129 Ga. 181 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.) Where an agent sends a telegram for an undisclosed principal the principal may bring an action in his own name for damages resulting from error in transmission which brought about a delay in delivering the telegram. Propeller Tow-Boat Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co., 124 Ga. 478, 52 S. E. 706; Harkness v. Western Union Tel. Co., 73 Iowa, 190, 5 Am. St. R. 672, 34 N. W. 811. An undisclosed principal may bring a suit in his own name for the breach of the contract made by his agent with a telegraph company, in1 which it agreed to transmit and deliver 'a telegram with reasonable dispatch, or for a breach of any duty arising out of the contract, and recover such damages as are appropriate to the form of action in which the suit is brought. It is said that the suit by the plaintiff in this case is well brought, for the reason that her husband merely acted as her agent in sending the telegram; that she was the undisclosed principal in the contract made between him and the telegraph company, and therefore any right of action which arose out of the breach of the contract, whether it sounded in contract or in tort, could be asserted by her in her name. The averments of the petition are possibly sufficient, as against a general demurrer, to show that there was an agency, and that the transaction did not arise merely from the fact that the relation of husband and wife existed between the parties. Eor the purposes of the present case we will treat the action as well brought in the name of the plaintiff. The purpose of the pleader was evidently to bring an action sounding in tort, and the petition will be so construed. The only damages alleged are those resulting from the physical and mental suffering endured by the plaintiff during the hours that elapsed between the time that the doctor would have-arrived if the telegram had been promptly delivered and the time at which he did «arrive; being about nineteen hours. The averments of the petition made a clear case of gross negligence against the defendant. According to the averments there was absolutely no reason why there should havedbeen such an unreasonable delay in transmitting and delivering the telegram.1 In an action sound
But the petition also alleged that the suffering endured by her was physical, and that this could have been relieved if the tele.gram had been transmitted and delivered within a reasonable time. The ease resolves itself, therefore, into the question as to whether the telegraph company is liable for the damages resulting to the plaintiff from physical suffering which she was enduring at the time that the telegram was delivered to the company for transmission, and which she continued to endure up to the time that the physician arrived. Can it be said that, her suffering was the .natural and proximate result of the failure of the telegraph company to transmit and deliver the message within due time? If so, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. If not, no recovery can be had. The Civil Code, § 3912, declares that “If the damages are only the. imaginary or possible result of the tortious act, or other and contingent circumstances preponderate largely in causing the in-.
Judgment affirmed.