90 Ky. 265 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion op the court.
This is an action against the telegraph company for damages for negligently failing to deliver to the ap pellant, Joseph Chapman, two telegrams, the one sent on February 12, 1888, announcing to him the dangerous illness of his father, and the other, sent on February 16, informing him of his death, and when he would be buried. They were sent from Franklin, Kentucky, to Bowling Green, Kentucky, a distance of about twenty miles. The appellant then resided in the latter city, and learning upon the street of the death of his father he called at the telegraph office on February 17 and received the two telegrams. The jury found one cent and the costs of the action.
Inasmuch as it must be tried again, we -shall not discuss the evidence relating to the question of negligence. The appellant claims that by reason of it he sustained a pecuniary loss by missing a donation from his father of a promissory note, which he says his father would have given him if he had seen him in his last illness; and that he was also damaged in his feelings and affections by being thereby prevented from attending upon his father in his last illness and from attending his burial.
The claim for the first item of damage was rejected as being too remote for recovery. The second was ruled out upon the ground that damage to the feelings, not blended with physical pain arising from
The company insists that as the appellant was not the sender of the telegrams, he can maintain no action whatever. The contract under which they were sent was, however, made for his benefit. He was to be the sole beneficiary. The sender had no interest in them. This the company knew from their character. In such a case the jjarty for whom a telegram is intended may sue the company for negligence as to it. It is said in Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, section 560: “We think, therefore, that upon the principle of these decisions a telegraph company is responsible for its negligence to a person to whom a message is addressed, as well as to the sender. If it were not so, it is obvious that the receivers of telegrams would often sustain great damage without any means of redress.” This is not the-English, but it is the American rule, and is, in our opinion, supported by reason, necessity and a proper policy. (Gray on Telegraphs, section 65; Wadsworth v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 86 Tenn., 695.)
The lower court properly rejected the first item of damage. It was too uncertain and remote. Greenleaf on Evidence, volume 2, section 256, says: “The damage to be recovered must always be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of. This rule is laid down in regard to special damage, but it applies to all damage.” It does not naturally follow,
The remaining question is one of some difficulty.
It has, upon the state of case now presented, been little before the courts, and but few authorities can be found. Indeed, so far as we have been able to find, but two or three courts of last resort have considered it. One of them has, at least to some extent, varied in its opinion, while the members of another have been divided as to it. It is, can one, in a case like this, recover damages for an injury to his feelings, unaccompanied by any pecuniary loss or physical suffering from bodily injury?
Many of the text-writers say that a person can not recover damages for mental anguish alone, and that he can recover such damages only where he is entitled to recover some damages upon some other ground. It will generally be found, however, that they are speak
The business of telegraphing, while yet in its infancy, is already of wonderful extent and importance to the public. It is growing, and the end can not yet be seen. A telegraph company is a quasi public agent, and as such it should exercise the extraordinary privileges accorded to it with diligence to the public. If, in matters of mere trade, it negligently fails to do its duty, it is responsible for all the natural and proximate damage. Is it to be said or held that, as to matters of far greater interest to a person, it shall not be, because feelings or affections only are involved? If it negligently fails to deliver a message which closes a trade for a hundred dollars, or even less, it is responsible for the damage. It is said, however, that if it is guilty of like fault as to a message to the husband that the wife is dying, or to the father that his son is dead, and will be buried at a certain time,
In Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, section 605, it is said: “In case of delay or total failure of de
This seems to us to be the true rule; one which is in accord with reason, and necessary to a proper protection of individual right and the interests of the public. The cases of Stuart v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 66 Texas, 580, and Wadsworth against the same company, supra, support this view of the -question; and the instructions of the lower court being contra, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new .trial, consistent with the views herein expressed.