66 So. 926 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The case went to- the jury on the-first and second counts of the complaint as it was last amended. The first count contained averments . to the-effect: That the defendant, in consideration of the payment to it by or for the plaintiff of the price of the message, to wit, 25 cents, or of the liability incurred by the plaintiff to pay that price, undertook to transmit and deliver the following message which the plaintiff' delivered or caused to be delivered to it on the 22d day of February, 1913, at its office in Blocton, Ala..: “Bloc-ton, Alabama, 2/22/1913. To J. M. Holland, Keller-man, Alabama. Come at once. Lena Holland.” That.
In several ways the defendant raised the question of the plaintiff’s right to recover damages for mental suffexúng or distress. One contention is that the relation between the plaintiff, the person to whom the message was addressed, and the person whose condition occasioned the sending of it, was not such a one as would enable the former to mtaintain a claim to damages for mental sxxffering attributed to her being deprived of the opportunity of securing the personal presence of the person to whom the message was sent in the time of the plaintiff’s trouble because of the serious personal injury from which her husband was suffering. In this connectioxx the counsel for the appellant refer to the decision in the case of Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Ayers, 131 Ala. 391, 31 South. 78, 90 Am. St. Rep. 92. In that case it
Another contention is that such damages are not recoverable by-the -plaintiff because it is not made to appear that the death or burial of the husband occurred during the time his father’s coming was delayed by his failure to get the message promptly. The right to recover such damages is not to be denied merely because the serious ailment of the person closely related to the sender and addressee of the message which occasioned the sending of it did not result fatally. — Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Crumpton, 138 Ala. 632, 36 South. 517. One may as well be distressed by the absence of another whose presence is felt to.be needed for practical aid and support in time of serious sickness as by his absence after the fatal termination of such sickness has rendered impossible the enjoyment of the benefits from his presence which before were hoped for. — Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Saunders, 164 Ala. 234, 51 South. 176, 137 Am. St. Rep. 35.
Still another contention is that such damages were not recoverable because of the failure of the complaint to show by appropriate averments that when the alleged contract was entered into it was in the contemplation of the parties to it, or, at any rate, of one of them, the defendant, that such damages were likely to be sustained in consequence of a failure promptly to transmit and deliver the message. The averments of the complaint show that when the defendant’s agent accepted the message for transmission and delivery he knew or was informed that the husband of the sender of it was seriously ill and that it was his father to whom the message was addressed. There is little plausibility in the suggestion that one whose receipt of such a message was accompanied by this information was without notice
The court did not err in overruling objections to the testimony of the plaintiff to the effect that prior to the time of sending the message one of her husband’s legs had been broken, that at that time he was worse than he had been, that previously and since his injury his parents had been informed of his condition, “that the doctor had left it with them whether the leg should be taken out of the plaster cast,” and that she wanted his father’s advice about this. This testimony tended to prove the averments of the complaint as to the serious illness of the plaintiff’s husband, and the circumstances of and occasion for her sending the message in question —of the general import and urgency of which the complaint showed that the defendant had notice — and the likelihood of the addressee’s complying with the request made in the message promptly after its receipt by him.
Evidence that plaintiff’s husband’s leg was amputated not long afterwards was of a circumstance indicating the gravity of the injury he had sustained and the plaintiff’s anxiety, when he grew worse, to secure the presence of her father-in-law. This evidence also, in connection with that of other circumstances, tended to prove the effect upon the plaintiff of the failure of her message to accomplish its purpose promptly, and was properly admitted.
The defendant was afforded full opportunity to give its version of the cause of the delay in transmitting the message and of the efforts made to remove that cause by restoring its line between Tuscaloosa and Keller-man to such a condition that messages could be transmitted over it. It was for the jury to say from the evidence whether the agent at Blocton sent the message off as quickly as he could, and whether the agent to whom was intrusted the duty of discovering and remedying troubles with the wire which interfered with the use of it for transmitting messages was duly careful in the performance of that duty; and it was not error for the court to refuse to- permit these agents, as witnesses
The evidence introduced by the defendant tended to prove that when its agent at Blocton ascertained that, because of some trouble with the line between Tuscaloosa, the relay station, and Kellerman, the message could not be telegraphed to its destination on the day of its receipt, he mailed it that day, Saturday, with the result that it reached Kellerman on Monday morning and was then delivered to the addressee, who left for Blocton on the first train thereafter. One of the defendant’s breaches of duty which was charged in the second count was its alleged negligent failure to inform plaintiff of its inability to transmit and deliver the message promptly. Plaintiff was not so informed on the day the message was sent, or on the next day, and there was evidence tending to prove that by other available means she could have gotten the message to her father-in-law about 36 hours sooner than he received it from the defendant. If, as there was evidence tending to prove, the defendant’s agent at Blocton was informed when he received the message of the urgency for prompt service with reference to it, the plaintiff, if, as there was evidence tending to prove, she could, by the exercise of due diligence, have been communicated with after the agent at Blocton ascertained the fact, should have been informed of the inability of the defendant promptly to transmit and deliver it. — Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hill, 163 Ala. 18, 50 South. 218, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 618, 19 Ann. Cas. 1058; Fleischner v. Pacific Postal Telegraph Cable Co. (C. C.) 55 Fed. 738.
An exception was reserved to the following statement made in the oral charge tó the jury:
“The physician or physicians attending him wished to consult with Mr. Holland’s father about the condi
It is pointed ont that there was no testimony to the effect that when the message was received by the defendant, or before the addressee reached Blocton, the question of amputation was under consideration, of that any physician desired at that time to consult with any one on that subject. According to the testimony, it was not till afterwards that the question of amputation was suggested. So it must be conceded that the subject of this exception was a misstatement of the evidence. But we are not of opinion that the making of that misstatement was an error which requires a reversal of the judgment. The- instructions contained in the oral charge and those given in written charges requested by the defendant, in stating the facts required to be found by the jury to entitle them to render' a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and the grounds upon which damages could be awarded, made it plain that the wishes of the physician or physicians as to consulting any one, and a postponement of the gratification of such wishes, could cut no figure in the plaintiff’s asserted right of recovery or in the assessment of damages to her. In the light of the instructions given, it cannot be supposed that the jury were influenced in their finding by the misstatement mentioned or that the defendant was prejudiced thereby. Without disobeying instructions, the jury could not, in finding for the plaintiff or in determining the amount of damages to be awarded, have been misled to their conclusions by that which the court mistakenly stated as a fact disclosed by the evidence.
An exception was reserved to a part of the oral charge ’ which dealt with the question of the duty of the defendant’s agent at Blocton as to giving notice of his inability to get the message to its destination by wire. The
It is only by disassociating from the rest of the oral charge the other parts of it to which exceptions were reserved that those parts of the charge can be made the subjects of the criticism aimed at them by the counsel for the appellant. The charge read as a whole, as it should be, could not have left the jury under the impression that they were authorized to render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff unless they found from the evidence that the defendant breached a duty as alleged in the complaint, and that the plaintiff sustained damage from such breach of duty, or that any damages could be awarded except such as the evidence showed that the plaintiff sustained in consequence of a breach of duty alleged and proved.
It cannot be said that there was an- absence of evidence of negligence for which the defendant was responsible and which contributed to the plaintiff’s failure to get her message to its destination promptly. On
There was evidence tending to prove the material averments of each of the counts of the complaint upon which the case went to the jury. This statement, in connection with what already has been said, sufficiently indicates the grounds upon which may be rested the conclusions that the court was not in error in refusing to ¡give written charges 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 13, and 15 requested by the defendant.
Refused charge 14 was inaccurate in stating in effect that the case submitted to the jury was one for a breach of contract. The second count was in tort, for the al
In view of the state of facts which there ivas evidence tending to prove, there is nothing in the amount of the verdict to indicate that it was the result of passion, prejudice, or other improper influence operating upon the jury. It is not made to appear that the court was in error in overruling the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial.
No reversible error has been found in the record.
Affirmed.
Note. — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Walker, P. J., before his retirement from the Court of Appeals, and has been adopted by the court.