144 Ala. 618 | Ala. | 1905
The complaint contains two counts and each predicates a right of recovery upon a breach of contract by defendant, for its failure to transmit and deliver a telegram received from plaintiff’s agent, Abercrombie, at Birmingham, to be sent to plaintiff at Edwards-ville, containing the information of the serious illness
These counts were amended so as to meet certain objections pointed out in the demurrer interposed to each of them. This demurrer was refiled after the amendments were allowed and overruled by the court and properly so.
To the amended complaint the defendant filed two special pleas to which a demurrer was sustained. The first of these averred that plaintiff resided outside the free delivery limits of the town of Edwardsville and that plaintiff’s agent, Abercrombie, did not deposit with the receiving officer a special charge to cover the cost of delivery and that the plaintiff’s agent did not advise that office of the fact that plaintiff resided beyond the free delivery limits of said town, and that the agent at the receiving office had no knowledge of that fact.
The other plea sets up substantially the same facts, Avith the additional averment that plaintiff had a laAV office Avithin the free delivery limits, but that his office avus closed between the time the message was received for transportation and the time the train left for Birmingham. Neither of these aver that the company transmitted the message or attempted to transmit it promptly as it contracted to do, and which the laAV required it to do. “When a message is handed in for transmission the presumption must be and is that sendee lives within the limits of free delivery, or that the sender takes the risk.of delivery unless he makes arrangements for delivery at a greater distance. And handing in such message, AA'ithout explanation, casts no duty on the transmitting operator, other than to forward the message accurately and with proper diligence. And it casts no duty on the terminal employee-or operator other than to copy the message correctly and to deliver it with all convenient speed, if the sendee resides within the free delivery limits.” — W. U. Tel. Co. v. Henderson, 89 Ala. 510, 517.
A failure to send the message raises the presumption of negligence and casts upon defendant the burden of overcoming that presumption.—27 Am. & Eng. Ency. LaAV (2nd ed.) 1090.
There was no merit in the motion to continue the case or to strike it from the jury docket because the demand •for a jury, endorsed upon plaintiff’s complaint, was not signed by him or his attorney.
The act requiring the demand for a jury to be endorsed on the pleadings does not malee such a requirement mandatory. — Acts 1896-7, p. 808, § 11. The demand for a jury is not a pleading within rule 4 of practice, found on page 1186 of the Code.
The question propounded to Abercrombie, “You did not consider him (plaintiff) liable to you for that 25 cents, did you?”: was'clearly objectionable-as calling for the opinion of the witness. Whether plaintiff was liable to witness was a question of law and fact not determinable by him. — Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Franscomb, 124 Ala. 621.
This witness in the course of his cross-examination testified that he sent another message to plaintiff besides the one on wdiich this action was predicated, but that he did not remember whether plaintiff had repaid him 'the charge or not. There was no error, therefore, in sustaining the objection to the question by defendant, “Did he (plaintiff) ever pay for any message except this one?” Evans v. State, 109 Ala. 11.
The questions propounded by defendant to the witness, Sightly, to which objections were sustained, constituting its 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th assignment of error, were
We apprehend that on this version of the transaction it may be declared as a matter of law that it was the duty of defendant to have transmitted the message by 7 p. m., and the risk assumed by Abercrombie was 'that the Edwardsville agent would not be in his office at that hour; and that «uch an assumption by Abercrombie did not authorize the defendant to delay its transmission until the next morning. Nor did Abercrombie assume the risk of the failure of defendant’s agent at Edwardsville, if present at his office, to receive the; message if it was transmitted or his declination to answer the call if one was made on him.
The first exception reserved to the oral charge of thei court is, therefore, without merit. The court in its oral charge also instructed the jury that, if the proof showed that plaintiff sustained damages in any sum, then he was entitled to recover for mental anguish and pain occasion-' ed by his failure to receive the message in time to reach Birmingham before his wife died. In this there was error. Whether the failure to transmit and deliver the telegram was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s mental anguish occasioned by his failure to be with his wife when she died was, under the evidence, a question Of fact for the jury, and not one of law for the court. It cannot be affirmed as matter of law on the testimony that he would have been able to have caught the only train passing Edwardsville on that afternoon for Birming
These principles will suffice for the guidance of another trial, without reviewing in detail the several written charge-s refused to defendant.
Reversed and remanded.