Lucas v. Southern Railway Co.

122 Ala. 529 | Ala. | 1898

TYSON, J.

— The complaint in this case avers ' that plaintiff contracted with defendant to transport and deliver the corpse of his infant child from Blocton, Alabama, to Aldrich, Alabama, both being stations' on the defendant’s line of road. That he paid the price of transportation charged, and defendant accepted said corpse for transportation. That the contract of affreightent- was effectuated by the-purchase of a passenger ticket for said corpse. That de fendant negligently and carelessly failed to carry the said body to Aldrich, but left it at a station some six' miles distant from Aldrich. The complaint' further avers that in consequence of this negligence the funeral of said infant was delayed, and plaintiff was “sorely vexed and harassed, and suffered great menial pain and anguish and was compelled to prolong his stay' from his business, to-wit, two days to his special damage,” 'etc. The undisputed evidence as shown by the record is, that one G. B. Lucas, a kinsman of the plaintiff, was in charge of the corpse and purchased the tickets for its transportation and the transportation of three othér persons, the plaintiff being one of them, Avho Avere 'accompanying the remains. The record affirmatively discloses that plaintiff Avas not present when the tickets Avere purchased and never had them in his possession; that G. B. Lucas delivered all the tickets to the conduc*532tor of the train, telling him that one was for the corpse, which was put in the caboose of the mixed train and transferred at Gurnee Junction to the baggage car of the regular passenger train, and further that the only information imparted by G. B. Lucas to defendant’s agent when he purchased the tickets, was that one of them was for a “corpse,” which ticket the agent identified by writing the word “corpse” upon it.

The evidence further shows that plaintiff gave the money to G. B. Lucas to pay for all the tickets purchased by him, and G. B. Lucas testified that he was acting for the plaintiff in the purchase of the tickets; but it is nowhere shown that this was disclosed or known to the agent when he sold the tickets. On the contrary, the agent testified that he did not know that the “corpse” was the body of plaintiff’s child; that there were three families by the name of Lucas living in Blocton, and that he knew that an infant in one of these families had died, but did not know which one; that he was not told it was a child of plaintiff, and he only knew the plaintiff by sight.

We have only stated the evidence bearing upon the point as to whether or not it supports the allegations of the complaint, that there was a contract between the plaintiff and defendant as alleged for the transportation of the “corpse.” It will be observed that the contract was made by G. B. Lucas with defendant’s agent, who says that plaintiff gave him the money to purchase the tickets, and that he was acting for the plaintiff in the transaction, but that he did not disclose his agency or the fact that he was using plaintiff’s money in paying for it.

The case of Kennon & Bro. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 92 Ala. 399, was a suit by the sendee of a telegraphic message against the telegraph company for the failure to deliver a telegram yvithin a reasonable time from its sending. The contention of the telegraph company was that it made no contract with the sendee, and, therefore, it was not liable. Justice McClellan, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “As we construe the amended counts of the complaint, they each suffi*533ciently aver that the plaintiffs, through their agents in New York, made a contract with the defendant to transmit a message from the agents to their principals at Salem, Alabama, with diligence and dispatch for a reward then and there paid by the agents for the principals and subsequently repaid by the latter to the former; and that the defendant violated-said contract in that it missent the message and failed to transmit and deliver it to plaintiffs for several days after it received the same for transmission and should have transmitted and delivered it. On the contract thus alleged, these plaintiffs may sue, and if the evidence develops that they 'toere disclosed to the telegraph company as the principals in the contract they may recover against the defendant.”

To the same effect is the cases of Daughtery v. A. U. Tel. Co., 75 Ala. 168; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Wilson, 93 Ala. 32; Wells, Fargo & Co. Express v. Fuller, 23 S. W. Rep. 412; Nichols v. Eddy, 21 S. W. Rep. 317.

It is true .that none of these cases decide the converse of the proposition above quoted and italicized, but it necessarily follows that it is bound to be correct. So, then, we feel constrained to hold that plaintiff has failed to prove this averment of his complaint and cannot recover.

The second count offered by way of amendment contains the same averment as to the making of the contract for transportation; and if there was error in the action of the court in not permitting it to be filed, it was without injury to the plaintiff.

The other assignments of error relate to the exclusion of testimony, which in no way affect the question decided by us, and it is unnecessary to consider them.

The affirmative charge was properly given for the defendant.

Judgment affirmed.