delivered the opinion of the court.
Thе Honorable Court of Civil Appeals refers for a statement of the facts in this case to Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Coopwood,
This suit was brought “to recover of the defendant damages' for the physical and mental suffering sustained by Mrs. Overton on account o'f the alleged wrongful and negligent conduct of the servants in control of one of appellant’s passenger trains upon which she was a passenger, at the time of its arrival at Brownwood and thereafter at the town of San Angelo. She also in addition seeks to recover for mental suffering sustained by her on account of the alleged negligent and wrongful treatment of her invalid sister who was partially in her charge and also in the charge of her mother, Mrs. Coopwood, when' passengers at Brownwood and at San Angelo.” The case was tried before a jury and a verdict and judgment rendered in favor of the appellee for the sum of $500.
In his work on personal injuries Mr. Watson states the general rule governing this class of cases thus: “There can be no rеcovery for such mental suffering as merely results from sympathy for another’s mental or physical pain, the right of action in such cases being restricted to the persоn who has directly sustained the injury.” (Watson on Damages and Personal Injuries, sec. 406; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Cooper,
There are numerous exceptions to the general rule stated above, but the facts as found by the Court of Civil Appeals' do not bring the case within any one of the exceptions. Mrs. Overton was not a party to the contract for carrying Miss Minnie Coopwood, nor did *587 the railroad company, by undertaking to transport the sister, place itself under any duty to Mrs. Overton, and- there can be no negligence as to Mrs. Overton, unless there was some duty which was due from the company to her.
The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals rested its decision upon the сase of Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Coopwood, which was a companion case to this. The application for writ of error in that case was denied because Mrs. Coоpwood was the mother of the injured party and in control of her at the time and in exercising that control entered into a contract with the railroad comрany for the transportation of her invalid daughter from Brownwood to San Angelo. The acts of the employes of the railroad company and its negligence towards Miss Minnie was a direct violation of the contract with the mother, therefore this court held, in acting upon the application, that the railroad company owed to Mrs. Coopwood the duty to carry her daughter to San Angelo with that care which was due to a passenger. Mrs. Coopwood’s injury resulted from a violation оf this contract and a failure to perform that duty.
There is evidence which tends to show that Mrs. Overton suffered some inconvenience and injury from the failure of the railroad company and its employes to exercise that degree of care towards her that was due to a passenger anu for such injury she is entitled to recover. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the District Court be reversed and that this cause be remanded to the District Court for trial in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
