75 Tex. 537 | Tex. App. | 1889
Plaintiff’s petition charges that on the 22d and 23d days of July, 1887, his wife S. A. Feegles was at her home in Fort Worth, Texas, and on the same day her son by a former marriage, Lee Mahone, and his wife Bertha Mahone were residing in the town of
The petition avers that in compliance with said request and promise the said Bertha Mahone, as the agent of said S. A. Feegles, on the 22d of July, 1887, caused to be delivered to defendant, at the telegraph office in Malvern, for transmission and delivery to S. A. Feegles, at her place of residence in Fort Worth, a telegram in the following words and figures:
“Malvern, Ark., July 22, 1887.
“ To S. A. Feegles, cor. Seventeenth and Calhoun Sts., Fort Worth, Texas:
“ Come to Malvern first train; Lee is very dangerously wounded.
[Signed] “Bertha Mahone.”
That the telegram was filed with defendant in its telegraph office in Malvern at 7 o’clock a. m., July 22, 1887, and the fee for its transmission and delivery was paid by the sender, and the defendant, in consideration of the premises, promised to immediately transmit and deliver the message.
Plaintiff represents that the son died at 11 o’clock a. m. on the day the message was sent, from the effects of his wounds; and that failing to receive an answer to her telegram, and believing therefrom that the mother of her husband was away from her home and had not received her telegram, and being “justified ” by the warmth of the weather and the absence of any necessity for delaying it, the body was interred at 10 o’clock p. m. of the day of the death; that if the telegram had been promptly transmitted and delivered, and within a reasonable time for it to be done, the mother could and would immediately have notified the wife of her son of the receipt of her message by another dispatch, and would in that way have let her know that she would go to Malvern on the first train, and the mother would have done so and would have reached there about 12 o’clock of the night of the day on which her son died, or about 12 m. of the next day, and in time to be present at the burial, as, in that case, it would have been delayed for her arrival. The petition charges that defendant, by its want of care and gross negligence, failed to deliver the telegram until nearly noon of the day following its receipt to be transmitted; that after the receipt of said telegram, and before the departure of the next train in the direction of Malvern, plaintiff’s wife received another telegram from her son’s widow informing her of the burial of the body. The petition avers that defendant was duly notified of plaintiff’s claim for damages,
The overruling defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s petition is assigned as error, on the ground that “there is nothing in the face of the message by which we could in contracting to transmit and deliver it contemplate that the relation of mother and child existed between the parties, and that a mother’s feelings would be injured by a failure upon appellant’s part to perform its contract.” We think there was no error committed in overruling the demurrer. Tel. Co. v. Edsall, 74 Texas, 329; Tel. Co. v. Adams, ante, 531.
The other errors properly assigned relate to the same question, stated in different forms, that the first one does, and are involved in its decision.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered December 20 1889.