192 Mo. App. 31 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
About two o’clock p. m., on December 5, 1912, plaintiff left a message with' the defendant’s agent at its office at Illmo, for transmission to Dexter, both points in this State and on defendant’s line, paying for it twenty-five cents, that being the proper tariff charge for its transmittal and delivery, the message directed “To Martin Sanders, Dexter, Mo.” The message was duly transmitted to Dexter, being received by the operator of defendant at that place about 2:45 p. m. of that day. When the telegram arrived at Dexter, the operator, within ten minutes after its arrival, gave it to a messenger, an employee of defendant, with instructions to deliver it to Martin Sanders. This messenger had never heard of Martin Sanders, and did not know where anyone of that name' lived. He accordingly went to the hotel and other public places and asked for him but could not locate him. He then went to the post office and on
This action is for recovery of the penalties given by section 3330, Revised Statutes 1909, plaintiff charging that having handed in the message to the agent of defendant at Illmo about 2:45 p. m., of December 5, and having paid the proper charges thereon, the message directed to Martin Sanders at Dexter, Missouri, that it “the'n and there became the duty of defendant to transmit promptly said message, over its wires to Dexter with care and diligence, and then to use due diligence to place said message in the hands of said addressee, Martin Sanders, by the most direct means available; . . . but that defendant so negligently and carelessly conducted the transmission and delivery of said message that the same was not placed in the hands of the addressee thereof till long after it should have been placed in his hands, to-wit: on the 7th day of December, 1912, at ábout 9 :30 o’clock, a. m.” Judgment is prayed for the statutory penalty.
The answer was a general denial.
Here appellant assigns five errors.
The first error assigned is to the action of the trial court in refusing appellant’s demurrers to the testimony. "We do not think this assignment is well taken.
The envelope in which this telegram was enclosed when mailed to Martin Sanders was in evidence, but it appears that the post office mark had been in part on the envelope and in part on the stamps and these latter had disappeared. All that could be made out yms the name “Dexter,” and the figures “8:00,” as indicating the time; whether eight a. m. or eight p. m., could not be determined, nor was the date visible. There was testimony tending to show that if the message had been placed in the post office between six thirty and eight o’clock p. m., of the’5th, it would'have been stamped as of eight p. m., December 5th, or if put in after eight p. m., of the 5th, and before eight a. m. of the 6th, it would have been stamped eight a. m., December 6th, and would have been delivered to the rural mail carrier the morning of the 6th and taken out by him about 9:30 a. m., that day and deposited by ten a. m., in Box 1, Route 3, that being the first box on that route out of Dexter. The carrier testified that he had no recollection, of having carried this op any other letter past Box 1 on the 6th arid then carrying it back a second time on the 7th, and the wife of Sanders testified that she had seen the carrier place it in the box on the morning, of the 7th, about nine thirty or ten o ’clock and had at once taken it out; that she received no mail on the 6th.
While the telegraph messenger testified that after he had ascertained the address of Martin Sanders, he had taken the message back to the telegraph office with the correct address and stamps, he does not state when he did this.
“The plain letter of the statute as amended discloses the legislative purpose of requiring a telegraph company to use reasonable diligence not only in the transmission of a paid message over its wires but in the prompt delivery of such message into the hand of the addressee by the most direct means available. This does not mean that the company is an insurer of the delivery of the message or that it must employ extraordinary care and promptness, such care as the hypothetical ordinarily careful and prudent man would employ in the performance of a duty emphasized by a penal law. ’ ’
Judge Allen, speaking for our court in Brockman Commission Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co., supra, has also said (l. c. 632), after stating that one who seeks to invoke the statute and recover the penalty must bring his case clearly within its terms:
“While this does not mean that the life and spirit of the statute are to be construed out of it by a strict construction of its terms (see Elliott v. Telegraph Co., supra, l. c. 672), it does mean that ‘no case shall be held*37 to fall within it which does not fall both within the reasonable meaning of its terms, and within the spirit and scope of the enactment,’ ” the quotation being from Connell v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 108 Mo. 459, l. c. 463, 18 S. W. 883.
So construing the statute we think there was substantial evidence in this case to warrant its submission to the jury, leaving it to their determination to say whether the defendant had used “due diligence to place said dispatch in the hands of the addressee, by the most direct means available, . . . promptly, and with impartiality and good faith.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 3330.]
The next error assigned is to the giving of'three instructions at the instance of plaintiff, these instructions numbered 1, 2 and 4. We see no particular objection to instructions 1 and 4. Instruction number 2, however should not have been given. It told the jury, in substance, that if they believed that on the receipt of the message at Dexter and the ascertainment by defendant that the addressee, Martin Sanders, did not live within the free delivery limits of Dexter, as fixed by the rules of the company, it was the custom and duty of the messenger of defendant at Dexter to promptly. send a service telegram to defendant’s manager at its office in Illmo, notifying him of such fact and demanding a better address or the payment or guarantee of delivery charges for the delivery of such message outside the free delivery zone; that no such service message was sent and that delay in the placing of such message in the hands of Martin Sanders resulted therefrom, then their verdict must be for plaintiff. This instruction was erroneous and giving it constituted, as we think, reversible error.
The learned counsel for respondent insists that where the plaintiff and defendant tried their case on a theory that is not within the pleadings, it is not error to instruct on that theory. The trouble with the applica
The fatal objection to this instruction and to the admission of the testimony as to any custom to send a service message, is that no such requirement is within the terms or spirit of the statute and this is an action on the statute.
For the error in giving this instruction number 2, which we have quoted in substance, the judgment of the circuit court must be and it is accordingly reversed and the cause remanded.