72 S.E. 78 | N.C. | 1911
This action was brought to recover damages for mental anguish, alleged to have been caused by the negligent delay of the defendant in transmitting and delivering a telegram. The message, *123
dated 26 November, 1909, was addressed by Mrs. Frank Barnes to Francis U. Barnes at Williamson, N.C. and read as follows: "Come at once. Your father very sick." It was transmitted from the initial point to Greenville, with due promptness, and reached (152) the office in that place at 8 o'clock A. M. The defendant had no office at Williamston, and the agent at Princess Anne so notified the sender. He also told her that it would have to be sent by telephone, owned by another company, from Greenville to Williamston, for which a charge or toll of twenty-five cents would be made by that company. When the message was received by the operator at Greenville, "he put in a long-distance call for Mr. Barnes at Williamston, and he was informed that Mr. Barnes was not there, but in the woods four or five miles away, he being a lumberman." The operator of the defendant at once instructed the telephone operator "to keep in the call for Williamston" — that is, to get Mr. Barnes as soon as it could be done; but he did not return until about 5:30 o'clock P. M., when the message was communicated to him by telephone. The plaintiff alleges that had the message been delivered to him at 8 o'clock A. M., on 26 November, the day it was sent, he could have left by the 8:28 A. M. A. C. L. Railroad Company train, and reached his father's bedside seventeen hours before his death, which occurred about 5 o'clock P. M., 27 November, 1909. We do not well see how he could have done any such thing. It would seem to be a physical impossibility. By his own calculation, there would be only twenty-eight minutes of time for the relay of the message at Greenville, and the delivery of it to him at Williamston, he being at the time, according to his own statement, four and a half miles from his home. Some time must be consumed in making the necessary connection between telegraph and telephone lines, and in making the call on the "long-distance phone" for him. He had to travel four and a half miles to Williamston to catch the train. To charge the defendant with negligence under such circumstances would be anything but justice. Plaintiff says he could have taken the 4:30 P. M. train out of Williamston on 26 November, 1909, a few hours before his father's death. But the crucial fact in the case is that plaintiff was not at home, but some distance therefrom, and this is what prevented (153) an earlier delivery of the message. It was his misfortune and not the defendant's fault, and plaintiffs fail so often to distinguish between the two. The service rendered to the plaintiff in the effort to reach him with the message was far more prompt and efficient than was the service in Marquette v. Telegraph Co.,
It is not mental anguish alone that entitles a plaintiff to recover, however much he may have suffered, but it must be coupled with the negligence of the company, and, too, that negligence must be the proximate cause of the injury as in other cases, and there must also be the absence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff directly or "in continuous sequence" contributing to his alleged injury, as in other cases. Brewsterv. Elizabeth City,
Telegraph companies are only bound to the exercise of that degree of diligence which a man of ordinary prudence would use under like or similar circumstances. They must be prompt and diligent, it is true, but to demand more of them would be to apply a rule which would result sometimes, if not in the large majority of cases, in oppression and gross injustice. We will require of them their full duty, but no more. "If the plaintiff has lost, he has not been injured, as it is expressed in one of the maxims of the law." Gainey v. Telegraph Co.,
There was some question as to the right of the telephone company to disclose the contents of the message to a person other than the addressee. This could not be done without the consent of the sender and the sendee, or at least the sender or the sendee, depending upon the nature of the message or the terms of the contract. The telegraph (154) company, under its ordinary contract, is not required to telephone a message, as it would impair the confidential relations assumed, but it can agree to deliver a message in this manner. 37 Cyc., 1683; Hellams v. Telegraph Co.,
There is a stipulation in the contract of the defendant with its patrons, that a claim or demand in writing must be presented to the telegraph company within sixty days after the message is filed for transmission. We have held this provision to be reasonable and valid. Sherrillv. Telegraph Co.,
The judge was right in nonsuiting the plaintiff, and we affirm the judgment.
No error.
Cited: Lytle v. Tel. Co.,