(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. The first question which arises for decision is whether, under the evidence, the telegraph company was guilty of culpable negligence in delaying the transmission and delivery of the message to the physician at Moultrie. The determination of this issue depends almost entirely upon the relationship which Harrell, the agent of the South Georgia Railroad Company at Quitman, occupied towards the parties. Was he the agent of the defendant telegraph company in receiving the message from Dr. Odum, or was he the agent of the sender of the message, or was he in a sense the agent of both the telegraph company and the sender ? It is earnestly eon-
What is said renders unnecessary any discussion of the sixth ground of the amended motion for a new trial.
2. The second question for determination is not free from doubt and difficulty. Was the negligent delay of the telegraph company in transmitting and delivering the telegram to the physician, whereby he was prevented from earlier attendance on the patient and medical treatment of the eye, the proximate cause of the loss of the plaintiff’s eye ? The general rule is that there must be some direct and proximate connection between the negligence or wrong-done and the physical injury«suffered, to warrant a recovery in damages, and this causal connection must be proved b3|" facts based upon direct testimony, or the opinion of experts, and must not depend upon conjecture or guesswork. In this case there could be no-recovery under the law, unless the evidence shows that it was reasonably probable that the plaintiff would not have lost her eye-had the doctor reached her. in time, after promptly receiving the telegram, and by proper treatment could then have saved the dye; and this evidence must have such probative value as to produce a reasonable conviction without resorting to mere conjecture, inconclusive inferences, or bare possibilities. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Ford, 8 Ga. App. 514 (70 S. E. 65). It seems to us that sections 4509 and 4510 of the Civil Code (1910) embody, in a com
If the jury in the present ease were authorized to believe, from the testimony of Dr. Jerkins, that he could have saved the plaintiff’s eye if he had reached her Monday morning by 12 o’clock, or if there was a reasonable probability that he could have saved her eye at that time by proper treatment, the standard of proof laid down by both the Ford and Glawson cases, supra, was reached. The evidence of Dr. Jerkins is not entirely satisfactory on this point, but, taking his evidence all together, we can not say that the hypothesis that he would probably have saved her eye if he had reached her in time is not fairly deducible. He testified that if he could have seen and treated the eye before 12 o’clock Monday, there would have been a reasonable probability that he could have saved it; and, from his opinion and experience as an expert, he states that 70 per cent, of eyes affected like this eye was, provided a physician could get to them and treat them within ten or twelve hours after the occurrence of the first premonitory symptoms of corneal ulcer
3. Error is assigned upon the ruling of the court in admitting in evidence the testimony of Dr. Jerkins as follows: “What percentage of eyes are saved, affected like this eye was, provided you get to them say within 10 or 12 hours after you feel the sharp pain that occurs ?” The reply to this question was that the average would be 70 per cent. This evidence was objected to, on the ground that it was a matter of hearsay and not relevant to the issues in the case. Certainly the question was relevant to one of the two controlling-issues in the case, and we think it was within the province of expert testimony. If based upon the experience of the witness as an expert, it would be admissible for that reason. If it was based upon the concensus of opinion of specialists, we think it would be admissible for that reason. The evidence is similar in character to that presented by statistics gathered by learned and experienced men, such as the average of life contained in mortality tables, and other kindred subjects.
4. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence a judgment of nonsuit was invoked, on the ground that the contract between the sender and the defendant company contained, as a condition precedent to a right of recovery, a stipulation that the claim should be filed by the plaintiff against the company within sixty days after the filing of the message, and there was no evidence that this claim had been filed as required by this condition of the contract. This objection was met by proof that the plaintiff had filed within the sixty days a suit for damages against the defendant company, in
In our opinion the filing of this suit was a substantial compliance with this condition of the contract. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. v. Morse, 5 Ga. App. 504 (63 S. E. 590). And we do not think that a subsequent temporary withdrawal of the suit destroyed the effect of the filing of the suit as a claim made against the company for damages. The first suit, filed within the sixty days from the time when the cause of action arose, had been served upon the company. They then had notice of the claim for damages, and the subsequent temporary withdrawal of the suit could not have taken away from the company the notice previously acquired by the filing and service of the suit.
5. The excerpts from the charge of the court, taken in connection with the entire charge, contain no material error. We think the charge as a whole clearly and distinctly instructed the jury that the standard of diligence required of the defendant company with reference to the transmission and delivery of the message was that of ordinary care, and we do not think that the jury could possibly have inferred,- from the excerpts set out and objected to, that any higher degree of diligence was required from the defendant than that of ordinary care. It was not necessary for the judge to define the words “ordinary care,” in the absence of a timely written request. They are self-explanatory, and it will be presumed that the jury understood the ordinary and common significance of these terms.
6. The assignments - of error on the failure of the court to charge that Harrell was the agent of the plaintiff, and not of the defendant telegraph company, are fully covered by the second division of the opinion. The failure of the court to define to the jury the legal meaning of the word “agency,” even if erroneous, was not harmful, in view of the fact that, as heretofore expressed
7. The failure to charge the jury on the right to keep its office closed on legal holidays was immaterial, under the facts of this case. The jury were authorized to believe that the question of legal holiday was not relevant. The message was received bjr the agent, Harrell, and, in the exercise of ordinary diligence, could (at least the jury would have been authorized to so infer) have been transmitted and delivered during the hours when the offices both at Quitman and Moultrie were kept open, under the rules of the company, on legal holidays. Besides, the company accepted the telegram on a legal holiday, and was under the duty to exercise ordinary diligence, after having accepted it, to transmit and deliver it to the addressee on that day, notwithstanding the fact that the day was a legal holiday.
8. It is contended in the last ground of the amended motion for a new trial that the court erred in not restricting the right of recovery to damages for a partial failure of vision, since Dr. Jer- ' kins’s testimony, considered most favorably for the plaintiff, only bore the construction that, even if he had reached the plaintiff in time, he could only have partially saved the vision of the eye. The evidence of Dr. Jerkins on this point is not entirely clear; but he does state that there was a reasonable probability that if he had reached the plaintiff in time, her vision would have been preserved. He does not say whether this preservation would have been partial or complete, and the jury were authorized to draw the latter inference from his evidence, taken as a whole. The issue was not so clearly and distinctly made as to have demanded from the court a pertinent charge, without a timely written request.
After giving the entire ease a most careful consideration, we fail to discover any error of such a material character as would warrant the grant of another trial.
Judgment affirmed. Pottle, J., not presiding.