This аction was brought in the Monroe Circuit Court to recover damages charged to have been sustained by the appellee’s decedent by reason of the appellant’s delay of twenty-four hours in delivering a telegraphic message to him. The cause was tried by a jury, and a judgmеnt was rendered upon the verdict against the appellant for $700. From this judgment this appeal was taken. The first error assigned is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The substance of the complaint is: That the defendant was сonducting a general telegraph business between Wheeling, Missouri, and Bloomington, Indiana; that on January 7, 1898, one Thomas Adams, deposited with the defendant’s agent at Wheeling, for transmission to Ancil Adams, the plaintiff, the following message: “Wheeling Mo., Jan. 7, 1898. Ancil Adams, Bloomington, Ind. Riley very low. Come at onсe. Deliver. Special messenger guaranteed. Thos. Adams”. Two dollars and fifty cents was deposited as a guaranty of the cost of transmission and delivery; the telegram was not transmitted with impartiality and in good faith, and without delay, and in the order of time in which it was received, but was delayed twenty-four hours at Bloomington, Indiana; Riley was the father of Thomas Adams,
The usual rule for the ascertainment of damages to plaintiff in an action for delay in trаnsmitting his telegraphic dispatch is stated to be such as naturally arise from a breach of the contract, and such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation -of both parties at the time they made the contract as to the probablе result of the breach of it. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Henley,
The courts which hold that damages for mental suffering alone may be recovered base the recovery upon the fact that the language of the message gives such notice to the company that the message concerns such event or events as
Counsel for appellee have moved to dismiss this appeal, and strike the case from thе docket of the Appellate Court. The facts relied upon as grounds for dismissal are as follows : Judgment was obtained in favor of Ancil Adams in the Monroe Circuit Court, November, 1899; Adams in whose favor the judgment was rendered died in February, 1900; the transcript was filed in this court in September, 1900; so that it appears that Adams, in whose favor the judgment was rendered, died three months after its rendition, and the transcript on appeal was filed six months after his death.
Section 644, Burns 1901, provides that appeals may be taken from the circuit court and superior court to the Supreme Court by either party from all final judgments. By §645, Burns 1901, one against whom a judgment has been rendered may appeal from such judgment at any time within one year from its rendition. Section 648, supra, reads: “In case of the death of any or all the parties to a
The gеneral policy of the law would seem to make it the duty of the court to construe the sections of the statute set out as directory of the method to be pursued in the prosectition of appeals, rather than a limitation or abridgement of the substantial right to appeаl at all in such cases. In the ease of Stout v. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co.,
In Diefendorf v. House, 9 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 243, the court said thаt the practice of entering a judgment, nunc pro tunc, as of a term prior to the death of the party, such case depends upon the rule .of common law, “that when parties are hung up by act of law, neither of them loses his right, but eventually judgment is entered up, nunc pro tunc, as if the party were still alive.
In Shafer v. Shafer,
An act concerning the survival of claims for personal injuries, Acts of 1897, p. 227, reads as follows: “That whoever has a claim for personal injuries and obtains judgment for the same against any person, company or corporation in any trial court of this State, and from which judgment any person, company or corporation, against whom or which the same was obtained, shall appeal to the Supreme or Appellаte Court of the State, and such judgment be reversed by such Supreme or Appellate Court, and a new trial be granted to appellant thereon; and if the person who obtained such judgment should die, pending such appeal, or before a new trial after such reversal can bе had, such claim for personal injuries shall survive and may be prosecuted by the personal representatives of such decedent, as other claims are prosecuted for and on behalf of decedents’ estates”.
It is evident that by “pending appeal” is meant from the time of the announcement by the defeated party of his intention to appeal. Otherwise if the plaintiff dies after the judgment, and before the transcript is filed, his cause of action dies with him, notwithstanding this section of the statute which obviously intended to provide against such contingency. If such is nоt the proper construction of the act it must be held to discriminate in favor of certain persons who may die at one time, as against those who may die at another time. Such an intention can not be attributed to the legislature. Therefore, since that body has made provisiоns for the survival of the cause of action after reversal in such cases, in doing so it has given expression to the legislative construction of §§648, 649 Burns 1901. By use of the words “appeal” and “reversal” we may conclude
The cases cited by counsel for appellee are distinguishable from the case at bar. In Moore v. Slack,
The conclusiоn from each of these cases is that to constit\ite a valid appeal, where death occurs after judgment and before the transcript is filed, it is necessary for the appellant to substitute in the assignment of errors the name of the personal representatives of thе deceased judgment holder, and to have notice of the appeal served upon the substituted party. This practice was followed in the present appeal. The name of “Mary E. Adams, administratrix of the estate of Ancil Adams, deceased”, appears as aрpellee in the assignment of errors^ and the fact is noted of his
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant’s demurrer to the complaint.
