57 So. 87 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
This was a special action of trespass on the case which was brought by appellee against appellant for the alleged negligence of appel
When his wife died, appellee, wishing her father to know about her death, and also desiring his presence at the funeral, requested B. E. Cheatham to wire his said father-in-law at Winfield, Ala., that his wife was dead and also the time when she would be buried. Acting under said instructions, Cheatham delivered to appellant a telegram for transmission to Caddell at Win-field, which, Avhen he delivered it to appellant, read as follows: “July 5, 1907. To H. K. Caddell, Winfield, Alabama. Mrs. B. E. Bennett just died. Will' be buried to-morrow eve. B. E. Cheatham for B. E. Bennett.”
Appellant undertook to transmit and deliver the telegram to Caddell jat Winfield, 'and appellee paid to appellant 25 cents, its customary charges, for so doing. The telegram was transmitted to Winfield and
A mistake was made by the servants of appellant in transmitting the message, in that the words “to-morrow eve” were changed to the words “to-day eve,” and as the telegram was received too late for Caddell to reach Columbus on the 5th, and as he naturally presumed that his daughter would be buried on that day, he did" not attempt to go to Columbus or to attend the funeral. The evidence tends to show that but for the above mistake made by the servants of appellant in the transmission of the telegram, Caddell would have been present at his daughter’s funeral. —Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Snell, Infra, 56 South. 854.
1. 'When a man’s wife dies, if he is a normal man, his thoughts turn, naturally, to her people, for it is her people, next to himself, who are most afflicted by her death. The wife’s mother appears to have been dead, and this telegram was sent to her father, who, next to her husband and her children, stood most closely to her, and who, by reason of his own grief, would have been the most natural person in the world to have given sympathy and comfort to the husband in his sorrow. He was the father-in-law of the husband, the grandfather of his children, and, if the husband was a normal man, he entertained for Caddell an affection and veneration second only to that in which he held his own parents. The relationship of the parties was such as to warrant the recovery of damages for mental
It was, under the facts in this case, for the jury to say whether the appellee suffered mental pain because of the absence of his father-in-law at the time of the funeral.—Western Union Telegraph Co. v. McMorris, 158 Ala. 573, 48 South. 349; 132 Am. St. Rep. 46.
2. The appellant contends that, as the evidence fails to show that appellee when he delivered the telegram to appellant for transmission disclosed to it that the sendee was his father-in-law, appellee is not entitled to recover for his mental suffering caused by its error in transmitting the telegram and the absence of the father-in-law occasioned thereby.
We do not regard the question which the appellant thus seeks to present as an open one in Alabama. We think that the decisions of oiir Supreme Court are clearly to the effect that when a telegram is sent announcing serious illness or death, and the relationship, by blood or marriage, between the sender and the sendee is such as to warrant the recovery of damages for mental suffering, on account of such relationship, caused by negligence in the transmission or delivery of such telegram, the sender may recover for mental suffering occasioned by reason of such negligence, whether the relationship is disclosed or not. —Western Union Telegraph Co. v. McMorris, 158 Ala. 563, 48 South. 349, 132 Am. St. Rep. 46.
It seems that in those jurisdictions where the rule above announced does not obtain, the sendee may always recover for mental pain or suffering occasioned
4. A prima facie case was made out by appellee, so far as the negligence vel non of appellant was concerned, when his evidence disclosed the fact that the telegram delivered to Caddell was not a copy of the telegram which appellee delivered to it at Columbus to be transmitted to Caddell. 4 Mayfield’s Dig. p. 935.
We have above discussed all of the assignments of error in this case which appear to us to possess merit, and we find no error in the record.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.