139 Ga. 385 | Ga. | 1913
Mrs. Y. H. Reynolds brought suit against the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by her on account of the negligence of the defendant. The defendant filed its general demurrer, which was overruled by the court, and it excepted. The petitioner alleges that her husband was a subscriber to the telephone service of the defendant for a valuable consideration, and as such was entitled to prompt and efficient service at the hands of the defendant by night and by day, by answering all telephone signals made 'at petitioner’s home in the regular and customary way. Plaintiff lived with her husband in DeKalb county, Georgia, at a distance of from five to six miles from Atlanta, where her family physician lived, who was also a subscriber in good standing, for a money consideration, for the telephone service of defendant. He lived approximately five miles from the plaintiff, and his telephone was a part of the same general telephone system operated by the defendant. Plaintiff expected to be delivered of a child on or about December 8, 1910, and her family physician was apprised of the fact and agreed to remain at home all night of the above-named date, subject to the call of plaintiff’s husband. At 2:30 o’clock on the morning of December 9, 1910, her husband went to the telephone in his residence and signaled the defendant company in the usual way, and was promptly given the telephone connection with the family physician and had 'a conversation with him in. reference to plaintiff’s condition. At that time plaintiff was resting quietly and no symptoms of the delivery had appeared, and the physician instructed her husband to call him every twenty minutes during the remainder of the night to explain her condition, and the physician stated to her husband in this conversation that he was ready to come to plaintiff’s home as soon he was advised that the delivery of the child was imminent, -or as soon as any symptoms of such should appear. The physician owned an automobile, and the roads'between his home and that of plaintiff were good, and it would take twenty or thirty minutes for the physician to thus travel the distance. Shortly after 2:30 o’clock on the
It is insisted by the defendant in error that the cases of Western Union Tel. Co. v. Ford, 8 Ga. App. 514 (70 S. E. 65), and Glawson
Judgment reversed.