41 S.E. 378 | N.C. | 1902
Plaintiff's brother delivered a message to defendant (252) company's agent at Sanford, to be transmitted and delivered to him (plaintiff) at West End, in these words: "Come home quick. Father is dead." The charges (40 cents) were prepaid. The message was never delivered. Inferentially it appears that the defendant company's line terminated at Aberdeen, and the line of another company extended thence to West End.
Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that by reason of the gross negligence, carelessness and willful conduct of the defendant in not transmitting and delivering the message to him, he was prevented from being present to see his father, before the interment and from being present at the funeral, and thereby suffered great damage, both in body and mind, to the extent of $1,900.
Defendant, in its answer, admits receiving the message, alleges that it was transmitted promptly to Aberdeen and there given to another and independent telegraph company, and that it, by special contract, was made the agent of the sender, without liability, to forward it over the line of said other company.
Upon the issues submitted, to wit: "1. Did plaintiff, within sixty days after he had learned that said message had been sent, present to the defendant company a claim in writing for damages for the alleged failure to deliver said message? 2. Was the message set out in the complaint sent under the contract set out in the answer, that defendant was made the agent of the sender to forward without liability said message over lines of other company when necessary to reach destination? 3. Did defendant negligently fail to deliver the message sent by C. K. Rosser to the plaintiff? 4. What damage, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover?" The jury answered the first and third "Yes." *177 There was no testimony bearing on the second, and that was answered by consent of the parties "No"; and to the fourth they answered $500. Defendant moved for a new trial for errors assigned in the record; the motion was overruled, and defendant appealed.
The first exception is to the admission by the court of plaintiff's (253) evidence that he "saw him (his father) last time 8 January, 1898," and defendant insists that the court erred in admitting it, upon the grounds that the jury should not permit that to enter into the question of damages; that it is foreign to the case, and may have been considered by the jury in increasing the amount of damages, as the shock would be greater in being the more unexpected; and that this could not have been in the contemplation of the parties in making the contract. But we can not sustain this exception, for that the "court specially instructed the jury that they should not permit that evidence to enter into the question as to the amount of damages, if any, they should award the plaintiff; that it had been stated by plaintiff's counsel that the evidence was brought out simply to show that he was in good health when last seen." And the evidence shows that plaintiff testified, without objection, that "his health was tolerably fair." Whether the jury may have considered this evidence in increasing the damages, after receiving the instructions from the court, would be only a matter of speculation, and nothing appearing to the contrary, we must assume that they observed their instructions. This testimony was introduced for some purpose other than bearing upon the amount of damages, and the jury were bound under the instructions given not to consider the same in that connection.
The fifth exception (as numbered in the brief of defendant's counsel) is to the modification of their sixth instruction asked to be given, to wit: "That great care should be used by the jury to distinguish the suffering caused by the death of plaintiff's father, for which defendant is in nowise responsible, and that caused by plaintiff being unable to attend the funeral." His Honor gave the instruction as asked, but omitted the word "great," and charged the jury that "care should be used," etc. In making this modification there is no error. The court having called the attention of the jury to the difference (254) between the suffering caused by the death of the father and that caused by the inability to attend upon interment and funeral, and instructed them that they should use care to distinguish them in making up their verdict, fully meets the requirements of the law. No greater care was incumbent upon the jury in considering this element of the case than any other. It was their duty to be careful in the consideration of each fact material to be found and the evidence bearing upon each. The "great care" or "caution" referred to in Young v. Tel. Co., *178
The other exceptions relate to the liability of the defendant in not delivering the message, and can not be sustained. If there was any evidence tending to show that the message ever reached West End, or that it reached Aberdeen, or that it was ever transmitted from Sanford, it does not appear in the record certified to this Court; and if there was such, the defendant obtained the full benefit of it in the following part of the charge: "If you find from the evidence that the message was delivered to the defendant, with the charges prepaid, and you (255) further find from the evidence that the defendant failed to deliver the message, a prima facie case is made out, and the burden would then rest on the defendant to show matter to excuse its failure." The message having been shown by the testimony, and also admitted in the answer, to have been received by defendant and the charges prepaid, it then became its duty to deliver to the addressee at the point to which it was addressed. If, however, that could not be done, then it was incumbent upon defendant to show that it had performed its part of the contract in exercising due diligence in endeavoring to do so. The fact that plaintiff lived several miles from West End does not excuse the defendant from making prompt and diligent inquiry to see if he were not within its delivery at that point when the message arrived; or, if defendant delivered the message promptly to its connecting and independent line, then it was its duty to have shown it, in order to excuse itself from the alleged negligence, provided that would be a legal excuse. All of the facts relating to the transmission of the message were within the possession of the defendant, and it did not choose to disclose them to the court and jury. From the very nature of telegraphy, neither the sender nor sendee could personally know what became of the message, or why it was not received at its destination, or, if received, why not delivered.
We see no error in the rulings of his Honor, and the judgment of the court below is
Affirmed. *179
Cited: Cogdell v. Tel. Co.,
(256)