170 Mo. App. 624 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Plaintiffs, as the persons desiring to send a dispatch over defendant’s line from Mercer to Trenton, sne to recover the penalty of $300 under section 3330, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, for failure to transmit said message. ■ I. E, Crihh, the father of plaintiffs, was seriously ill near Mercer, and Made H. Cribb, one of the plaintiffs, sent a message to A. F. McCloud," the husband of his sister and coplain-tiff Katie McCloud, saying, “Come today.” This message was sent Monday morning, November 6, 1911, and was sent “collect,” A. F. McCloud paying for it when it was received in Trenton. In response to this message his wife, Katie McCloud, left Trenton, and went to Mercer, on the noon train of that day. Before leaving, she agreed with her husband that she would telegraph him to come to Mercer if her father died.
Upon arriving at Mercer she met her brother, Mack H. Cribb, at one of the stores in town, and was informed that her father was dead. It was then about two o’clock in the afternoon, and, as they would have to see the undertaker and select a casket and then drive out to their father’s residence as soon as possible they sent the hired man, John Scott, to the depot to telegraph the husband, A. F. McCloud, to come, as the wife had agreed to do before she left Trenton.
Scott went to the telegraph station and caused a telegram to be prepared on one of defendant’s blanks addressed to A. F. McCloud saying, “Come home tonight,” and delivered it to a young man in the office who collected from him the twenty-five cents charges due for sending the message. Scott then reported to plaintiffs the message had been sent.
The message was never sent, however, and Mc-Cloud did not come, and by reason of this fact was not enabled to be present at the funeral of deceased. Result : This suit in which the statutory penalty was recovered in the trial court, two thirds of which was
The defendant does not deny that the telegram was prepared and left in the telegraph office nor that the charges thereon were duly paid; and there is no dispute over the fact that the telegram was never sent. The contention is, however, that the man in the telegraph office, with whom Scott left the- telegram and the money, was not the defendant’s agent for receiving transmitting and delivering the message, and, therefore, defendant is not liable. As this issue was submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and it found a verdict for plaintiffs, the point, in the appellate court, resolves itself into this question: "Was there sufficient evidence to submit to the jury the question whether the man who received the message, and who collected the charges due thereon for transmitting and delivering the message, was defendant’s agent for that purpose?
According to Scott’s testimony, when he appeared at the counter of the telegraph office, the regular operator, Shouse, was sitting at the table on which were the keys of the telegraph instruments, and a young man by the name of Cox was also in the office. "When Scott announced that he desired to send a telegram, Cox arose, came to the counter and handed Scott a regular telegraph blank. "Whereupon Scott asked him to writ it for him as Cox wasi a better scribe than he. Cox did so, and when the telegram was completed to Scott’s satisfaction, the latter asked what the charges were. Cox looked .in a book of charges or tariffs kept by the company for the information of its agents and then replied th,at the charge was twenty-five cents. Scott then handed him a dollar and Cox unlocked the money drawer or till, dropped the dollar in, and gave Scott the change therefrom. "Whereupon Scott asked him when the message would go out and Cox replied, “Right away.” All this took place within the sight
The only part of the above which is denied is the claim that Shouse was present. Cox also says that when Scott told him he wanted to send a telegram he (Cox) replied he was not the agent, that he was over in town, and that Scott then said he was in a hurry and asked him to take it, which he did and collected the money for it and placed the message on the regular hook for holding messages to he sent; that he forgot to call the agent’s attention to it when the latter returned and that the wind must have blown it off the hook to the floor where it was not discovered till next day.
It is true that the action is penal in its nature and plaintiffs, to recover, must bring themselves strictly within the terms of the statute; and the .dispatch must he delivered to an agent of the company. [Pollard v. Telephone Co., 114 Mo. App. 153.] But this does not mean that the message must he handed in person to the operator who does the- work of actually sending messages. If Cox was defendant’s agent for the purpose of receiving messages to he transmitted and the message was delivered to such agent in the telegraph office and the fee paid thereon, then the penalty is recoverable.
We think the evidence was ample to support a finding by the jury that Cox was defendant’s agent for the purpose of receiving the message.
It is conceded that Shouse was station agent for the Rock Island railroad, agent for the II. S. Express Company and defendant’s operator, and that the offices of all three were in one and the same place. The money paid to each company at this station was placed in one common till or drawer. It is also admitted that Cox was Shouse’s. helper, that he obeyed whatever orders the latter gave him and his duty was to do everything Shouse asked him to do; and that Cox car
In addition to the testimony of Scott and the admissions of Cox and the conceded facts from which an inference of agency could legally arise, the testimony of Cox and Shouse, both testifying for the defendant, contained enough contradictions of each other to justify the jury in accepting Scott’s version as the true one in preference to either or both Cox and Shouse’s testimony. Cox swore he was a practical telegraph operator; Shouse swore he was not. Cox said the second message which was never sent was discussed the next day by both Shouse and him; Shouse says he never heard of the message until claim was made against the company for damages. Cox says the message was fdund next morning on the table among some blanks or stationery; Shouse says it was found in a drawer. Cox says the message when, received by him and placed on a hook, where messages were customarily hung before being sent, and that evidently the wind blew it off the hook; Shouse says there were no indications on the message to show it had ever been on the hook. And the message in the possession of the defendant was never produced at the trial in order that it might speak for itself.
These contradictions, and certain testimony concerning the checking over of the telegram sent and
Under all the circumstances the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Cox was defendant’s agent to receive the telegram for transmission. Such finding, therefore, cannot be disturbed. The judgment is accordingly affirmed.