93 S.E. 467 | N.C. | 1917
This action was brought to recover damages for mental anguish alleged to have been caused by the (98) negligence of the defendant in failing to properly transmit and deliver to the plaintiff a telegraphic message filed with the defendant at Durant's Neck, N.C. by her brother, George Simpson, and addressed to her at Plymouth, N.C. in the following words: *106
"Father died last night. Will bury Sunday, 3 p. m." As delivered to her, the message read: "Walter died last night. Will bury Sunday, 3 p. m." The defendant transmitted the message by way of Norfolk, Va., instead of directly to Plymouth, N.C. and the defendant contends, for that reason, that the sending of the message was a transaction in interstate commerce, and therefore the case should be governed by the Federal law, which denies a recovery for mental anguish. Express Co. v. Byers,
The plaintiff, on the contrary, argues that it is not interstate, but intrastate commerce, the initial and terminal points of the transmission being in this State. If the defendant's contention is the right one, and the case must be considered and decided according to the Federal rule, then plaintiff is not entitled to recover, as it would present the same question we decided at the last term against the plaintiff's right of recovery inMeadows v. Tel. Co.,
The authorities to this effect are very numerous and consistent.Shelby Ice and Fuel Co. v. Ry. Co.,
The Court criticized certain cases in conflict with the views expressed in the Hanley case, and virtually overruled them, as to this question, for it states that they were based upon a misconception of the real question and the true decision thereon in L. V. R. R. Co. v. Pennsylvania,
In W. U. Tel. Co. v. Bolling, (Va.), S.E. 154, the Court said upon this question: "Inasmuch, however, as under the express provisions of the act to regulate commerce, telegraph and telephone companies are common carriers, these decided cases are conclusive of the question here involved. Since the case of Hanley v. Kansas City, etc., R. R. Co.,
His Honor, Judge Daniels, who presided at the trial, submitted the question of the defendant's good faith in selecting the route via Norfolk, Va., to the jury, as follows: "If the jury believe the evidence, and find therefrom that the message was transmitted in the usual, customary and necessary route from Hertford, N.C. to Norfolk, Va., and relayed and transmitted from Norfolk, Va., to Plymouth, N.C. then the message would be an interstate (100) *108 message, and as such, interstate commerce, and the liability of the defendant is such only as is fixed and determined by the Federal law applicable thereto; . . . and mental anguish alone in such a case as this is not recognized by the Federal law as an element of damage for which a recovery can be had, . . . therefore, upon such finding, you will answer the third issue `Nothing.'"
This charge, read in connection with the verdict, or the answer to the third issue, excludes the idea of bad faith on the part of the defendant, and goes further, for it establishes the fact that instead of there being any attempt to evade the law, the route selected by the defendant was "the usual, customary and necessary one."
Our conclusion, therefore, is that there was no error in the trial of the case.
No error.
Cited: Speight v. Tel. Co.,