for the white passen
gers to ride in the front part of the bus and the other pas
sengers the back part? A. That is right.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
158
Mr. Freeland: Believe I will object to the custom.
By the Court: I don’t think the custom has got
a thing in the world to do with this, Mr. Waller.
Mr. W aller: I f you try to run a bus contrary to
custom in the realm it is operated in, you will find
out.
By the Court: No—there is a law, too.
Mr. W aller: You can’t use law in this situation.
Mr. Freeland: I want to object to that statement.
That is why we are here.
Mr. W aller: I mean by that this is not a matter
regulated by law.
Mr. Freeland: What are we doing here then!
By the Court: That is, I understand, the purpose
of this law suit to determine whether it is or not con
trolled by operation of law.
Mr. W aller: That is right, sir, whether this com
pany can legally do this under the law.
Mr. Freeland: Now you are talking about regu
lations, you were talking about customs. I am object
ing to the testimony about customs.
By the Court: I am going to sustain it.
Mr. Waller: All right. Exceptions.
Q. Mr. Robinson, assuming that you are an experienced
peace officer in the vicinity of Wickliffe, Kentucky, do you
think it is conducive to the safety of the traveler in that
section that the busses of this defendant be loaded and
operated on the general plan of colored passengers going
to the rear and white passengers going to the front?
Mr. Freeland: Object, if your Honor please.
Among other things, all the jurisdiction he has ever
had is in the town of Wickliffe.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
159
By the Court: I believe a peace officer in a town
or vicinity or particular section wouldn’t be qualified
to pass upon what is or is not conducive to safety in
the operation of a bus. Sustain the objection.
Q. Mr. Robinson, assuming that the defendant is charged
by law in carrying the passengers on this line safely into,
out of and through Wickliffe, Kentucky, do you think that
a regulation of the company that the white passengers be
loaded to the front of the bus and colored passengers to the
rear of the bus is a reasonable and proper regulation, that
is, one that aids in the safe transportation of passengers?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Same question.
Q. Do you think that the loading of passengers on busses
in Western Kentucky where they mingle and sit indis
criminately would tend to create any disturbance or dis
order among the passengers ?
Mr. Freeland: I will object to that because,
among other things, because he testified they never
do that.
By the Court: That strikes me as the same ques
tion.
Mr. Waller: I didn’t think you were ruling on
that basis. I thought you were objecting because he
is not a transportation man.
By the Court: I sustained the objection first as
to transportation. Now you are asking him whether
or not permitting white and colored passengers to
sit together would tend to promote unsafe conditions
and Mr. Freeland objected to that. I sustain the ob
jection.
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Direct
160
C ro ss exa m in a tion b y M r. F ree la n d .
Q. Mr. Robinson, you didn’t arrest her for anything,
did yon? A. No, I didn’t.
Q. You didn’t have any warrant charging her with any
thing, did yon? A. No, I didn’t.
Q. You did not consider that you were subjecting her
to any legal process at all? A. That is right.
Q. As far as you know she was not violating any laws
at that time?
Mr. W aller: I object—this suit isn’t for violat
ing any law.
By the Court: But here is an officer who assisted
in taking the passenger off of this bus. Now, the
inquiry is whether she committed any violation of
the law.
Mr. W aller: I want to ask the next question and
he will object to it.
By the Court: I don’t know whether it will be
the next one or not.
Q. She has not as far as you know violated any law? A.
Well, no.
R ed ir ec t exa m in a tion b y M r. W a ller .
Q. Mr. Robinson, how long have you lived in Western
Kentucky and in the vicinity of Wickliffe? A. Practically
all of my life.
Q. I will ask you if during the last several years, in fact
for many years, if it has been the custom of all bus lines
operating in and through Wickliffe and Western Kentucky
to seat the passengers as follows—colored passengers go to
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Cross-—Redirect
161
the rear of the bus and fill up toward the front, and white
passengers go to the front and fill up toward the rear.
Mr. Freeland: I will object.
By the Court: I will sustain it. Mr. Robinson, in
the question Mr. Waller asked you, would your opin
ion be based upon any experience that you have ever
had in operating or extensively traveling by bus in
that section! Or would it be just an opinion that you
would have from observing the busses as they came
in and went out from Wickliffe?
A. Well, experience and traveling in and out of Cairo and
around Wickliffe, and in and out of Ballard County, and
out of Ballard County.
By the Court: How long have you been riding
busses in and out of Wickliffe and in the vicinity of
Wickliffe and Cairo and the points you referred to !
A. Oh, for 20 years.
By the Court: During that time you mean that
you have observed the method of seating the pas
sengers !
A. Not necessarily. Only just seeing that happen—it has
been always done through Wickliffe and around through
that place. I don’t know whether it is a law.
By the Court: But your observation is what has
prevailed when you were traveling as a passenger
on busses which you say you have done rather ex
tensively over a period of 20 years and in that par
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Redirect
162
ticular section you have observed that the colored
people generally are seated in the rear and the white
people in the front?
A. That is right.
Mr. Freeland: Judge, I don’t know whether I
can object to a question that you are asking or not.
By the Court: Tes, Mr. Freeland, you can ob
ject if you want to.
Mr. W aller: Do you now hold that he may or
may not answer?
By the Court: He has answered the question.
Mr. W aller: He has answered your question. I
want to ask him another one.
Q. Mr. Robinson, as one familiar as the general public
is familiar with the customs and practices of seating pas
sengers in busses over a long period of years in Western
Kentucky, including Wickliffe and vicinity, I will ask you
if that custom of seating passengers in busses is so gener
ally known as to—-is generally known and is a matter of com
mon knowledge to all people of this section?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: I sustain the objection.
Mr. W aller: Instead of making an avowal, may
he not just answer it?
By the Court: Yes. Answer the question for the
record.
A. Well, I guess you better let him ask me that question
again. I was waiting and I thought you would sustain it.
I might not know what I was going to answer.
(Reporter reads question.)
Martin Robinson—For Defendant—Redirect
A. It is.
163
Q. Now, Mr, Robinson, the plaintiff has testified that
Mr. Martin, the driver, threw her luggage off the bus. Tell
whether he did or not? A. Don’t think he did. Didn’t
while I was there.
Q. Did you see any luggage taken off the bus that be
longed to the plaintiff? A. All she had was a little small
box and a magazine. She taken that off with her. She
asked to pick it up and we let her pick it up and she taken
it off with her.
Q. She did that at the time all three of you were going
off the bus? A. That is right.
Q. Now, did you later, immediately after that, see the
driver deliver any luggage to her? A. Taken it out of the
compartment and set it on the walk.
Q. Where was she with reference to where he sat it?
A. As far as from here to that table there.
Q. About how many feet would that be? A. About 12
feet.
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant-—Direct
F. S. K eaton was recalled as a witness for the defen
dant, and was examined and testified as follow s:
D irect exa m in a tion b y M r. W a lter .
Q. Mr. Keaton, you have already testified as to your
experience in the transportation of passengers by motor
bus in Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, so forth—
not all of Missouri, but east of the Mississippi River. I will
ask you if as one experienced in that field of endeavor you
will state to the Court whether or not the loading of pas
sengers on the plan of colored passengers going to the rear
of the bus for their seats and seating forwai’d, and the white
passengers taking seats from the front toward the rear is
164
in your opinion a reasonable and necessary method of load
ing and transporting passengers? A. It is.
Mr. Freeland: I want to object.
By the Court: I understand—you are objecting.
Q. I will ask you if in your opinion that method of seat
ing and transporting passengers is one that is necessary in
your opinion for the safe transportation of the traveling
public in Western Kentucky? A. It is.
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
Q. Mr. Keaton, how long has it been the general custom
of the bus companies operating in Western Kentucky to
load and seat and transport their passengers on that plan
and in that way?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. To my knowledge it has been the practice since we first
came into that territory which I believe was in September,
1939.
Q. I will ask you to please state whether or not in your
opinion that regulation of the bus companies of loading and
seating and transporting its passengers on that plan has
been so universally followed by the bus companies as to
have become on and prior to May 6, 1946, a matter of com
mon knowledge among the people who have lived in Paducah
and other West Kentucky places in the last six years?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: I am going to permit him to an
swer. Go ahead.
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Direct
165
A. Yes, sir, when our passengers board our coaches it is,
we observe, it is the practice of the people to voluntarily
seat themselves in that manner, both the whites and the
colored.
Mr. Freeland: I move to exclude that.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. — It is our duty as common carrier, as a public utility
to at all times keep our coaches under control as to com
fort, security and safety of all passengers and the seating
from the front of the white people and the seating from
the rear of the colored people has been a practice which
we believe has been conducive to all people riding the busses,
which is, as I said, the busses are a common carrier for the
public.
Q. Mr. Keaton, as an experienced motor bus operator
over a long period of years, state whether or not that regu
lation of loading and transporting passengers, colored at
the rear and white at the front, has been acceptable to both
white and colored!
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: I am going to let him answer it
for the record.
A. That has been, as I said, a favorable practice and has
been, we believe, favorable to all our passengers, to their
safety.
C ross exam in ation by M r. F ree la n d .
Mr. Freeland: The Court understands I am not
waiving my objections.
By the Court: I understand.
F. 8. Keaton—-For Defendant—Cross
166
Q. You have stated that the regulation the company is
supposed to have about seating of colored passengers from
the rear and white passengers from the front is necessary,
reasonable and conducive to the maintenance of safety on
the bus lines in Western Kentucky where you say it is ap
plicable, is that your testimony? A. I don’t know it is ex
actly what I said. It is that in substance.
Q. All right.
(At request of Mr. Waller, reporter read above
question and answer.)
Q. Now, Mr. Keaton, that regulation is not in effect just
across the river in Southern Illinois where you operate,
is it?
Mr. Waller: Your Honor, please, I object to that.
By the Court: Your objection will be noted. Go
ahead.
Q. That regulation is not in effect just across the river
in Southern Illinois, is it? A. No, sir, I don’t believe it is.
Q. Don’t you know? A. As I said before, our instruc
tions to our operators are general and I think that I said
those operators are not confined to Illinois, and they would
have these instructions over the territory of the system.
Q. The instructions being that colored passengers will
be seated from the rear and white passengers will be seated
from the front. Do I understand you now to say those
regulations are applicable at least sometimes in Illinois?
A. No, I haven’t said that.
Mr. Freeland: Did your Honor understand that ?
He said they were generally applicable.
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
167
A. I went on and explained that those operators operate
other than in Illinois, and that w*as not a specific rule for
Illinois.
Q. Well, what is the rule as to Illinois for the seating of
colored and white passengers ? A. I think there is a statute
in Illinois on intrastate passengers.
Q. What is yonr company’s rule? A. That passengers
boarding our coaches in Illinois may choose their seats and
sit in any seat that they are able to secure voluntarily, but
the rule of the company generally is to reserve the right to
seat its passengers or to change the seating of its passen
gers during the trip.
By the Court: Mr. Keaton, his question to you
is—you have said that your company gave your
drivers instructions to seat the white people to the
front—from the front toward the rear and colored
people from the rear toward the front, that is true,
is it?
A. Yes.
By the Court: Now, do you give that instruction
to your drivers who drive in Illinois?
A. I am afraid you don’t understand me on that. The gen
eral instructions to all drivers is that, but that would apply
more particularly to the operations South of the Ohio River
and I think I so stated that.
By the Court: Why? If your instructions are
generally in the aid of safety, comfort and con
venience of the passengers, why would it promote
safety, convenience or comfort more in Western Ken
tucky than it would in Illinois?
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
168
A. Because the people South of the Ohio River who ride
our busses are accustomed to that practice and, as I said,
they voluntarily seat themselves in that manner, but the
people North of the Ohio River are generally accustomed
to the colored people sitting in any seat in the bus and,
therefore, that practice governs our operations North of
the Ohio River.
By the Court: Of permitting them to sit indis
criminately in the bus!
A. That is right. We do not discriminate against the col
ored people.
Q. North of the Ohio River? A. We don’t discriminate
against them South of the Ohio River.
Q. You just make them sit in the back?
Mr. W aller: I object.
By the Court: That is a proper question, Mr.
Waller—make them sit in the back— that is what the
driver’s intention was when he asked this girl to
move back.
Mr. W aller: I don’t so much object to the ques
tion as to the grin.
By the Court: I can’t prevent Mr. Freeland’s
grin.
Mr. Freeland: The record will not show the grin.
By the Court: I f it will be any comfort to you,
I will sustain the objection, but I don’t know whether
that will prevent its repetition. Go ahead.
Q. The gist of the whole thing, Mr. Keaton, is this—
that your company believes that that regulation is salutary
South of the Ohio River because it has always had it in
force, and you have never tried to operate without those
F. S. Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
169
regulations or requirements, whatever they are! The com
pany has never made any effort to see what would happen
if they did operate without that so-called regulation? A.
No, we are following the practice there of the people gen
erally. We are not discriminating against colored people
in any section. The practice is that they voluntarily board
those busses and find their seats.
Q. And if they don’t you put them where they belong,
is that right? A. That is the substance—that is the in
structions to our drivers when that is necessary.
Q. But you never have operated without those instruc
tions and so you don’t know what would happen if you
were to abandon the practice?
By the Court: I don’t think we need to get into
any speculation.
Mr. Freeland: For the purpose of avowal, may
I ask him?
By the Court: Yes, you may for the purpose of
the record.
Q. Do you know what would happen actually?
Mr. Waller: What was that?
Mr. Freeland: I asked him—he has testified that
the company has never operated without that regu
lation, has always had it South of the River.
Mr. W aller: So what was your question?
Mr. Freeland: I asked him if he knew actually
how they would get along without it.
By the Court: I sustain the objection and he
can answer for avowal.
Q. You don’t actually know, do you? A. No, I don’t
know what would happen, but I do know the custom of the
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Cross
170
people who ride by bus generally, as it is now being prac
ticed, since we have been in that territory.
R ed ir e c t exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. Out of your experience as a transportation man,
would you express an opinion as to whether or not the fol
lowing of that custom or practice and the maintenance of
that regulation is a necessary thing in the safe transporta
tion of the traveling public?
Mr. Freeland: Judge, he has asked him that
several times.
By the Court: Mr. Waller, that is repetitious. I
am going to let it ride this last time.
Mr. Freeland: This is the third time.
By the Court: I know it. It is just pure repe
tition.
A. I think it is necessary and there is a reason for our so
instructing our operators and for our rules and regulations.
I might add the same is true in the seating of white people
themselves by reason of various handicaps, workers, com
muters, etc., our drivers are instructed to re-seat those
people at places on the bus where the same practice, com
fort or security would apply. Same applies to children.
If a lady gets on our bus with two children and the front
seat is taken, our operator asks that lady to sit in another
seat because of the hazard of those children standing and
for quick stops would be injured against the front of that
bus—have no protection on that seat. If there is no other
seat she can have—other seats in the bus— our operator will
ask some other passenger to exchange seats with her. The
same is true of baggage inside the bus. Our operator, even
F. 8. Keaton—For Defendant—Redirect
171
though a passenger will put baggage right over her seat,
if that is not secure place for that piece of baggage, he will
move it, maybe to the back, to keep it from falling and in
juring people on the bus. Those are rules of our company
the same as this rule for safety, security and seating of the
passengers.
Jess Sullivan—For Defendant—Direct
Jess Sxjllivan was called as a witness for the defendant,
and after having first been duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follow s:
D ire c t exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. State your name. A. Jess Sullivan.
Q. Your age? A. 50.
Q. Your residence? A. Wickliffe, Kentucky.
Q. And your employment? A. Sheriff of Ballard
County.
Q. You are Sheriff of Ballard County, Kentucky, and
how long have you been Sheriff this time? A. This last time
almost a year and a half.
Q. Were you ever Sheriff of Ballard County before the
present term? A. Twice before.
Q. When were those terms? A. 1926 to 1930 and 1934
to 1938.
Q. Under the laws of Kentucky a Sheriff can’t succeed
himself, is that right? A. Yes.
Q. You have to let somebody else have it. Mr. Sullivan,
how long have you lived in Ballard County, Kentucky, of
which Wickliffe is the county seat? A. All my life.
Q. I will ask you if you are familiar with the practice
of the bus companies operating in Western Kentucky as to
172
their method of loading and seating and transporting white
and colored passengers? A. Well, I think so.
Q. How do they all load them?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled for the present.
A. It is just an old custom— colored folks always take the
back seat and white folks in front. Always been a ruling
that the colored folks take the back seat and the white folks
in front when they cross the Ohio River. We never have
any trouble with them hardly ever—but it has always been
a custom, been a ruling for years in Western Kentucky.
Q. Are you familiar with the customs and practices of
the traveling public and the bus companies that transports
them in Western Kentucky?
Mr. Freeland: All of them—I object to that.
By the Court: Generally—I think I know the
purpose—overruled.
(Reporter read question back.)
A. Yes, ma’am, I think so.
Q. Well, what is it?
Mr. Freeland: I want to object to that as being
too indefinite.
By the Court: He is talking about all bus com
panies, if I understood his question.
Mr. Freeland: And all the customs and practices.
By the Court: The custom of seating colored per
sons in the rear and white people in the front, is that
your question?
Mr. W aller: Yes, that is right.
By the Court: Objection overruled.
Jess Sullivan—For Defendant—Direct
173
A. That is the custom for seating colored folks in the back
and white folks in the front.
Q. Mr. Sullivan, in your opinion, has that practice been
so long observed that all persons living in Western Ken
tucky, whether at Paducah, Wickliffe, or elsewhere, are fa
miliar with that custom and that method of the bus com
panies loading and transporting their passengers?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: I agree with you. Answer.
A. I think so. I think everybody is familiar with that.
Q. Mr. Sullivan, have the bus companies and the public
been so long accustomed to the colored people being seated
at the rear of the bus and white people at the front that
that method of transporting the public is a matter of uni
versal and common knowledge among the people of this
section of Kentucky? A. I think so. I think it is.
By the Court: Do you want to cross examine?
Mr. Freeland: No, sir.
Mildred Swain—For Defendant—Direct
M ildbed S w ain was called as a witness for the defen
dant, and after having first been duly sworn, was examined
and testified as follow s:
D irect exam in ation b y M r. W a ller .
Q. Is your name Mildred Swain? A. Yes, sir.
Q. You live at Wickliffe, Kentucky? A. Yes.
Q. How old are you, Miss Swain? A. 34.
Q. How long have lived in Wickliffe? A. 27 years.
Q. Do you have any connection at all with the Southern
Bus Lines, Incorporated, the defendant in the suit? A. I am
their agent.
174
Q, At Wickliffe, Kentucky? A. Yes, sir.
Q. I believe your mother operates the Swain Hotel? A.
Yes.
Q. And you assist in that, or participate in that? A. I
do.
Q. I believe the lobby of your hotel is the station or
ticket office of all the bus lines that enter Wickliffe? A. We
have a separate room for the bus station—for the waiting
room for all of them.
Q. All of them have you for agent? A. Yes.
Q. Are there more than two? A. There is the Grey
hound and Southern Bus Lines and Gulf Transport, we have
three.
Q. Are you familiar with the rule of the Southern Bus
Line as to seating and loading of the passengers, white and
colored? A. Other than from observation I have noticed
usually the colored people sit in the back and the white in
the front.
Mr. Freeland: The Court understands I am still
objecting.
By the Court: Yes, sir.
Q. Would you say you have had sufficient experience and
observation of the carriage of passengers by motor bus that
you would know whether or not that regulation and rule is
universally known among the people of Western Kentucky?
A. Around Wickliffe I know that it is known. I wouldn’t
know about Western Kentucky, but around Wickliffe it is
known.
Mr. Freeland: I move to exclude that. It is not
responsible.
By the Court: That is additional grounds?
Mr. Freeland: Yes, sir.
Mildred Swain—For Defendant—Direct
175
Q. Do you ever ride the busses out of Wickliffe and
back? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Where do you go? A. I go to Paducah, Cairo and
St. Louis.
Q. How long have you been riding the busses in and out
of Wickliffe? A. About ten years I would say.
Q. And how frequently? A. On the average of once a
week.
Q. I will ask you if in Paducah and the other towns that
you are in frequently there is a universal knowledge in your
opinion among the people that the regulations of the South
ern Bus Lines are that colored passengers be seated from
the rear forward and white passengers from the front to
ward the rear?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Mr. Waller, do you mean they have
a knowledge of the regulation or the practice?
Mr. W aller: Did I say regulation? I mean prac
tice.
Mr. Freeland: I still object.
By the Court: I understand. I am going to per
mit her to answer.
A. I notice they usually, they always ride in the back, the
colored people do, and the white people in the front.
Q. Did you see any of this trouble between the driver
and the plaintiff? A. No, not until the passenger was off
the bus.
Q. Did you talk to the plaintiff after she came off the
bus? A. Yes.
Q. Where did you talk to her? A. In the bus station—
in the waiting room.
Mildred Swain—For Defendant—Direct
176
Q. How long did yon talk with her? A. Just a few
minutes. I would say between five and ten minutes, be
cause that is as long as she waited for another bus.
Q. Was she hurt? A. She didn’t say anything about
being hurt.
Q. Did she complain at all of shoulder, back, wrists or
legs? A. No.
Q. Did you observe any scratches or bruised places on
her? A. No.
Q. Did you observe any abrasions? A. No, sir.
Q. Did she complain of any of those? A. Not to me.
Q. Were her clothes disheveled or torn in any way? A.
Not noticeable. I didn’t notice it.
Q. Did she tell you of any? A. No, she didn’t.
Q. Did she tell you or did you see a purse that had a
strap broken? A. No.
Q. Did she have a purse with her? A. I don’t remem
ber.
Q. Did you see her luggage taken from the bus? A. I
saw her luggage on the sidewalk.
Q. Did you see it put there? A. No, sir.
Q. How far was she from it? A. When I looked out
she was in the bus station and the luggage was out on the
sidewalk. That is where the drivers set all the luggage.
Q. Was hers with the others? A. That was the only
luggage there that morning.
Q. Did plaintiff say anything about her back hurting
her? A. No.
C ro ss exam in ation b y M r. F ree la n d .
Q. Miss Swain, you have testified that the plaintiff did
not say anything to you about being hurt, was she crying
Mildred Swain—For Defendant— Cross
177
at any time that you saw? A. I don’t remember about that.
I f she was, it wasn’t to the extent that it was very notice
able.
Q. Could you tell whether she had been crying! A.
I couldn’t tell.
Q. You saw five minutes all together? A. Between
five and ten minutes, just while she waited for the other
bus.
Q. You did not see her being ejected from the Southern
Bus Lines? A. No.
Q. You testified you did not see any abrasions or
bruises. What sort o f clothes was she wearing? A. As
I remember she had on slacks.
Q. Did she wear a jacket with the slacks? A. I don’t
know about that.
Q. Do you recall whether she wore a jacket with sleeves ?
A. No, I don’t.
Q. You wouldn’t necessarily have seen any bruises she
might have had if they were covered by her clothes? A.
No, not unless she mentioned it to me.
Q. Of course, sometimes it requires a little time for those
to appear even after one has been subjected to a blow or
pressure? A. That is true.
Q. Do you recall telling her she ought to try to get her
self together and calm herself down? A. Yes, I did tell her
that.
Q. Was she crying then? A. I don’t know whether she
was crying or not, but she was upset— she told me she was.
R ed irec t exam in ation by M r. W a ller .
Q. I show you Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1 and ask if
there is a tariff just like this in the office of the Southern
Bus Lines at Wickliffe, Kentucky?
Mildred Swain—For Defendant—Redirect
178
Mr. Freeland: Object.
A. I am quite sure there is. I will look at it. Yes.
Q. Was it on record in your office and open to public
inspection on May 6, 1946, and some prior months there
to?
Mr. Freeland: I think I will object to that, too.
For one thing, the plaintiff didn’t have an opportun
ity to look at tariff in Wickliffe until she was thrown
o f f .
By the Court: Overruled for the purpose of
getting it in the record.
A. Yes.
L. E. Carter-—For Defendant—Direct
L. E. Carter was called as a witness for the defendant,
and after having first been duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follow s:
D ire c t exa m in a tion b y M r. W a ller .
Q. State your name. A. L. E. Carter.
Q. How old are you? A. 62.
Q. Where do you live? A. Down near Hinkeyville,
Kentucky, in Ballard County.
Q. Do you hold any public office in Ballard County? A.
Yes, sir.
Q. What is it? A. County Judge.
Q. How long have you been County Judge? A. Since
January of ’46.
Q. Did you hold any public office prior to January, ’46.
A. Sheriff.
Q. You were Sheriff of Ballard County? A. Four years
—from 1942 to ’46.
179
Q. Did you every hold any public office in that county
before then! A. Road Engineer.
Q. Judge Carter, how long have you lived in Ballard
County? A. All my life.
Q. Are you familiar with the people and. their customs
and methods of living in that section of Kentucky? A. I
think I am.
Q. Do you know what the practice of the Southern Bus
Lines and, in fact, all bus lines has been in Western Ken
tucky as to loading, seating and transporting of passengers,
colored and white?
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled for the purpose of
record.
A. I understand they try to keep them separated as much
as possible in the busses— colored in the rear and white in
the front.
Q. Do you think that out o f your experience as a public
officer that is a reasonable and reasonably necessary prac
tice and regulation of the company in transporting passen
gers?
L. E. Carter—For Defendant—Direct
Mr. Freeland: Object.
By the Court: Overruled.
A. I do.
Q. And why ? A. To avoid trouble that is liable to arise
if you mix them, especially in Kentucky.
Q. Do you think it is conducive to the safe transporta
tion of passengers that they load and transport them in that
way? A. I think it is.
180
C ross exa m in a tion b y M r. F ree la n d .
Mr. Freeland: Without waiving my objection,
your Honor.
Q. Judge, you have stated in your opinion this regula
tion is reasonable and that it aids in avoiding trouble. You
mean by that friction or difficulties that might arise between
passengers of different races on the bus lines'? A. That is
right.
Q. You are right well acquainted in Southern Illinois,
aren’t you? A. Fairly well.
Q. They are pretty much the same kind of people over
there that we have down here in Western Kentucky? A. I
judge they might be the same kind of people.
Q. They don’t have any such custom as that in Illinois,
do they? A. I don’t think they do.
Q. They don’t have any undue amount of trouble you
ever heard of either, do they? A. I f they have, I haven’t
heard of it.
Q. But you think they possibly would have in Western
Kentucky if it were not for observance of this regulation?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. So far as you know there has been no attempt made
by any bus company to operate without this regulation? A.
How is that?
Q. As I understand it, you testified that the bus com
panies all observe this regulation in Western Kentucky. So,
nobody knows and certainly you don’t know as a matter of
fact what actually would happen if they didn’t? A. No,
I wouldn’t know.
L. E. Carter—For Defendant—Cross
181
Rebuttal-
Mary Elizabeth W hiteside was called in rebuttal by
counsel for the plaintiff, and testified as follows:
D ire c t exam in ation by M r. F ree la n d .
Q. Miss Whiteside, it was testified by the driver o f the
bus, Mr. Martin, that when he told you upon your refusal
to move upon his instructions that if you did not do so, he
would call the law and you told him that you didn’t care
whether he did or did not call the law. Did you make that
statement to him or not ? A. When he told me I would have
to move to the rear of the bus and I asked him why, he said
it wras because he said so.
Q. That is not what I asked you. A. And he said if you
don’t move to the rear I will call the Deputy Sheriff. He
said that after I told him I wouldn’t move to the rear of the
bus. I asked him to give me his name and his driver’s num
ber and I would move to the rear of the bus and he refused
to do so and said he would get the Deputy Sheriff whereas
he turned to walk out the door and turned and came back
inside the bus and asked me whether or not I was going to
move. I said no, and when I said no he turned and walked
off the bus and came back on with the Deputy Sheriff. The
Deputy Sheriff was ahead of him and he came to me and
asked me what was the trouble.
Q. Did you or not make the statement he said you did?
A. That I said I didn’t care whether he called the Deputy
Sheriff or not?
Q. That is right. A. I did not make that statement.
Q. What you said is what you have testified about? A.
That is right.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside—-Plaintiff— Rebuttal—Direct
182
Q. By Deputy Sheriff do you mean the officer, Mr. Robin
son, who has testified here! Is he the man you are speaking
of? A. He is the gentleman that represented himself as a
Deputy Sheriff, although I didn’t see a badge.
Q. Miss Whiteside, it has been testified that after these
two gentlemen, Mr. Robinson and Mr. Martin, took hold of
you one by each arm that you then agreed to get off the
bus, is that true? A. I did not. Before the Deputy Sheriff
grabbed me by my arm that is when I told him I would move
to the back of the bus, and the bus driver said he didn’t want
me in the back in the bus at all, he wanted me off of the bus,
whereas the Deputy Sheriff told him he would have to give
me my ticket back if he put me off the bus, and the bus
driver said he wouldn’t give me my ticket back, and I asked
him to give me my money back if he put me off. He said he
couldn’t give me my money back, he would give me a trans
fer. I told him I wouldn’t accept a transfer, and the Deputy
Sheriff spoke again that he would have to give me my ticket
back, and the bus driver went to his seat, and as he went
to his seat, the Deputy Sheriff grabbed me by my right
arm—
Q. You needn’t go into all the details about it. I just
asked you whether or not after they did take hold of you
did you agree to get off? A. No, I didn’t, after they had
taken hold of me.
Q. It was further testified that you wralked down the
aisle, is that true or not? A. I did not. That is untrue.
Q. It was further testified that you went back in, after
you walked off the bus, one witness said you went back in
for your box you had with you and the magazine, and an
other one said you brought it out with you—were either of
those statements true? A. Both of them are wrong.
Mary Elisabeth Whiteside-^-Plaintiff— Rebuttal—Direct
183
Q. What was true about this box and magazine? A.
After they had gotten me off of the bus, I tried to reenter
the bus. I told them my purpose of wanting to reenter the
bus. I wanted to reenter the bus to get my overnight ease,
overnight bag, and a hat box, and my bracelet was lying on
the floor o f the bus, and that is when I told them I wanted
to reenter the bus for. The Deputy Sheriff blockaded the
door of the bus and the bus driver went to the back of the
bus, to the seat where I was sitting, and got my luggage and
my hat box.
Q. And threw them out to you? A. He threw them at my
feet. I was standing there at the steps of the bus, and he
threw them at my feet.
Q. Now, Miss Whiteside, it is also testified by Mr. Mar
tin that you told him, after you were thus ejected from the
bus, or as he says got off, that you told him that was what
you wanted him to do—to mistreat you or scratch you or
bruise you—did you tell him anything like that? A. No, I
didn’t make that statement.
Q. Did you make any such statement in substance? A.
I only made statement to the Deputy Sheriff that I hadn’t
done anything wrong, and he knew it was wrong in the way
they were treating me. And that is when the Deputy Sheriff
said he would put me in jail if I opened my mouth.
Q. But you did not make the statement that Mr. Martin
said you did? A. I did not make that statement.
Q. Without going into detail—further detail about what
has happened, you have told your story, you have given
your account about what happened and the witnesses for
the defendant have given theirs, now, without going into
detail will you state whether your account of the incident
or theirs is true, which one of you is telling the truth? A.
I told mine exactly as it happened and exactly the words
Mary Elizabeth Whiteside—Plaintiff—Rebuttal—Direct
184
S ta tem en t o f M rs. C. G. S w ain
that were passed between the bus driver, the Deputy Sheriff,
and myself.
Q. And if the accounts of these other witnesses differ
from yours in any respect, they are mistaken. A. They
don’t vary with mine— some are the truth and on others
they aren’t the truth. All of the statements don’t vary.
Q. But when the statements vary with yours, are they
telling the truth? A. They aren’t.
The following statement, consisting of one typewritten
sheet, is agreed to be in substance the testimony that Mrs.
C. C. Swain would give if present and sworn as a witness
in this case, and as she is prevented from being here by
illness, it is stipulated that the statement shall be her
testimony, subject to competency and relevancy. Said state
ment is as follo-ws:
S tatement o p M es. C. C. S w a in .
One morning, as I recall it was May 6, 1946 at about
7 :30 A. M., a Southern Bus Lines bus arrived at the Wick-
liffe station at the Swain Hotel. This was the regular bus
from Cairo to Paducah. When the bus arrived the driver
told me that there was a colored woman sitting near the
front of the bus who would not move back to the rear, and
he asked me to call an officer to help him either move the
185
S ta tem en t o f M rs. C. C. Sw ain
woman to the rear of the bus or get her off the bus. I called
Mr. Martin Robertson, the town marshall, and he arrived
in five or ten minutes. Mr. Robertson went on the bus fol
lowed by the driver. I don’t know what was said by them
or the colored woman, but in a few minutes they brought
the colored woman to the door of the bus, and she stepped
down on the ground and up on to the sidewalk in front of
the bus station. The driver got out of the bus and went to
the rear and took the colored woman’s luggage out and set
it on the ground. The driver then got into the bus and
drove away. The colored woman bought a ticket for Pa
ducah on the Greyhound bus and left on the Greyhound bus
in about fifteen minutes.
I have been agent for the Greyhound bus at Wickliffe
for 10 years, and the drivers of the busses have always
regulated the seating of the passengers in the busses. I
have always observed that the colored people were at the
rear of the busses. A year ago there were two colored
people on one of the busses who were occuping two double
seats and refused to move on to the same double seat. The
bus was crowded and white passengers refused to sit by
them. I called the sheriff, Mr. L. E. Carter who came and
required the colored people to sit on the same seat at the
rear of the bus. The colored woman was not thrown from
the bus and did not appear to be injured.
/ s / M rs. C. C. Sw ain
186
V erifica tion
State of K entucky
County of J efferson
I, H elen M. W hedon, Official Reporter for the U. S.
District Court for the Western District of Kentucky, hereby
certify that the foregoing is a true, correct and complete
transcript of the proceedings of the trial had at the time
and place set ont in the caption hereof; that the proceed
ings of this trial were reported by me in shorthand and also
on an electric recording machine, and that the proceedings
were transcribed by me on a typewriter.
I further certify that I am not related by blood or
marriage to any of the interested parties to this action;
and that I am in no way interested in the outcome of same.
Given under my hand as Reporter aforesaid, this the
5th day of June, 1947.
H elen M. W hedon
187
Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1 (Front):
“ CAIRO, 111. to PADUCAH, Ky.
St. Louis, Mo. — Paducah, Ky.
IDENTIFICATION CHECK
Not Good For Passage
Form S. T.— 2
“ This check must be retained by passenger until destina
tion is reached, subject to inspection by operator at any
time, and is to be surrendered to operator when journey is
completed. Baggage Liability Limited to $25.00 (unless
greater valuation is declared at time baggage is checked).
Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
Shreveport, Louisiana
2068.”
Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1 (Back):
“ TRAILW AYS DEPOT
M AY-5 ’46
ST. LOUIS
2-M O.-2”
188
Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2 (Front):
“ SOUTHERN BUS LINES, Inc.
Cairo, 111.
- To -
PADUCAH, KY.
“ Good for one continnons trip subject to tariff reg
ulations if used within 30 days from date stamped
on back. Form S. T. C. W. Smith
President
Pugh, Cin’ti, 0.
12006
Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 2 (Back):
“ . . n Trailways
May 6 1946
CAIRO, ILL.
O K Martin”
HP-Ill. C. C. No. 6 MP-I.C.C* No. 13
C anceIs Cancels
HP-Ill. C. C. No. 2 MP-I.C.C. No. 2
I No supplement will be Ala. P. S. C. No. 2ll Original Title Page 1
I issued to this tariff Ark. P. S. C. No. 7 5 r
| except for the purpose D. M. T. Ky. No. 26 f
| of cancelling the tariff L. P. S. C. No. 12 §
1 Hiss. P. S. C. No. 15b I
i T. R. P. U. C. No. 55 §
i R. C. T. No. 25 §
SOUTHERN BUS LIKES, INC,
RULES AND REGULATIONS TARIFF NO. l+OO-A
Cancels
RULES AND REGULATIONS TARIFF NO. b,00
Honing
RULES AND REGULATIONS
Governing
PASSENGER TRAFFIC
IN CONNECTION WITH
THE
TARIFFS I LIKING REFERENCE HERETO
ISSUED: February . 19^6 EFFECTIVE March 5. 191+6
:
ISSUED BY:
C, P. Cox
General Traffic Manager
619 Ardis Building
Sftreveport, Louisiana
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| Rules and Regulations i a r if f No. 1+00-A
f Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
f Issued! February 1 , 191+6
.........
Original Page 1 1 i
EFFECTIVE! March 5 , 19i+6j
l By: C. P. Cox,
1...... ....
General Traffic Manager
u ildin g. Shreveport, La,
:
f
...'(C) pj^ficiPATIHG CARRIER 1
f .ABBREVIATION H Name of Carrier JIEXC1 NO.
STC SOUTHWESTERN GREYHOUND LINES, INC. 163 • |
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Arrivals and Departures not
guaranteed--------------------------- -—
Baggage-*---------t— — ----------------
Basing Fares----------------1---------------
Change of Route-------------
Change or' Extension of
Destination----------
Circle Tour-
Damages-— —
Eates of Sale-
Destination, Change or
Extension o f -— — -----— --------
Disputes------ ------ -— ----------------- --
Extension of Limits of Tickets
Account I lln e ss , Quarantine,
Extension or Change of
Destination------------ ------
Fares:
Application o f— -----—
» Firearms*
L ia b ility ! General-
Limits o f T ick ets-—
Limits o f Tickets
Extejis ion o f------------
r
RULE IPAGE
i NO. NO.
19 6
1 2
< 10
J
b
18 5
i 25 7
1(h) 2
19 6
11 h
2l+ 7
b 3
i 21 6
18 5
5 3
! 18 5
2 2
18 5
2b 7.
22 6
.
20 6
21+
•
7
1 2
! b 3
j 9 3 I
j 8 3 i
! l(« )i 2 !
|23 6 j
! 17 5' !
18 5 ?
3 2 i
S 20 6 1
I * h |
•RULE iPAGEI
| NO. ]N0. f
Minimum Fares-- ------- *---- l 9 13:-
Objectionable Persons------ i 17 i 5 !
Operations, Seasonal— :------i 6 | 3 i
Optional Honoring of Tickets-i 26 I8&9 I
Operators* Tickets--- — — — -i 13 j 1+
Overgriding of Tickets------ j 12
Persons, Objectionable-— -— -j 17
Redemption of Tickets------- j 10
Refunds----- --- ----- ■----- i 10
Reduced Fares— — ----- — —— | 5
Reservations--------------- j 15
Round Trip Tickets-*— -- —l 8
Round Trip Table-------*—--A
Routes-— — — ■— --- ----— >— | l(c)j 2
Route, change of----- -— — — | 1 1 j 1+
Seasonal Operations------- -I 6
Seating of Passengers— — — - 1 15
Seat Reservations--— — — — — j 15
"Soeing-EyeH Dog— — -------- 1 19
Stolen or Lost Tickets--— --j if)
Stop-overs---------- i 7
Tickets: I
■“•Iteration or Erasure— — î 1 6
Dates of Sale-— — — — — 2
Extension of Limits— -— —— j 20
Interline— — -----
Issuing by Operator— *----j 13
Limits of— — — --—-- ----1
\ h
\ 5
I b
! h
I 3
I 5
i 3
iio
3
5
5
6
b
3
Lost or Stolen— — ------------------i ll+
16
13
! 5
! 2
1 6
2
h
2
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5
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1
(c) -
* -
Non-Transferable— -------- —4
Operators------------- — ------------—j
Optional. Honoring j
Arrangements---------— — ------j 26 |8&9 !
Overriding o f— — — --------—i 12 j |+ \
Redemption o f— — — — -----j 10 [ i+ I
Reservations— ------— * — — j 15 | 5 f
Round Trip Faros— - — — — — j 8 13 1
Responsibility--------------------------- j x(b)| 2 f
Transferring Passenger— — — ! 15 f 5 f
EXPLANATION OF ABBREVIATIONS AND REFERENCE MARKS
Change, the result o f which is neither an increase nor a
reduction.
Intrastate only
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MP-I.O.C. No. 13
ISSUED: February 1, 19^6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
......... 619.., Ar Bi.S.. Jui Shreveport,.... Lp,. .... , ... ...;.......... ....... ..
‘.............. ....RULES,. M P. REGULATIONS... .....;.................... .
AFPLICATION OF FARES: (a) Fares shorn in tariffs made subject hereto,•
| are in dollars and cents and are payable in lawful money of the United
iStates,
i (b) In issuing tickets and chocking baggage under tariffs made subject
| hereto, for passage over the lines of other carriers, the issuing
| carrier acts only as ‘selling agent and is not responsible beyond its
I ovai lines, except as responsibility may be imposed by law with respect
| to baggage.
j (c) Fares named in tariffs made subject hereto, apply via the direct
| route only, unless otherwise provided herein. Nhen route is whown in
j connection with the fare, such route must bo endorsed or printed on
| the ticket. Routings must bo designated at time ticket is purchased
| and con be changed only as authorized herein.
| (d) Fares to destinations or from points of origin not shown in tariffs
I made Subject hereto, will be made by adding the fares shown in-those
| tariffs to the fares shown in other tariffs lawfully on file with the
jvarious regulatory commissions, provided that if the fare so made
jexceeds the fare to or from a point beyond on the same through lino of
i travel-as shown in tariffs made subject hereto, the latter fare will
japply.
j(c) Faros from and to intermediate points not specifically shown in
jLocal Tariffs made subject hereto, will be the same as the fares from
or to the next more distant point that is shown. No ticket will be
sold to a destination not named in an effective tariff.
(f) Fares named in tariffs made subject hereto are governed by the
rules and regulations contained herein and no one shall have the
authority to change dr deviate from the fares and routes named in tar
iffs made subject hereto or rules and regulations contained herein,
unless the fares and routes or rules and regulations•are changed by
amendment to the tariffs or by the issuance of a new tariff.
(g) Fares named in tariffs made subject hereto applj' only to trans-
| portation of nersons and their baggage. All Berth or Seat fares or
jcharges for any other or "Additonal Services” offered by any connect-
jing carrier, will be in addition to the fares named in tariffs subject
!hereto. Agents will refer to lawful tariffs of such carriers to
| determine such additional fare or charges find other rules and regula-
]t ions gove rn ing s ame.
|(h) Fares designated as "Basing Fares" are shown in certain tariffs
|made subject hereto for the construction of through fares to or from
ipoints from or to which no through fares are published therein, and
|they are not to bo used for selling purposes. Selling fares are to be
[found in those tariffs provided fear that purpose.
R ules and R e g u la tio n s T a r i f f No. hOQ~A O r ig in a l Page 2 J
Southern Bus L in e s , I n c . EFFECTIVE: March 5 , 19h6'
2 [DATES OF SALE: Tickets are on sale d aily , unless otherwise specified
[in the ta r if fs made subject hereto.
3 [LIMIT OF TICKETS: (a) Unless otherwise sp e cific a lly provided in
[individual t a r i f f s , one way tickets w ill be lim ited to one ( l ) month
[from date of sa le .
[(b) Unless otherwise sp ecific a lly provided in individual t a r i f f s ,
[round trip and circle tour tickets w ill be limited to s ix (6) months
{from date of sale .
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Rules and Regulations Tariff No. 1+00—A
Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
ISSUED: February 1, 191*6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
6lff Ardis Building. Shreveport..La......
............. MP-i.,c,?..g,,,..<jjo,....3l3.... *
Original Page 3 j
EFFECTIVE: March 5, 19461
..I
(C)
...................RULES...Am..MGUUIIONS........... !............ ....
I4 ['CHILDREN'S FARES: Children under five (5 ) years of age must be accon- |
(C) | panicd by an adult pas-senger , Children under five (5 ) years of age,
; when accompanied by an adult passenger end not occupying’a seat to the §
j exclusion of other passengers will be carried free. Children under |
i five (5 ) years of age occupying seats to the exclusion of other pass-
i engers, and children five (5 ) years and under twelve (12) yearscfagewiilbe!
j charged one-half (3) of the adult fare, increased where necessary to make f
j such fare and in "0" or "5", with a minimum fare of fifteen ( l y ) cents, f
I EXCEPTION NO. 1 : Where the crossing of the Mississippi River at Vicks- f
j burg, Miss., or Greenville, Mias,, is involved, the minimum child's fare f
\ between any two points will be forty (1*0) cents. f
i EXCEPTION NO. 2: Minimum children's fare in connection with Texas I
j Intrastate traffic will be ten (1 0 ) Cents, f
j SPECIAL REDUCED FARES: Special reduced fares will be granted account |
i Clergy; Charity; Veterans Bureau (Hospital) and Public Health Service; |
I Inmates of National and State Soldiers and Sailors Homes; Subject to f
| rules, regulations and fares contained in Local and Joint Reduced Fare I
{ Circular No, 75* issued by National &us Traffic Association, Inc., |
I Agent, amendments thereto or reissue thereof. Commutation rates will
(be shown in Local Commutation Tariff No. 1*01, MP-I.C, C. Nc, 3 , Ala. i
j P.S.C. No. 21, Ark. P.S.C. No. 71, KP-J11. C.C. No. 3 , D.M.T., Ky. I
4 No, 23, L.P.S.C. No. 1*, MisS.P.S.C. No.ll*3, T.R.P.U.C. No, 51, R.C.T.
I No. 23, issued by C. P. Cox, General ^raffic Manager, amendments thereto |
I or reissues thereof. f
| EXCEPTION: Special Reduced Fares governing Texas Intrastate Traffic |
| will be as shown - in Reduced Fare Tariff No. l+Ol*, R.C.T. No. 2i*, amend- |
i ments thereto or reissues thereof. 1
| SEASONAL OPERATION: (a) Operations via some routes and to some desti- f
_i nations are seasonal in character and are subject to road and weather §
(conditions. |
i (L) Southern Bus Lines, Inc., reserves the right to issue or honor 1
jtickets only during the season that roads are open. i
j STOP-OVERS: Stop-overs, within limits of tickets, will be permitted
| ut any point upon application to selling agent at time of purchase of
jticket, or to agent at division point. Proper notation must be made
| on, or coupons added to, tickets by such agents.
[ROUND TRIP FARES: Unless otherwise shown in tariffs made subject hereto,
I t h e round trip fares are one hundred-eighty per cent (180$) o f the one
[way fares named, adding sufficient when necessary to make fare end in
j"0" or "5m. Agents will use "Round Trip Fare Table" to determine such
I fares.
[EXCEPTION: Where the crossing of the Mississippi River at Vicksburg,
I Miss., or Greenville, Miss., is involved, the minimum round trip fare
[between any two points will be eighty'(80) cents,
= MINIMUM FARES: (a) Unless otherwise shown in tariffs made"subject
[hereto, the minimum one way fare is fifteen (1 5 ) cents.
[EXCEPTION No. 1: Where the crossing of the kissiasippi River at Vicks-
Iburg, Miss.., or Greenville, Miss., is involved, the minimum one way
[fare between any two points will be forty (1*0) cents. .
[EXCEPTION NO., 2: Charity, clergy and other forms of reduced fare trans-
! portat-ion are subject to the minimum fare as shown in tariffs governing
i such reduced fares.
^EXCEPTION NO. 3* Not applicable in connection with Texas Intrastate
[Traffic. ,1 *"
9
(c)
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O r ig in a l P age U j
EFFECTIVE: March 5. 1*4
Rules and Regulations Tariff So, uOO-A
Southern Bus Lines, Inc,
ISSUED! February 1, 19U6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager f
...... 6l9,,.,ArdIs,Juild.ing.JI.Shreyegort^ Lo^ sj ........... ............ .... „...... ̂̂
...■Rim j.oJ...... ........ « .....................e.uib.s...m k ,..m q .uutions....,..:.................. ........................... ............. I
10 | REDEMPTION OF TICKETS: (a) Tickets will be redeemed to the original |
(c) | purchaser by the issuing carrier at the fare paid when no portion of the j
| trip has been made, and at the difference between the fare paid and -
•; the published tariff fare between the points used if the trip is
! discontinued and nbt completed.
| (b) When a ticket not used or partly used for passage,, but on which
jbaggage has been transported, is presented’for redemption, an excess
! baggage charge for gross weight will be assessed from the point where I
; passenger's journey was discontinued to the point to which baggage |
| was transported. (Minimum charge twenty-five (25) cents-). If the gross I
| weight of baggage cannot be ascertained, the excess baggage charge for (
| the maximum, free allowance .will be assessed. (Minimum charge twenty- f
five (2 5) cents). §
(c) Application for refund on tickets must in all cases be made to the §
General Office of Southern Bus Lines, Inc., 619 Ardis Building, Shreve- I
| port, -Louisiana.
| EXCEPTION: Agents nay redeem a ticket of their own' issuo on date of
; sale only, when ,no portion thereof has been used. f
11 j CHANGE OF ROUTES: \ Routings nay be changed only when the diversion is f
j approved by an authorised agent of the Issuing Carrier, and then only I
(C) | upon assessing and collecting of the difference between the fare paid
jand the fare applying via. the route used. When a route is changed to §
one carrying a lower fare, refund of the difference between the fare 1
paid and the fare applying over the route used will be made upon appli- |
cation to the General Office, 6l9 Ardis Building, Shreveport* La. g
12 ]OVERRIDING OF TICKETS: A Passenger purchasing a ticket to a fare point f
(C) j shown in tariffs making reference hereto may override his ticket to. a I
country stop beyond the limits of the city or town to which his ticket I
reads a distance not to exceed one mile at no additional cost. Where f
jthe point passenger desires to leave the bus is a distance greater than 1
[one (l) mile, or-if it is within one (l) mile of the next more distant f
1 fare point, passenger will bo charged the amount necessary to extend
)his original 1 ticket to read to the next more distant fare point than
ithat to which his ticket reads. |
[EXCEPTION: Hot applicable in connection with Texas Intrastate Traffic. !
13 [OPERATORS TICKETS: (a) Operators of motor ctoaches may sell tickets to I
I and from points, both of which are within their division only. Passen- i
Igers desiring to purchase tickets beyond end of division must pay fare I
| to first agency station or to termination of division and there may I
|secure tickets to final destination. f
j(b) Operators of motor coaches may not sell tickets at points where an !
jagency is maintained at such tines as the agency offers tickets for safe.I
11+ [LOST OR STOLEN TICKETS: Southern Bus Lines, Inc., will not be rospon- I
vC) Isible for lost or stolen tickets and they will not bo replaced, refunded f
[or redeemed.. I
jEXCEPTION: Not applicable in connection with Texas Intrastate Traffic® I
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.... ........................
Original Page 5 i
EFFECTIVE: March 5. 192+61
ISSUED: February 1, 192+6 i
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager !
.... 619 Ardis Building, Shreveport* La. ............ |
J S J & 4 - .1 .............. RULES' AND REGUlifiOHS...................."~.l. .......J
15 jRESERVATIONS: (a) Reservations will be made only as authorized in |
tariffs made subject hereto. Except as authorized in such tariffs, f
reservations of certain seats, or guarantee of seating space on any {
particular schedule will not be made. |
(b) This company reserves to itself full control and discretion as to |
seating of passengers and reserves the right to change such seating at |
any time during the trip. I
(c) This company reserves the right whenever operating conditions re- I
?uire, to transfer passengers from one vehicle to another enroute. I
d) Seating space cannot be guaranteed on stop-over privileges or on sale!
of tickets at intermediate points, except as provided in tariffs made I
subject hereto, and sane are subject to the limitations of seating I
capacity <5f motor coach passing through such points. In case of in- |
sufficient seating capacity on any schedule, passengers will be placed f
on motor coach in order of their booking. f
16 jTICKETS: (a) All tickets sold at fares shown in tariffs subject hereto f
; are non-transferable and will be valid only for tho transportation of f
I the passenger for whom originally purchased. !
|0>) If any ticket bear3 any alteration or erasure, it will be void and f
{may be confiscated by any agent or driver of any carrier over which it 1
j is routed. I
17 {OBJECTIONABLE PERSONS: The Southern Bus Lines, Inc., reserves the right f
j to refuse to transport a person under the influence of intoxicating |
fliquor or drugs, or who is incapable of taking care of himself or her- \
|self, or whose conduct or condition is such, or is likely to be such, as j
j to make thorn objectionable to other passengers' or prospective passengers,1
j or who may be suffering from a contagious or communicable disease, or 1
{diseases, or who may be suffering from such a loathesome disease, even |
jthough not communicable, as to be, or calculated to be, objectionable to I
.{other passengers. I
{EXCEPTION: This rule does not apply to persons who are ill and accom- f
j panied by an attendant or nurse. f
18 jCLAIMS: (a) This company will not be liable for delays caused by J
{accidents, breakdowns, bad conditions of the road, or other conditions |
(C) {beyond its control, and does not guarantee to arrive at and depart
{from any point at a specific time. The time of arrival at and departure I
[from any. point shown in its published time schedules is the schedule it |
{endeavors to maintain, but same is not guaranteed. f
{(b) All claims for damages of whatever character must be filed in 1
{writing within nine (9 ) months at the nearest office or age'ncy of this f
j company. (
{(c) This company is not liable to any person using a ticket who is not I
{the original purchaser thereof, or who is not lawfully entitled to use
{the said ticket. (See Rule l6j I
{EXCEPTION: Not applicable in connection with Texas Intrastate Traffic. f
Rules and Regulations T a r iff Ho. l+OO-A
Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
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M M .0 ,0 . So. 13#̂MWf̂**t̂»<»̂»j(#̂*̂****»»*»»**M*»’*‘*»**f******',
EPFECTIVEs March 5, 1946j
| Rules and Regulations Tariff So, LOO-A
I Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
| ISSUED? February 1, 1946
\ By: C. ? . Cox, General " r a f f i c Manager
619 ArtUs Building, % revoport# La, , ___ ____ [.... „......
I; Jug: "ho;]'" .......................R U L E S ' l i ^ S 11.‘ 11....................... , „
.... 1 9 ’ IASIMALiS: Dogs, cats, and other live animals or birds, will not be
! accepted for transportation.(C)
20
(C)
21
22
(C)
23
I EXCEPTION HO. 1: "Seeing-Eye Dogs," traveling with blind persons, when
[properly h&rnessod and muzzled will be carried free of charge* The dog
■will not be permitted to occupy a seat, but must lie or stand at the
[feet of its master.
[EXCEPTION No. 2: Rules and Regulations governing animals,-and other
household pets, carried in baggage service in Texas Intrastate Traffic
will be as shown in Motor Bus Baggage Tariff Ho. 1, supplements thereto
or reissues thereof, issued by the Railroad Commission of Texo.s.
[EXTENSION OF LIMIT OF TICKETS AND STOP-OVER PRIVILEGES ON ACCOUNT OF
I ILLNESS, QUARANTINE, WASHOUTS, ETC: (a) In case of illness which makes
[traveling dangerous an extension of limit and stop-over privilege will
jbe granted by this company to passengers holding tickets, and, if nee-
Ies s ary, to one or more accompanying members of the family of holder of
fticket when such illnews is authenticated by written certificate of a
[reputable physician or other satisfactory evidence i*s given.
[(b) QUARANTINE: The privilege outlined in (a) will also bo extended to
iholders of tickets who become subject to an established quarantine and
present proper certification thereto by the quarantining physician or
other authorized public health officer.
[(c) If, on account of washouts, obstructions to highway, public calamity,
|the act of God, or of the public enemy, a passenger is delayed on the
[lines of this company, so that the limit of such passenger's ticket has
[expired, or has elapsed to such an extent as to curtail the stop-over
[privileges, an extension of limit and stop-over privileges will be
[granted by this company to passengers holding such tickets.
[(d) The extension of limit and stop-over privileges provided in "'a,"
i"b" and nc" may be given by the ueneral Office of this company, by
[narking the ticket or issuing a now ticket in exchange. Such ticket
[or tickets issued in exchange, must be marked to show the reason for
[the extension of limit and/or stop-over privilege.
[GOING ONE ROUTE, RETURNING ANOTHER (CIRCLE TOUR): Round trip tickets
[going one.route, returning another, may be sold in connection with fares
[shown in tariffs made subject hereto by adding one-half (it) of the round
[trip fare via each route to same destination, adding sufficient cents
[when necessary to make faro end in "0" or "5"«
[DISPUTES: In the event of any dispute ovor tickets or faros, passengers
[should-pay the fare requested, taking .receipt for- money, - and. present
[claim for refund to the General Office, Shreveport, Louisiana.
[FIREARMS: Firearms, which are ta bs transported on any motor coach,
[must be completely unloaded and cither in a caso, or "broken." They
[must be entrusted to the- ca.ro of the Driver on demand of any Company
[Agent or Driver.
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1 6 6 -1
ISSUED: February 1 , 19̂ +6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
619 Ardis Building, Shreveport, La.
r _ M O J
Rules and Regulations T a r iff Ho.
Southern Bus L ines, Inc.
.........
Original Page 7 |.
EFFECTIVE: March 5, 191+61
2k j CHANGE CR EXTENSION OF DESTINATION: (a) Passengers who. desire to change |
| the destination of their trip on one way tickets may do so, provided I
j such change is requested prior to reaching the destination of the f
j original ticket, by paying the difference between the fare originally 1
| paid and the fare in effect, at the time original ticket was purchased, |
| from the origin of the first ticket to tho destination of the new |
I ticket. I
| (b) Changes in destination of round trip, circle tour and open-jaw J
] tickets may be made at any point enroute, provided request is made before!
j the passenger has completed the entire trip, by paying the difference |
| between the fare originally paid and the fare in effect from point of |
| origin, at tho time first ticket was purchased, via the route of the J
jnew ticket. J
1 (c) Under provisions outlined in "a" and ”b" of this rule, the tine |
! iinits of the new tickets must be figured from the date of purchase |
j of the original ticket. I
j (d) If under provision "a” or MbM of this rule, the new ticket would |
j carry a#lower fare than original ticket, passenger may obtain refund |
i by making application therefor to the General Office, Shreveport,
! Louisiana. J
I NOTE: Rule 2ti applies to tickets of Southern Bus Lines, Inc., issue
| only,
25 | BAGGAGE: Except as otherwise specifically provided herein, charges,
(C) {rules and regulations governing the checking of baggage will be in
I accordance with Local and Joint Baggage Tariff No. 500-G, MP-I.C.C.
} No. 752, Ala. P.S.O. .No, 28, A.CJ.'C. No . 27, HP-Ill. C.C. No. 105,
| D.1I.T, Ky. No. 23, L.P.S.C. No. 38, Miss. P.S.C. No. 31, T.R.P.U.C.
{No. 2J4., Amendments thereto" or' reissues thereof, issued by National
| Bus Traffic Association, I®c., Agent.
jEXCEPTION: Rules and Regulations, governing the handling of baggage,
! charges, etc., intrastate in Texas will be as shown in Motor Bus
Baggage Tariff No. 1, supplements thereto and reissues thereof, issued
by Railroad Commission of Texas.
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---------------------------- -------------------- ----- --------------------------- --- ------------------------------------ ----- ------- W~£r£..*.Q..- .
Rules and Regulations Tariff H o. ItOOA Original Pag© 8 |r
Southern Bus Lines. Inc. EFFECTIVE* March 5* 19uo |
ISSUED:,. February 1. 19ho I
By: C. P. "Cox, General Traffic Manager f
619-Ardia Building, Shreveport, La. ___■________ *......_.............. .... -|
. .......................RUIE'OJD'"RgCTm i O HS........... :.............. ............. ........... .......U ....... .... J
"""'"' 2 6...I ' b m o a u T m m B ^ op t i ck e t i & ^ m m n s i The following "optional ̂ j
(C) iHonoring,of Ticket Arrangements” between points shown, will be applicable
I at fares shown in tariffs made subject hereto. All classes of tickets j
I good for passage between the stations shown in columns 1 and 2 will be. |
I honored via either of the routes named in' Column 5« I? ' ... :.. ... ... ..... ««...»/$
! ALL CLASSES OF TICKETS GOOD FOR PASSAGE
f 1 BETOEEN
I Alexandria, La.
2 AND
Baton Rouge, La,
j WILL BE HONORED AT
!... „0mpIL.0F. ..HOLDER....
| 3 VIA...... ......... . . .......
j Bunkie or Marksv il ie
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1 Alexandria, La.
I Alexandria, La.
| Batesville, Miss.
|(C)$Batesville, Mis:
| Bolivar, Tenn,
t ,
! *Bolivar, Tenn.
j Natchitoches* La.
I Shreveport, La.
i
| Bolivar, Tenn.
:
| Grenada, Miss.
| Grenada, Miss.j
i
i Parsons, Tern.
S'C
Boyce or Gelfax
a
Armi stead & Boyce or 4
Canpti & Colfax |
Holly Springs or Memphis |
J
I Oakland Jet. or ^Oxford
l Holly Springs or Memphis |
: ■. s
i- Jackson, Tenn. or Henderson!
J | Brooksvilie, Miss. | Columbus, Miss. | Crawford Jet. or Mayhew
i Jet. |
5 I Camden, Ark. 1 Fordyce, Ark. ! Southern Bus Lines, Inc.or 1
j Southwestern Greyhound |
; Linos, Inc. |
i
i Durant, Kiss. | Starkville, Miss.
:
j Ackerman or Winona il i
|
!
i El Dorado, Arlc. ! Shreveport, La. | Honor & Jet. City or
1
: : Plain Dealing (E-dPtease
s j s j
1 1’ Grenada, Miss,
:
! Oxford, Miss.
1 Creeks 1
: Oakland Jet or Water
1 1
1i j
Haynesville, La. j Shreveport, La.
[
| Valley }
\ :
i Dixie Inn or Plain Dealing {
1
i - i
1 i■ Jackson, Miss. | Taylorsville, Miss, ! Brandon or *Magee
= (C)ir * Does not apply whon faro is less than faro to or fron Oxford. |
If faro is less than fare or from Oxford, fare via Oxford
j will be same as Oxford. j
WMHWmWWWmWWMWUlMIHmWWWWWWWHW t«1TittF>ff1“ *,TTtt****t*ttt~t**r*» It ****■“ f*+ff ****** ■»**■** *»**•***•*«»*******,*********,**t***** “ t,**,*,#*,, >««,,»««, miHIIMIIW< ****—**©— *♦♦♦
f vB)»i©5 and Rogulati'’ris Tariff -Ho. 4OO-A
Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
1 ISSUED« February 1, 19^6
I By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
l 619 Ardis Building, Shreveport, La.
! .... H F nO.].......................... ....".... 1 ' RUITS; ̂ FD JE ^I^IO IIS ■
|.... "26... I OPTIONAL HONORING'OF" TICKET "AI® ANGET*ENTS,
...................mp- i .-c . c. iio. 1? ^
Original Page 9 5
EFFECTIVE: March 5. 19̂ +6 |
CONTINUED: All classes o f
!tickets good for passage between , the stations shown in columns 1 and
| 2 will be honored via either of the routes named in column J>,
[ALL CLASSES OF TICKET^ GOOD FOR PASSAGE WILL BE 'HONORED AT
OPTION OF HOLDER,
l
i
1 BETWEEN 2 AND 3 VIA ....... !
Jaokson, Miss. Waynesboro, Miss. Laurel or Meridian |
Kinder, La. Lake Charles, La. Hollingsworth or Iowa Jet. \
Leesvilie, La. New Orleans, La. Alexandria or Holdings- |
worth A Opelousas |
Mansfield, La. Many, La, Belmont cr Zwolle
Mendenhall, Miss, Prentiss, Hiss, Pinola Rd, or *Pinolo |
Natchitoches, La. Shreveport, La. Armistead or Clarence f
Sarepta, La. Shreveport, La, Dixie Inn or Plain 1
Dealing |
Shreveport, La. Springhill, La. Dixie inn or Plain I
Dealing 1
Shreveport, La, Texarkana,Ark-Tex. 1Ida -or Rodcssa |
\
|
|
I
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: R u les and Regulations T a r iff No. 1+00-A
S outhern Bus L ines* In o .
,*,H« t'**M*»*« tUiUllUiU >**»*«. »|iji«**<i*M>«»«»?'!S«*mS****»»'***»*t«‘s***H* *.**H»*i MF-X.C.C. No. 13
Original Page 10
EFFECTIVE: March 5* 19U61
ISSUED: February 1* 191+6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
619 Ardis Building, Shreveport,.La.
TABLE
ROUND ROUND
1 ONE WAY ..TRIP... ONE WAYi ..TRIP... ONE WAY TRIP
I $ .19 $ .30 $2 .6 0 1 $l+.70 $5.05 $ 9*10
I .2: .1*0 2 .6 5 ! 1+.80 5.10 9 .2 0
1 .25 .1*5 2 ,7 0 ! 1+.90 5.15 9.30
1 .30 .55 2.75 i 1*. 95 5 .2 0 9.1+0
1 .35 .65 2.80 s 5.05 5.25 9.1+5
\ .1+0 • 75 2.85 ! 5.15 5.30 9-55
1 .1+5 .85 2.90 i 5.25 5.35 9.65
l .50 •90 2.95 ! 5.35 5.1*0 9.75
.55 1.00 3.00 ! 5*1+0 5.1*5 9.85
I .6 0 1.10 3 .0 5 ! 5.50 5.50 9.90
.65 1.20 3 .1 0 1 8160 5.55 10.00
.7 0 1.30 3.15 j 5.70 5 .6 0 10.10
I .75 1.35 3 .2 0 5.80 5.65 10.20
f .80 1.1*5 3 .2 5 1 5.85 5.70 10.30
1 .8 5 1 .5 5 3 .3 0 S 5.95 5.75 10.35
.90 1 .6 5 3.35 1 6 .0 5 5. 80 1 0 .I+5
i .95 1.75 3.1+0 j 6 .1 5 5-85 10.55
1 .0 0 1.80 3.1*5 ! 6.25 5.90 10.65
I 1 .0 5 1.90 3.50 | 6 .30 5.95 10.75
1 1.10 2.00 3.55 i 6.1+0 6.00 10.80
i 1 . 1 5 2.10 3.60 1 6 .5 0 6 .0 5 10 .9 0
! 1.20 2.20 3 .6 5 ! 6.60 6.10 11.00
1.25 2.25 3.70 } 6.70 6.15 11.10
! 1.30 2.35 3 .7 5 i 6.75 6 .2 0 11.20
f 1*35 2.1*5 3 .-80 1 6.85 6.25 11.25
1.1+0 2 .5 5 3.85 ! 6.95 6.30 11.35
1 1.2*5 2.65 3 .9 0 j 7.05 6.53 1 1 .1+5
! 1.50 2 .7 0 3 .9 5 i 7.15 6.1$ 1 1 .5 5
i 1.55 2.80 k .0 0 1 7.20 6.1+5 1 1 .6 5
i 1 .6 0 2.90 1+.05 | 7.30 6 .5 0 1 1 .7 0
1 1 .6 5 3.00 1+.10 7.1*0 6.55 11.80
1 1 .7 0 3 .1 0 {*.15 i 7.50 6 .60 11.90
! 1.75 3 .1 5 5.20 ! 7.60 6 .6 5 12.00
f 1.80 3 .2 5 1+.25 I 7.65 6 .7 0 12.10
! 1-85 3 .3 5 1+.30 i 7.75 6.75 12.15
= 1.90 3.1*5 1+.35 | 7.85 6.80 1 2 .2 5
1.95 3 .5 5 l*.l*o 7.95 6.85 12.351 2.00 3 .6 0 1*.1*5 i 8 .0 5 6 .9 0 12.1*5
I a .0 5 3 .7 0 1+.50 1 8.10 6.95 12.55
! 2 .1 0 3 .8 0 1+.55 i 8.20 7 .0 0 12.60
2 .1 5 3.90 1*. 60 8.30 7.05 1 2 .7 0
1 2.20 l+.oo I+.65 ! 8.1*0 7.10 12.80
r 2 .2 5 1*. 05 li.7 0 1 8.50 7.15 1 2 .9 0
1 2 .3 0 1+.15 1+.75 i 8.55 7 .2 0 13 .0 0
1 2 .3 5 1**25 1*. 80 i 8.65 7.25 13.05
f 2 .I+0 1+.35 lu 85 ! 8.75 7.30 13.15
j a.1,5 1+.1+5 1+.90 1 8.85 7.35 13^25
I 2 .5 0 1+.50 1+.95 1 e .9 5 7.1+0 13*35
1..2 .5 5.. l*.6o 5.00 1 9 .0 0 7.1+5 13.1+5
ROUND
$13.50 f
1 3 .6 0 i
1 3 .7 0 1
1 3 .8 0 |
1 3 .9 0 I
1 3 .9 5 !
11+.05 f
11+.15 !
1I+.25 f
Hi. 35 1
ll+.i+o !
11+.50 i
ii*. 60 r
11+.70 1
1U .8 0 1
m .8 5 I
111. 95 I
15.03 I
15.15 j
15.25 1
15.30 j
15.U0 \
15.50 I
15.60 I
1 5 .7 0 i
M 1
15.95 I
1 6 .0 5 I
1 6 .1 5 i
1 6 .2 0 I
16.30 I
16.3+0 I
1 6 .5 0 i
1 6 .6 0 !
1 6 .6 5 !
1 6 .7 5 i
1 6 .8 5 i
16.95 i
1 7 .0 5 i
1 7 .1 0 I
1 7 .2 0 i
17.30 I
17.3*0 f
17.50 I
17.55 I
17.65 1
17.75 !
.17.85.J..
I tvouna c r ip m r e s m excess ox those shovm above w ill be computed on a basis of I
I onG hundred eighty per cent (18V%) o f the one way fare , increased where neces- I
| sary, to make same end in next "O" or ” 5 ". I
L~QNE..IA7
| $7.50
| 7.55
7 .6 0
I 7.65
I 7.70
I 7.75
I 7 .80
i 7-85
7.90
7.95
1 8 .0 0
8 .0 5
I 8.10
! 8 .1 5
I 8.20
I 8.25
8.30
I 8.35
i 8.1*0
1 8.1*5
i 8.5O
I 8.55
I 8.60
! 8 .6 5
I 8 .7 0
I 8 .7 5
I 8.80
! 8 .8 5
| 8.90
j 8.95
i 9 .0 0
! 9 .0 5
1 9 .1 0
j 9 .1 5
i 9 .2 0
! 9 .2 5
! 9.30
! 9.35
9.1*o
9.1*5
9 .5 0
9.55
9 .6 0
9 .6 5
9 .7 0
9.75
9.80
9.85
9.90
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Rules and Regulations Tariff Ho. 1+QO-A
Southern Bus Lines, Inc.
ISSUED: February 1, 191+6
By: C. P. Cox, General Traffic Manager
* ..... W zI.'.Q .'& i.JIq». .13 r
Original Last Page §
EFFECTIVE: March 5. 19U6i
619 Ardis Building, Shreveport, La. . „ ....... .............
I ..........iilSroUCTIOHS RELATING' to' LOOSE-LSljV P I ^ ............. ;
| 1. This Tariff is issued in Loose-Leaf form and all changes and additions
{ will be published as loose-leaf revised pages.
I 2. Then a page in this tariff is reprinted the first tine, it will be des-
l ignated, "First Revised Page ...”. Each-subsequent rephint of such,pages will be
I numbered consecutively, i.e., "Second Revised Page "Third Revised Page ...”,
| etc. Pages cancelled by revised pages should be removed from Tariff when the
1 revised pages take effect.
| 3. There changes or additions to be made are in excess of the available
! space on effective pages, a page will be added to the Tariff, to which the same
1 number will be given, as on the preceding page, such additional pages being des-
.1 ignated by the letter affix, thus ”2a", ”1;a", etc., as the case may bo. The
I reprint of such pages will be numbered consecutively as "First Revised Page 2a",
f "Second Revised Page 1+a", etc., and.pages cancelled thereby should be removed
[ from Tariff when revised cages take effect.
Exception.--Then pages are added following last consecutively numbered page f
in the Tariff, or a Section carrying a separate Series of Numbers, such additional!
page or pages will be given the next consecutive number or numbers and will be §
designated as "Original Pages", j
• £
I).. It is important that users of this Tariff, promptly on receipt of revised §
or added pages, carefully file such pages in proper place in Tariff, and also f
check same in accordance with the- instructions given below........................ |
u" ........-................................... ;........checking"'siI et ' 'for’ 't m i f e I ' . ' ........ :... ...... ... .......\
5. Upon the receipt of revised or new paves, a check mark must bo placed I
opposite the "Correction" number (shown below) corresponding to number shown on 1
lower right hand corner of the new or changed page. If "Correction" numbers |
are properly checked as received, check marks will appear In consecutive order
with no omissions; however, if checkmarks indicate that a "Correction" has not
1 been received, request should he m
:
adc for a copy 0:1 same.
? CORRECTION CORRECTION CORRECTION CORRECTION CORRECTION f
NUMBER HUMBER NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER f
i ' i
i l » ........ 1+6 61 i
i 2 17 32 1+7 6 2. f
1 3 18 33 i+e 63 |
1 1+ 19 31+ 1+9 4+ |
l 5 2.0 33 50 65 !
1 6 21 36 51 66 f
I 7 22 37 52 67
i 8 23 33 53 68 |
! 9 2h- 39 5l+ 69 f
£ 10 25 l+o 55 70 i
I 11 26 .1+1 96 71 J
! 12 27 1+2 57 72
i 13 20 1+3 58 73 I
f 11+ 29 14+ 59 71+ I
1 15 30 1+5 60 75 I
s •
j THE END )
t .*«J*»H.i.t***‘ *
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202
Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Judgment.
(Entered June 15, 1948)
Shelbouene, J.
This cause came on for trial before the Court, without
the intervention of a jury, on May 14, 1947. The evidence
was thereafter transcribed and the cause was submitted
to the Court on the evidence and on briefs of the parties,
and the following facts are hereby specifically found:
(1) This Court has jurisdiction of the parties and of
the subject matter of this action.
(2) The defendant, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
on May 6, 1946, was a common carrier of passengers by
motor bus in interstate commerce and at said time there was
in force at Wickliffe, Kentucky, a rule of said defendant
requiring that colored passengers, including the plaintiff
who was an interstate passenger, be loaded from the rear
of its busses and white passengers from the front, which
rule had theretofore been orally communicated to defen
dant’s drivers, including the driver of the bus on which
plaintiff was riding.
(3) The rule set out in Finding No. 2 was one of gen
eral application at Wickliffe, Kentucky, on May 6, 1946, and
was well known to the general traveling public and was
communicated to the plaintiff at said time and place and
before the eviction complained of herein.
(4) The rule set out in Finding No. 2 was, on May 6,
1946, at Wickliffe, Kentucky, reasonable and necessary for
203
F in d in g s o f F a c t , C on clu sion s o f L a w and J u d gm en t
the safety, comfort, and convenience of the passengers using
defendant’s busses, including the bus on which plaintiff was
riding.
(5) The eviction of the plaintiff, as complained of in
this cause, was accomplished pursuant to the rule set out
in Finding No. 2 and was without the use of excessive force.
Conclusions of Law.
(1) The defendant, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
as a common carrier of passengers by motor bus, had, on
May 6, 1946, at Wickliffe, Kentucky, the right and duty to
seat all passengers on its busses, including the plaintiff, so
as to provide for the safety, comfort and convenience of its
said passengers.
(2) The defendant, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
had, on May 6, 1946, at Wickliffe, Kentucky, the right and
duty to evict any passenger, including the plaintiff, who
failed to abide by its reasonable rules and regulations for
the safety, comfort, and convenience of its passengers.
J u d g m e n t .
I t is t h e r e f o b e o b d e b e d and adjudged that plaintiff’s
complaint be dismissed and that she recover nothing
thereby, and that the defendant recover its costs in this
action.
204
Motion and Grounds for New Trial.
(Filed June 23} 1948)
The plaintiff, Elizabeth Whiteside, moves the Court to
set aside the decision and judgment of the Court herein
and to grant this plaintiff a new trial, upon the following
grounds:
1. The decision and judgment are not sustained by suffi
cient or substantial evidence;
2. The decision and judgment are contrary to law;
3. The Court erred in admitting incompetent and irrele
vant evidence offered by the defendant on the trial of this
cause and objected to by plaintiff at the time, as more par
ticularly shown by the transcript of evidence herein;
4. The Court erred in rejecting competent and relevant
evidence offered by the plaintiff on the trial of this cause,
as more particularly shown by the transcript of evidence
herein.
Plaintiff says that the matters hereinabove set forth
and complained of in the above and foregoing motion and
grounds for new trial materially affect and are prejudicial
to her substantial rights.
J o s e p h S. F r e e l a n d
Attorney for Plaintiff.
205
Order.
(Entered June 28, 1948)
S helbourne, J.
The motion and grounds for new trial, filed by plaintiff
Elizabeth Whiteside, is overruled.
The findings of fact and conclusions of law heretofore
filed fully show the view of this case taken by the Court and
it is, therefore, unnecessary to state further reasons why
the motion for a new trial should be overruled.
Notice of Appeal.
(Filed July 26, 1948)
Notice is hereby given that Elizabeth Whiteside, the
plaintiff in the above-styled action, hereby appeals to the
Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States for the Sixth
Circuit from the final judgment entered in this action on
the 15th day of June, 1948, said plaintiff’ s motion for a new
trial having been overruled on the 28th day of June, 1948.
J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff.
206
Bond for Costs on Appeal.
(Filed July 29, 1948)
We, Elizabeth Whiteside, principal, and Joseph S. Free
land, surety, are held and firmly bound unto the United
States of America and the defendant, Southern Bus Lines,
Incorporated, in the penal sum of $250.00, for the payment
of which well and truly to be made we bind ourselves, our
executors, administrators, and assigns jointly and severally
by these presents.
Now, the condition of this obligation is such, that if the
plaintiff and appellant, Elizabeth Whiteside, or any one
for her, shall pay or cause to be paid, when due, to the
defendant and appellee, Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
and to the officers of the Court the costs of the appeal herein
if said appeal is dismissed or the judgment affirmed, or of
such costs as the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit may award to said persons if the judgment is modi
fied, this obligation shall be and become null and void, other
wise to remain in full force and effect.
W itness our hands this 26th day of July, 1948, at
Paducah, Kentucky.
E lizabeth W hiteside
By J oseph S. F reeland
Her Attorney
J oseph S. F beeland
Surety.
7-29-48
Surety, Joseph S. Freeland, makes statement that he is
sole owner of real estate located in Paducah, Ky., reason
ably worth $5,000.00, with no encumbrances thereon. C. H.
Bennett, D. C.
207
Designation of Record on Appeal.
(Filed August 3, 1948)
The plaintiff and appellant, Elizabeth Whiteside, desig
nates the complete record and all the proceedings and evi
dence in this action to be contained and included in the
record on the appeal herein.
T his the 3rd day of August, 1948.
J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff (Appellant)
Motion.
(Filed August 3, 1948)
The plaintiff and appellant, Elizabeth Whiteside, moves
the Court to extend the time for filing the record and docket
ing the appeal in this action to and including the 24th day
of October, 1948, said day being the ninetieth day from the
date of filing of plaintiff’s notice of appeal on July 26, 1948.
J oseph S. F reeland
Attorney for Plaintiff (Appellant)
Service of a copy of the foregoing motion is accepted
and acknowledged, this 3rd day of August, 1948. W e have
no objection to the extension of time as prayed in the
motion.
W aller, T hrelkeld & W hitlow
Attorneys for Defendant (Appellee)
by H enry 0 . W hitlow.
208
Order Extending Time for Filing Record on Appeal.
(Entered August 4, 1948)
S helbourne, J.
On motion filed by plaintiff’s counsel and by agreement
of counsel for defendant, it is ordered that the time for
docketing and filing the appeal in this action in the United
States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit be ex
tended to and including the 24th day of October, 1948.
Clerk’s Certificate.
U nited States oe A merica )v gg *
W estern D istrict of K entucky ^
I, W. T. B eckham, Clerk of the United States District
Court in and for the Western District of Kentucky, do
hereby certify that the foregoing H pages constitute a
true, full and complete transcript of the record, except
briefs, of proceedings had in this court in the case of
Elizabeth Whiteside v. Southern Bus Lines, Incorporated,
Civil Action No. 419, Paducah Division, as same appears
of record and on file in my said office, and as provided in the
Designation filed herein by appellant on August 3rd, 1948.
In t e s t i m o n y w h e r e o f , I have hereunto sub
scribed my name and affixed the seal of the
aforesaid Court at Paducah, Kentucky, this
15th day of October, A. D. 1948.
W. T. B eckham
Clerk.
( s e a l )
By C. H. B ennett
Deputy Clerk.
L aw yers P ress, I n c ., 165 William St., N. Y. C. 7; ’Phone: BEekman 3-2300