133 N.C. 603 | N.C. | 1903
Ota. 9th November, 1900, the following telegram was sent from Mooresville, N. C., addressed to the plaintiff at Wedgefield, S. O., where she resided, in three miles of the defendant’s office: “Aunt Anna dead. Funeral Sunday. Answer quick.” This message was never delivered, but the contents came to her knowledge the evening of 10th November, too late to take any train in time for the funeral. The “Aunt Anna” named in the message was a sister to the plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that if she had received the message that day or any information as to the death of her sister, she could and would have gone to Mooresville. The son of the plaintiff testified that the operator at Wedgefield knew where the plaintiff was living, the day the message was received, and this was not contradicted by any evidence. The sender did not know the plaintiff lived beyond the free delivery limits, and paid all that was asked for sending the message. No special delivery charges were demanded, and the operator at Wedgefield wired back to Mooresville merely: “Party not known.” In deference to an intimation from the Court below, the plaintiff took a non-suit, and on appeal at last term that ruling was affirmed by a per curiam judgment. On this petition to rehear we are of opinion that the case should have been submitted to a jury. The defendant relies on four grounds:
2. The second ground that no special delivery charges were guaranteed is disposed of by what has already been said. The facts of this case differ widely from those in Hood v. Telegraph Co., which affirmed a non-suit by a per curiam., 130 N. C., 743, and which was reaffirmed in the same manner, 131 N. C., 828. In that case the sendee lived eight miles from the delivery office, the sender knew that fact and the company did not. The office at the receiving point could not have given the sender any information which he did not already have. It was his own negligence not to have paid the special delivery charges. Here the sender did not know that the plaintiff lived beyond the free delivery limits. The defendant, through its agent at Wedgefield, did, but it did not notify the sender, nor ask pay for special delivery.
3. Tbe third ground tbat tbe claim for damages was not presented in sixty days is answered by tbe fact tbat tbe summons was issued and served witbin sixty days. Sherrill v. Tel. Co., 109 N. C., 527, at page 532, where it is held “the general rule tbat tbe commencement of an action is equivalent to a demand applies to cases of this kind. Thompson on Elec., sec. 256.” It puts tbe defendant on notice and comes witbin tbe reasoning in that case upon which the rule is sustained, i. e., tbat it enables “tbe company to inquire into tbe nature and circumstances of a mistake in or tbe delay or nondelivery of tbe message while tbe matter is still witbin tbe memory of witnesses.” Tbe service of tbe summons puts tbe defendant on inquiry fully as much as filing tbe complaint, at possibly a distant court-house, would do. Indeed, Groswell Elec., sec. 557, questions whether this stipulation in the blank is binding upon tbe sendee at all, but we need not pass upon that point.
The last objection is tbat tbe wrong, if any, occurred in South Carolina and is to be tried by tbe laws of tbat State, which it is alleged did not at tbat time allow tbe recovery of damages for mental anguish. A case exactly in point is Reed v. Tel. Co., 58 Am. St. Rep. (Missouri), 609, 34 L. R. A., 492, which bolds that “if a telegraph message is delivered to the company in one State to be by it transmitted to a place in another State, the validity and interpretation of tbe contract, as well as its liability thereunder, is to be determined by the laws of the former State.” Tbe contract was made at Moores-ville in this State; it is a North Carolina contract, and damages for its breach are to be assessed according to tbe liability attaching to such contract under our laws. Tbe Code, sec. 194 (2), authorizes an action against a foreign corporation
Our authorities have been uniform and unanimous, from the first case (Young v. Tel. Co., 107 N. C., 370, 22 Am. St. Rep., 883, 9 L. R. A., 669) down to the present, that damages are recoverable for mental anguish in oases like the present. In Sherrill v. Tel. Co., 116 N. C., at p. 658, the divided sentiment in the Courts of other States was referred to, with citation of the States on* either side, and since then there has been a growth of sentiment elsewhere expressed in many States by statutory enactments in support of the views we have upheld. In South Carolina the North Carolina rule was adopted by statute 20' February, 1901, which is set out in Meadows v. Tel. Co., 132 N. C., at page 41. In Virginia, by chapter 698, Acts 1900, it is enacted: “Grief and mental anguish occasioned to the plaintiff by the aforesaid negligent failures (in ‘receiving, copying, transmitting or delivering dispatches, or disclosure of the contents of my private dispatch’) may be considered by the jury in the determination of the quantum of damages.” Statutes of similar purport have been enacted in Arkansas and in other States. In Watson P'ers. Inj., sec. 450, he says: “Certainly, on principle, tire best considered position is that where mental suffering naturally and proximately results from the default of a telegraph company, whether regarded as a contract or a tort, damages therefor should be recoverable”; and sums up the States holding by judicial determination that doctrine, which were then (1901) already in the majority (see States holding the contrary view, Ibid., see. 462), irrespective of those which have adopted the majority view by statute like Virginia and South Carolina above quoted, and others. Among those since adhering by judicial decision to the views we have entertained is Louisiana. In Graham v. Tel. Co., 109 La., 1071 (1903), Nicholls, C. J., in a learned opinion, citing numerous authori
We have heretofore (107 N. C., at p. 885) quoted that great lawyer, Cicero (from his 11th Philippic against Mare Anthony), to show that the same view was held among the bar that gave to the world the great Code of the Civil Law, “Nam quo major vis est animi, hoc sunt graviora ea quae con-cipiuntur animo quam ilia quae corpore.”
Not to prolong the discussion in such action as this for breach of contract, there is the same reason for recovery of damages without physical injury as in actions for breach of contract of marriage and the like, i. e., that in both cases the parties have notice that mental anguish will be the probable consequences of a breach of contract. If viewed as an action of tort there is the same ground of recovery of damages for mental anguish caused thereby as in actions for seduction and the like; besides, there is the further reason that the telegraph company has violated a public duty which it undertook to discharge in consideration of the grant of its charter. A strong statement of this view may be found 3 Sutherland Damages (4 Ed.), sec. 975; Joyce Elec. Law, sea 825.
The judgment of non-suit should be set aside, and a new trial is ordered.
Petition allowed.