14 Ga. App. 403 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Gardner, doing business as the St. Nicholas Hotel, sued the Western Hnion Telegraph Company in the city court of Albany, alleging that he had been injured and damaged in the sum of $75, by reason of the following facts: On or about August 1, 1913, a person registered at the hotel of the plaintiff as H. Davis, and requested plaintiff to honor or cash his draft on the Hncle Sam Breakfast Food Company, of Omaha, Nebraska, and to this end wrote a telegram to be sent through defendant’s office at Albany, directed to said Breakfast Food Company, and presented the same to plaintiff’s clerk at said hotel and requested said clerk to send the same for him. Plaintiff’s said clerk took said telegram and pulled or operated the call-box of the defendant, which was installed in plaintiff’s hotel and was connected with the office of the defendant in said city of Albany, and, in response to the call of said “box,” a messenger-boy, known as Harley Bramlett, and known at the time as messenger-boy No. 2, and then employed by the defendant, responded to the call of said “box” at about 1:55 p. m., and took said telegram from plaintiff’s said clerk and disappeared. Said telegram (which is not in the control, power, or custody of plaintiff) was in substance a request to said Hncle Sam Breakfast Food Company to wire plaintiff to honor the said draft of H. Davis for $75. About 8 p. m. on the same day that plaintiff had delivered said message to said Bramlett, the said messenger-boy came to plaintiff’s hotel and delivered to plaintiff’s clerk a telegram purporting to have been received by defendant at Albany, from said
The above constitutes one count of the petition. The second count sets out the same facts, except that it fails to allege any collusion between the messenger-boy and Davis, and also fails to allege any misconduct or negligence on the part of the messenger, except-that it alleges that the plaintiff, "in sending and receiving said message or telegram, relied upon the defendant, having within its employment honest and reliable servants,” and that "the loss of plaintiff is the direct result and consequence of the negligence of defendant in having in its employment the unreliable messenger-boy referred to in this petition, knowing him to be unreliable.” The first count of the petition seeks to recover for the alleged tortious act of the messenger-boy, who is described as the agent or employee of the defendant; but the petition nowhere alleges that the messenger-boy, in calling for the original telegram addressed to the Breakfast Food Company, or in delivering to the plaintiff what purported to be a repfy to it, was acting within the scope of his employment; nor does the petition disclose what were the ordinary, usual, and proper duties of the messenger-boy in connection with the defendant’s business. The second count seeks to recover on the ground that the messenger-boy was "unreliable,” and was known by the defendant to be unreliable, but wherein the boy was
Judgment affirmed.