81 S.E. 657 | S.C. | 1914
May 12, 1914. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff, who is an attorney at law, brought this action to recover damages for the alleged negligence of defendant in failing to transmit and deliver with reasonable promptness the following message, which was addressed to him: "Go to Columbia tomorrow. Represent me before executive committee." The message was sent by Mr. W. Jasper Talbert, from Parksville, to the plaintiff, at Edgefield; both places being in Edgefield county. It was filed about 7 o'clock p.m., September 3d, and delivered the next morning, about 9 o'clock, too late for plaintiff to catch the *415 last train leaving Edgefield that day at 9:10 o'clock a.m. for Columbia. Mr. Talbert had been a candidate in the Democratic primary election, held in the latter part of August, for the purpose of nominating a candidate of the party for the office of United States Senator, and desired to contest the election before the State executive committee, which met at Columbia, on September 4th. The damage alleged was the loss of the fee which plaintiff would have been entitled to charge for his professional services in representing Mr. Talbert before the executive committee.
The defendant demurred to the complaint for insufficiency, on the ground that the damages sued for are special, and there is no allegation that, when the contract was made, defendant knew the special circumstances out of which such damages would result, if the telegram was not promptly delivered. We have frequently held that to recover special damages, arising out of breach of contract, it is necessary to allege and prove that, when the contract was made, defendant knew the peculiar circumstances which would give rise to such damages; in case of a breach thereof.
The complaint is sufficient if it alleges knowledge of facts and circumstances from which a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence should have known that such damages would result from delay in delivering the message, for facts are well pleaded which may, by reasonable intendment, be inferred from the facts and circumstances directly alleged. Therefore, in determining the sufficiency of the allegations of the complaint in which the telegram is set out in full, we may consider the information which the telegram itself afforded, when read in the light of the attendant circumstances known to defendant, and also alleged in the complaint.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff is and, at the time in question, was an attorney at law, engaged in the practice of his profession, at Edgefield, and that he was well known to *416 the agents of defendant. The allegation of this knowledge in connection with that afforded by the message is a sufficient allegation, at least by intendment, that defendant knew that Mr. Talbert's purpose was to engage the professional services of plaintiff. The law supplied an obligation on the part of Mr. Talbert to pay the plaintiff a reasonable fee for his services. The natural and reasonable inferences from these circumstances would be that delay in transmission and delivery of the message, which would prevent plaintiff from getting to Columbia in time to appear before the executive committee, might result in such damages to him as he has sued for.
Moreover, in the sixth paragraph of the complaint, it is alleged "that the defendant, its agents and servants, had full knowledge of the importance of said message, and of the importance and necessity for the prompt transmission and delivery of the same." While it is true that this is not an allegation, in so many words, that defendant knew the particular circumstances from which the special damages sued for would result, in case of delay, yet such knowledge may well be inferred from "knowledge of the importance of said message, and of the importance and necessity for the prompt transmission and delivery of the same." It must not be overlooked that the demurrer admits every fact alleged in the complaint, as well as every fact which may be reasonably inferred from those directly alleged.
The case of Mood v. Telegraph Co.,
If it be said that the allegation of the telegram is not the allegation of the notice, which its contents may impart, but merely the allegation of the evidence by which such notice *418 may be proved, then the answer is that the difference is technical rather than substantial. It would have been more technically correct for the plaintiff to have alleged the facts and circumstances out of which the damages sued for arose, and that defendant knew of those facts and circumstances when it made the contract. But the defendant cannot complain at this fault in the plaintiff's pleading, whereby the evidence to prove the fact of notice is set out instead of the bare allegation of notice, because it has not been prejudiced thereby.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE GAGE did not sit in this case.