Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Potts

120 Tenn. 37 | Tenn. | 1907

MR. Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Action to recover damages for failure to promptly deliver a telegram, recovery in the court below for $500, and an appeal in error by the company.

The facts are as follows;

The mother of Mrs. Clara Potts, of Chattanooga, Tennessee, was lying at the point of death near Springville, Ala. Mrs. Potts requested her brother, W. D. Self, to telegraph news of her mother’s death to Chattanooga, when it should occur, in time to enable her to be present at the funeral. The arrangement between them was that the message was to be sent to her husband, A. B. *41Potts, at his place of business, and he promised his wife that on receiving such a message he would promptly deliver it to her. Mr. Self complied with his promise by handing to plaintiff in error for transmission the following message:

“Springville, Ala., 2/14, 1905.
“A. B. Potts, care of Master Mechanic, O. S.
Shops, Chattanooga, Tenn.
“Mother died this morning, seven o’clock; come to Springville, train one, tonight.
“W. D. Self."

The message reached Chattanooga at 2:48 p. m. on the same day, and could have been delivered in ample time to enable Mrs. Potts to leave for Springville on the 6:30 p. m. train. If she had received the message in time, she could and would have reached Springville in ample time for the funeral. The company, however, negligently failed to deliver the message until after the 6:30 train had left. In consequence of this negligence Mrs. Potts could not leave for Springville until the next morning. She left on the earliest train possible after the delivery of the message to her husband, but was able to reach her mother’s home only after the interment had taken place.

Mrs. Potts and her husband brought suit to recover damages on this state of facts, with the result already stated.

The company had no further knowledge or notice of the relations of the parties or the probable consequences *42of a negligent failure to deliver the message, than such as was furnished by the face of the message itself.

The company moved for peremptory instructions in the court below, which was refused, and it insists here that the court erred in denying the motion.

The plaintiff in error insists that the facts stated do not make out a case of liability against it, since, as it claims, Mrs. Potts was neither sender nor sendee of the message, and there was nothing on its face indicating that she had any interest in it. Hence it is said the consequences to Mrs. Potts, in the way of mental suffering or otherwise, or a failure on the part of the company to deliver the message, could not have been within reasonable contemplation.

At a former term of the court the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed, and a petition for rehearing was thereafter filed by the telegraph company, and was held under advisement.

It is not necessary to discuss the right to damages for mental anguish arising from delay in the delivery of a social telegram. That question has long been settled in this State. Wadsworth v. Telegraph Company, 86 Tenn., 695, 8 S. W., 574, 6 Am. St. Rep., 864; Railroad v. Griffin, 92 Tenn., 694, 22 S.W.,737; Telegraph Company v. Mellon, 96 Tenn., 66, 33 S. W., 725; Telegraph Company v. Robinson, 97 Tenn., 638, 37 S. W., 545, 34 L. R. A., 431; Telegraph Co. v. Frith, 105 Tenn., 167, 58 S. W., 118; Gray v. Telegraph Co., 108 Tenn., 39, 64 S. W., 1063, 56 L. R. A., 301, 91 Am. St. Rep., 706; Telephone *43Co. v. Brown, 104 Tenn., 56, 55 S. W., 155. The right to sne may be in either the sender or the sendee, and may be either on the contract or for breach of the statutory duty to promptly deliver. If on the contract, the right of the sendee is based on the proposition that the contract must be treated as made between the sender and the company for the benefit of the sendee; if under the statute, the sendee sues as the “aggrieved party.” Manier & Co. v. Telegraph Co., 94 Tenn., 442, 448, 29 S. W., 732; Gray v. Telegraph Co., 108 Tenn., 39, 64 S. W., 1063, 56 L. R. A., 301, 91 Am. St. Rep., 706; Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, supra. The ground of the action, if on the contract, is for the breach thereof; if under the statute, it is for the failure to perform the duty imposed, and in effect the action is equivalent to one for negligence. Gray v. Telegraph Co., 108 Tenn., 39, 49, 50, 64 S. W., 1063, 56 L. R. A., 301, 91 Am. St. Rep., 706; Wadsworth v. Telegraph Co., supra; Jones v. Telegraph Co., 101 Tenn., 442, 47 S. W., 699; Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, supra. The measure of damages, whether the suit be on the contract or in tort, is, jn this class of cases substantially the same, viz: (1) If there has been a violation of the contract, or a breach of duty on the part of the company, the aggrieved party is entitled to recover, in any event, nominal damages. Wadsworth v. Telegraph Co., supra; Jones v. Telegraph Co., supra; Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, supra; Gray v. Telegraph Co., supra. (2) Such damages as may be fairly and reasonably considered as arising naturally, in the usual *44course of things, from the breach of the contract or the violation of public duty, or such damages as may he reasonably supposed to have been within the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of a breach of it. Wadsworth v. Telegraph Co., supra; Railroad v. Griffin, supra; Telegraph Co. v. Reid, 120 Ky., 231, 85 S. W., 1171, 70 L. R. A., 289; McPeek v. Telegraph Co., 107 Iowa, 356, 78 N. W., 63, 43 L. R. A., 214, 70 Am. St. Rep., 205; 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.), p. 1059. (3) In a proper case, punitive damages. Telegraph Co. v. Frith, 105 Tenn., 167, 58 S. W., 118; Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, supra. The company may learn the grounds on which it may base an estimate of, or anticipate, the damages that may result or naturally flow from a failure to properly deliver the message, either from facts communicated to its agents dehors the message or from the face of the message itself. Pepper v. Telegraph Co., 87 Tenn., 554, 558, 11 S. W., 783, 4 L. R. A., 660, 10 Am. St. Rep., 699; Telegraph Co. v. Frith, supra; Telegraph Co. v. Adams, 75 Tes., 531, 12 S. W., 857, 6 L. R. A., 844, 16 Am. St. Rep., 920; postal Telegraph Co. v. Lathrop, 131 Ill., 575, 23 N. E., 583, 7 L. R. A., 474, 19 Am. St. Rep., 55; Telegraph Co. v. Feegles, 75 Tex., 537, 12 S. W., 860; Reese v. Telegraph Co., 123 Ind., 294, 24 N. E., 163, 7 L. R. A., 583; Telegraph Co. v. Swearingin, 97 Tex., 293, 78 S. W., 491, 104 Am. St. Rep., 876; Bright v. Telegraph Co., 132 N. C., 317, 43 S. E., 841; Davis v. Telegraph Co., 107 Ky., 527, 54 S. W., 849, 92 Am. St. *45Rep., 371; Telegraph Co. v. Edmondson, 91 Tex., 206, 42 S. W., 549.

It is not necessary to a recovery that the suit should be brought either by the person whose name appears in the telegram as the sender, or by the one whose name appears as the sendee. It may be brought by one whose name appears upon the face of the message as the beneficiary thereof, though neither the sender nor the sendee. Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, supra, Whitehill v. Telegraph Co. (C. C.), 136 Fed., 499, 500. Or it may be brought bv the undisclosed principal of the sender. Milliken v. Telegraph Co., 110 N. Y., 403, 18 N. E., 251, 1 L. R. A., 281; Leonard v. Telegraph Co., 41 N. Y., 544, 1 Am. Rep., 446, 454; Harkness v. Telegraph Co., 73 Iowa, 190, 34 N. W., 811, 5 Am. St. Rep., 672; Telegraph Co. v. Broesche, 72 Tex., 654, 10 S. W., 734, 13 Am. St. Rep., 843.

It Avould seem to follow, from the principles above stated, that the undisclosed principal of the sendee might also bring the action; but the contrary has been held in two cases. Lee v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 51 Mo. App., 375; Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Schriver, 141 Fed., 538, 72 C. C. A., 596, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.), 678. And there seems to be a general disinclination to extend the right of recovery for mental anguish, as distinguished from physical injury, beyond the point already reached by the authorities. However, it seems to be recognized that, Avhere the person interested in the telegram is the undisclosed principal of both the sender *46and the sendee, he may recover. Leonard v. Telegraph Co., supra; Milliken v. Telegraph Co., supra.

This is the case we have before the court now for consideration. Both the sender and the sendee were the agents of the undisclosed principal, Mrs. Clara Potts.

The petition to rehear and the accompanying brief, so far as they need be noticed, make the point that the court, in the former opinion, erred in respect of the measure of damages. It is conceded that the undisclosed principal of the sender of a telegram could sue for breach of the contract, but it is said that he would have to adopt the contract as he found it, that he would be entitled to recover only such damages as the apparent sender could recover, and that this would necessarily exclude damages for the mental anguish of the undisclosed principal; that the telegraph company and the apparent sender, together with the language of the message, would be the persons and the matter for consideration ; that the company would be presumed to have in contemplation the language, purport, and effect of the message, and the relation of the apparent sender thereto, and would be liable to the apparent sender, in case of a breach of duty in respect of the message, for all such damages as might be considered as arising naturally, in the ordinary course of things, from such breach of contract or violation of duty, but this could not be held to include a special injury to a third person, whose particular relation'to the matter could not be held in contemplation, because not only unknown, but un-*47suggested bj the language of tbe message or otherwise; that where the subject of the message is some commercial matter, and a breach of duty occurs on the part of the telegraph company, the nature of the business, which is the subject of the telegram, places the parties thereto in possession of data from which they may contemplate the probable effect of a failure in correct and seasonable transmission and delivery on the part of the company, and that an undisclosed principal can obtain the benefit of this as fully as the agent, the apparent sender; but that the case is different in respect of social messages, since ih these the personal element enters of the special relation of the parties thereto, and unless the existence of such parties and the fact that they have an interest in the message be called to the attention of the company, by something in the language of the message itself or by collateral information given to the company or its agent in the course of the transaction, it is impossible that there should have been had in contemplation the relationship and interest of such parties, and the probable result to them of a breach. It is said that it was on this principle that the recoveries were based in favor of the undisclosed principal in the two commercial cases referred to in the original opinion (Leonard v. Telegraph Co., 41 N. Y., 544, 1 Am. Rep., 446, 454; Harkness v. Telegraph Co., 73 Iowa, 190, 34 N. W., 811, 5 Am. St. Rep., 672), and on which relief for mental anguish Avas denied in Telegraph Co. v. Kerr, 4 Tex. Civ. App., 280, 23 S. W., 564, and Pacific Express *48Co. v. Redman (Tex. Civ. App.), 60 S. W. 677, and that the two mental anguish cases relied upon in the original opinion (Cashion v. Telegraph Co., 124 N. C., 459, 32 S. E., 746, 45 L. R. A., 160, and Landie v. Telegraph Co., 124 N. C., 528, 32 S. E., 886) have, since the delivery of our former opinion, been discredited by the supreme court of North Carolina; the first-mentioned case having been in terms overruled, and the second in effect, by the case of Helms v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 143 N. C., 386, 55 S. E., 831, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.), 249, 118 Am. St. Rep., 811, it having been held in the case last cited, and the two Texas cases (4 Tex. Civ. App., 280, 23 S. W., 564, and [Tex. Civ. App.] 60 S. W., 677) that the undisclosed principal in a social telegram could not recover for his mental anguish, but only such damages as the apparent sender could recover, that is, the cost of the telegram.

This view of the matter was not suggested by counsel at the former hearing, nor did it occur to the court; but after further examination of the authorities and careful reflection we are of the opinion that this is the correct Ariew. Of course, there never could have been any doubt of the general proposition that an undisclosed principal of the sender could have the benefit of a contract made for him by his agent in the name of the latter; but the conditions which he must submit to in availing himself of such contract were not sufficiently attended to in due correlation to the measure of damages in cases of the character before us.

*49In our own case of Foster v. Smith, 2 Cold., 474, 478, 88 Am. Dec., 604, the conrt said:

“It will make no difference ’ in such cases . .• . that the principal, at the time of entering into the contract, is unknown or unsuspected, nor that the third person has dealt with the agent, supposing him to he the sole principal. The only effect of the last consideration is that the principal will not he permitted, while insist-, ing upon the contract, to intercept the right of such third person in regard to the agent but he must take the contract, subject to all the rights of such third person, in the same way as if the agent was the sole principal, and subject to these rights the principal may generally sue upon such contract in the same manner as if he had personally made it. Neither can it make any difference that the contract be of that character that the agent may maintain a suit upon it in his own name. In cases where a third person deals with an agent, supposing him to be the principal, and without any knowledge that the property involved in the transaction belongs to another, such third person may acquire rights which will be protected; and to this end, it can make no difference whether the action be in the name of the principal or agent. The right to sue upon the contract entered into by the agent, within the scope of Ms power, and to the enjoyment of all its benefits and advantages by operation of law, flows to the principal, though he may be unknown; and the fact that the third person dealt with *50the agent, believing him to be the principal, cannot defeat the rights of the principal. Neither will the fact that the name of the principal was concealed, while such third person was induced to contract with the agent believing him to be the principal, be permitted to defeat the rights of snch third person nnder or growing ont of such contract, even though the action be brought in the name of the principal; and in all such cases it may be said the principal ‘steps into the shoes of the agent.’ ”

In Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kerr, supra, it appeared that, the husband of Mrs. Kerr being ill, she asked one Henderson to send a message to Dr. J. C. Jones, at Gonzales, Texas. This message was sent, but was signed only by Henderson, and it was not known to the telegraph company, or to its agent, that Henderson was acting as agent for Mrs. Kerr. The message Was not delivered promptly, the husband of Mrs. Kerr died, and the suit was brought to recover compensation for mental anguish and for' suspense experienced by her, as the result of the failure of Dr. Jones to arrive as she expected. On this subject, the court said:

“The telegram, according to the petition, was sent by the agent of appellee for her benefit. A breach of the contract thus made would give rise to a cause of action for damages legitimately resulting. That this is true, if Henderson acted as plaintiff’s agent, appellant’s counsel does not deny. The second question presented does not involve a denial of the right of .an undisclosed principal to sue upon a broken contract made by his agent *51for his benefit, but raises a question as to the character of damages recoverable.”

After adverting to the fact that the telegraph company had no notice that Henderson was acting as'agent for Mrs. Kerr, the court continued: “There was nothing in the dispatch, or the circumstances attending its delivery, to excite any inquiry as to the plaintiff’s connection with it. How can it be said that a condition of her mind, the result of the failure to deliver, entered into the calculation of the parties when it was sent? It may be true that she can enforce the contract, if made by her agent for her benefit; but she must adopt it as it Was, and can recover nothing but what the agent could recover if he sued in his own name. All defenses and rights which the defendant could urge against the agent, if suing, it may urge against the plaintiff. Mechem, Ag. section 773. Can it be contended that, in a suit on this telegram by Henderson, such element of damages would be mental anguish of Mrs. Kerr? . . . That the fact of the agency was not communicated may be immaterial to some questions, but very material to others. The principal may sue for breach of the contract made for his benefit, whether his existence and connection with, it were disclosed or not; but he cannot, in our opinion, recover a class of damages affecting his person, Avhich an ignorance of his existence put beyond the contemplation of the other contracting party.” •

The case of Pacific Express Company v. Redman, *52supra, is in strict accord. In that case it appeared that Miss Redman, through her agent, N. B. Pruett, ordered certain medicine, by express, from a neighboring town. By reason of the negligence of the express company the medicine was not promptly delivered, and as a result thereof Miss Redman averred that she suffered great physical and mental pain, and her recovery was seriously retarded. It was not known to the express company that Mr. Pruett was acting as her agent. He made the order in his own name, and it was held that Miss Redman could not recover any damages peculiar to herself, but only such as Pruett could have recovered if he had been suing.

In view of what has been said in this opinion, we think that the conclusion reached in the former opinion, as to the liability of the company, was erroneous, and that a peremptory instruction should have been given in favor of the company, to the extent, at least, of directing a verdict for nominal damages only, that is, for the price of the message, forty cents. A judgment will accordingly be entered now. The plaintiff in error will pay the costs of this court, and the defendant in error the costs of the court below.