23 S.E. 277 | N.C. | 1895
Upon the trial defendant admitted the delivery of the message for transmission, the payment of costs therefor and, further, that the telegram had never been delivered to Franklin Sherrill, for whom it was intended. The message was delivered to defendant company at Lebanon, Ind., by the witness Booher, acting for the sender, and was in words and figures as follows:
"Max, Ind., 1 Dec. 1890. Mr. Franklin Sherrill, Statesville, N.C.: Tell Henry to come home. Lou is bad sick. M. C. Sherrill.
"Tel. ans. quick; it's paid for here.
"16 pd. $3.50 gt. spl. dely."
It appeared that plaintiff, who is referred to in the telegram as Henry, was on 1 December, 1890, temporarily residing with his father in Shiloh Township, eight or nine miles from Statesville; that he lived in Indiana; that the sender of the telegram, M. C. Sherill, (355) is his sister, and Lou, referred to in the message, is his daughter, since deceased. *243
C. J. Jones, defendant's operator at Statesville, testified that he received the message in question, and that he repeatedly sent out a message boy to find the addressee, whom he did not know; that, the search proving unavailing, he sent the message to Davidson, being informed by J. S. Ramsey that a Frank Sherrill, formerly residing at Troutman, had moved to that place; that he shortly afterwards received a message from one Schofield, who was the operator at Davidson, stating that the message was delivered, and that there was no answer; that on the evening of 2 December he received an inquiry from the operator at Lebanon, and answered that the message had been delivered; that he did not know until after the commencement of this suit that the message had not been delivered to the person for whom it was intended. The witness also testified that there was a rule of the company requiring him to telegraph for a better address if the address is doubtful, but that in this case he did not do so. Rose, the messenger boy to whom the witness Jones delivered the message, testified that he inquired of certain persons for the residence of Franklin Sherrill, and was informed that a man of that name lived in Troutman. W. F. Sherrill, to whom the message was delivered at Davidson, testified that he did not tell defendant company that the message was not intended for him; that his place of business was 400 yards from the telegraph office; and that Schofield, the operator, lived about 350 yards from him. The message was delivered to him by one not in defendant's employment.
The court submitted the following issues:
"1. Did the defendant negligently fail to deliver the said message to Franklin Sherrill? 2. Was plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, as alleged in the answer? 3. Was such contributory (356) negligence the proximate cause of the injury complained of? 4. Was the message mentioned in the complaint sent subject to the stipulation and agreement that the defendant company would not be liable for damage unless the claim for damage was presented to defendant in writing within sixty (60) days from the sending of the message? 5. Did the plaintiff, within sixty (60) days after he found out that said message had been sent and not delivered to him, present to the defendant company in writing a claim for damage for the alleged failure to deliver said message? 6. What damage, if any, has the plaintiff sustained by reason of defendant's failure to deliver said message?"
The following instructions, referred to in the opinion of the Court, were given at plaintiff's request: "5. That if you find from the evidence of Jones that he sent the message to W. F. Sherrill on 2 December, and that he failed to call for an answer to the message, this was negligence and entitled the plaintiff to your verdict on the first issue; and if *244 Schofield wired him that there was `no answer,' this was sufficient to put him on guard, and it was encumbent on him to find out from Schofield why there was no answer. In this state of the case the plaintiff is entitled to recover. 6. That a delivery of the message at Davidson to W. F. Sherrill, as testified to, is negligence in the defendant, and entitles the plaintiff to your verdict on the first issue. 7. That if you should find from the evidence that the sender did not give the post-office address of Franklin Sherrill and the exact spot where he lived to the operator at Lebanon, and that the operator did not require as full and explicit directions as he had the opportunity to obtain, and that both were (357) guilty of negligence at that time, nevertheless if the message arrived safely to the operator at Statesville, North Carolina, and you should find that he is guilty of negligence in the manner as above explained, the question of contributory negligence is out of the case, and you will find the second and third issues for the plaintiff and answer them `No.'"
The first paragraph of his Honor's charge was as follows: "1. That if the jury should find that the message in question was received at Statesville at 12:40 o'clock, 1 December, 1890, and within 10 or 15 minutes thereafter the defendant, through its operator and messenger, commenced trying to find out where said Franklin Sherrill lived; and that he, the said operator, and messenger boy made inquiry of W. R. Mills, Chief of Police of Statesville, J. S. Ramsey, cotton buyer, F. A. Sherrill, merchant, W. P. Coone, deputy register of deeds, George W. Clegg, ex-County Treasurer, and then County Surveyor, Lon Cowan, a deputy sheriff, W. H. H. Gregory, cotton buyer, at the post-office in Statesville, at the livery stables of M. Misenheimer and George Daniel, respectively; and that said inquiries were continued, as testified by the witnesses, from 12:40 P. M. of 1 December, 1900, up to 2:30 of the next day; and that said messenger and operator, a short time before 2:30 P. M. on 2 December, 1890, were informed by said parties, or either of them, that W. F. Sherrill lived at Troutman, six or seven miles from Statesville; and that one or more of said parties soon thereafter informed said operator that W. F. Sherrill had moved to Davidson, whereupon said message was immediately transmitted to W. F. Sherrill, the witness, at Davidson, and he received it without giving the defendant notice that said message was not intended for him; and that if you believe the evidence as testified to by all the witnesses for the defendant, there being no conflict, and that they did nothing more, then I charge you (358) that the defendant is guilty of negligence, and you should find the first issue `Yes.'" *245
The jury responded "Yes" to the first and second issues, and "No" to the third and fourth, did not answer the fifth, and to the sixth answered "$1,100." From the judgment on the verdict the defendant appealed.
By a series of decisions it has become settled law in this State that the sender of a telegram may recover, where the company is shown to be negligent, damages for such mental anguish as may be caused either by the failure to deliver or delay in the delivery of the message sent. Young v.Telegraph Co.,
Upon the defendant's own showing its agent at Statesville (359) (whose negligence we have heretofore held was that of the company) violated its rules when he omitted, after spending a day in fruitless inquiry, to wire back for a better address and when he neglected to notify the sender before that time of the failure to find Frank Sherrill. The agent at Statesville testified on the last trial that he did not wire back because he had all of the information that the agent could give him, but on cross-examination stated that it was because he presumed that the agent at Lebanon had given him all the information he could. We do not think he was warranted in this assumption. Having failed to furnish any sufficient reason for not complying with the rule, the matter stands as it did before. His admitted and unexplained omission of duty subjected the company to liability unless it was shown that plaintiff's agent was negligent and that her negligence was the proximate cause of his failure to receive the message more promptly. The court was warranted, therefore, in recapitulating the testimony of defendant's witnesses, as was done in the first paragraph of the charge, and telling the jury that admitting it all to be true the defendant was negligent. *246
The agent at Davidson was also in fault when, after seeing the nature of the message he sent it by a person not employed as a messenger to a citizen of that town who lived but a few hundred yards from him, had no receipt taken for it and made no inquiry to ascertain whether he was the person addressed, especially when W. F. Sherrill was known by him to have a wife and seven children at his home there. The failure to elicit a reply to so urgent a message, which upon its face seemed to demand prompt answer, ought to have stimulated a further investigation on his part. It was clearly an omission of duty to seek no explanation of what seemed unnatural conduct if the message (360) had been delivered to the proper person. Had Schofield ascertained, as by proper diligence he might have learned, that the message had been delivered to the wrong person and so notified the agent at Statesville, it was not too late then to save the plaintiff much unnecessary anguish. We think it was not error, therefore, to give the instructions submitted for plaintiff and numbered 5 and 6. The proper construction to be placed upon number 7 of the same prayer, which was likewise given, seems to us to render it unobjectionable upon any tenable ground. Even though it be conceded that the plaintiff's agent at Lebanon did not exercise due care in making special arrangements for the delivery of an answer, precaution was nevertheless taken to leave in the hands of the agent there a sufficient sum to pay for the delivery at Max, Indiana, where the sender of the telegram was known by him to reside, of any notice that might be received by him. It appeared also that there were daily mails from Lebanon to Max and a post-office at Max. So that if Schofield had done his duty, or if Jones, the operator at Statesville, had upon receipt of the message made more diligent inquiry or instructed the boy entrusted with the message with the important information that the person addressed had been represented as living 7 or 8 miles from Statesville, the result might have been different. Ramsey would not have told the messenger that a person represented by the sender as living within the distance mentioned resided then at Davidson. He would have assumed doubtless on such information that the sender must know of the truth of a statement which constituted a part of the description of the person sent with the telegraph address at Statesville. Due diligence on the part of either would have led to the return of a notice of nondelivery to the sender, and would have elicited a more specific description of locality, since it appears that the plaintiff was at the home of the sendee, the location of (361) which she could and would have designated unmistakably when it became apparently necessary to do so. If the exercise of ordinary care by either would have led to such further explanation as *247
would have enabled Jones to deliver the message to plaintiff, he might have been spared the mental anguish for which he seeks to recover compensation. If, notwithstanding the want of care on the part of the plaintiff's sister and Booher, who acted as her agent in sending the telegram, either Jones or Schofield had exercised due diligence, the suffering complained of would not have ensued. The Judge applied the law correctly to the testimony when he told the jury that the negligent conduct of the agent at Statesville, if the jury found that he had not done his duty, would dispense with the necessity for considering the question of contributory negligence. Pickett v. R. R., post, 616;Deans v. R. R.,
In Scott v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
Cited: Ellerbee v. R. R.,
(366)