Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Sefrit

38 Ind. App. 565 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906

Comstock, P. J.

Appellee recovered judgment against appellant in the Daviess Circuit Court for $100, the penalty prescribed by the act of April 8, 1885, entitled “An act prescribing certain duties of telegraph and telephone companies, prohibiting discrimination between patrons,” etc. Acts 1885, p. 151.

On August 26, 1904, plaintiff delivered to the defendant, at its office in Plainfield, a dispatch addressed to Lucian W. Wilder, care of conductor, Evansville & Indianapolis train No. 34, Petersburg, Indiana. /The dispatch was transmitted at once. Upon receipt at Petersburg, the point of des*567tination, it was copied, enclosed in an envelope, and addressed to addressee, in care of said conductor, but through negligence was not delivered. Defendant’s agent at Peters-burg, after the dispatch reached said place on the same day, transacted business with said conductor at a time- when he could have delivered the dispatch.

1. A demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and the cause put at issue by general denial. -The court made a special finding of facts and stated conclusions of law thereon, to which conclusions appellee excepted. In support of the appeal, appellant presents three points or propositions: (1) Having found the telegraph company negligent in its omission to deliver the dispatch, the court erred in its conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the defendant the statutory penalty. A penalty may not be recovered for negligence. (2) Having found that the dispatch was transmitted to the point of destination without delay, but that the omission lay in the failure to deliver the dispatch to the addressee at the point of destination, the court erred in its conclusion of law, and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the statutory penalty. Transmission under the penal section of the statute does not mean delivery. (3) The penalty is not recoverable where the addressee of the dispatch or his agent or the person in whose care the (Jispatch is addressed resides neither within one mile of the station to which the dispatch is addressed, nor within the town or city within which said station is.

The first and second of these points are decided adversely to appellant’s claim in Western Union Tel. Co. v. Braxtan (1905), 165 Ind. 165.

2. As to the third proposition, so much-of the act of 1885, supra, as is pertinent, is as follows: “Every telegraph company with a line of wires wholly or partly within this State, and engaged in doing a general telegraphic business, shall during the usual office hours receive *568dispatches, whether from other telegraph lines or other companies, or individuals, and shall, upon the usual terms, transmit the same with impartiality and in good faith, and in the order of time in which they are received, and shall in no manner discriminate in rates charged, or words or figures charged for or manner or conditions of service between any of its patrons, but shall serve individuals,” etc. Acts 1885, p. 151, §1, §5511 Burns 1901.

The Supreme Court in Reese v. Western Union Tel. Co. (1890), 123 Ind. 294, 7 L. R. A. 583, has held that a failure to deliver a dispatch in accordance with the requirements of section three of the act of 1852 (1 R. S. 1852, p. 481, §5514 Burns 1901, §4178 R. S. 1881) is a failure to transmit under the provisions of the act of 1885, supra,, and renders the telegraph company thus guilty liable for the statutory penalty. Said section three is as follows: “Such companies shall deliver all dispatches, by a messenger, to the person, to whom the same are addressed, or to their agents, on payment of any charges due for the same: Provided, such persons or agents reside within one mile of the telegraphic station or within the city or town in which such station is.”

3. There is nothing in the act of 1885, supra, regulating the distance or prescribing the limits within which telegraph companies shall deliver messages. Section three, supra, relates solely to the duties of telegraph companies as to the manner of delivering — “by messenger” — dispatchers to addressees who reside, or whose agent resides, within the prescribed limits. The section relieves the company from delivery, by messenger, of telegrams to persons not residing within one mile of the telegraphic station or within the city or town within which said station is located.

*5694. *568The act of 1885 requires the delivery of all dispatches which the company undertakes to transmit. It is a rule *569of construction, that a statute should be construed as a whole so as most reasonably to accomplish its purpose.

5. All consistent statutes which can stand together, though enacted at different times, relating to the same subject, are called statutes in pari materia, and treated prospectively and construed together as though they constituted one act. They are made to operate, as far as possible, consistently with the evident intent of the latest enactment. 2 Lewis’s Sutherland, Stat. Const. (2d ed.), §443, and cases cited in foot notes.

6. The intention of the legislature, manifest in both acts, was to secure the prompt and impartial delivery of messages. The provision of the act of 1852, supra, was to relieve the telegraph company from the possible task of an unaided and perhaps fruitless search for an addressee, a stranger, through a wide territory. It could not have been the purpose to excuse the telegraph company from the discharge of its simple duty when it could perform it with but slight, if any, inconvenience.

The office of appellant was in the depot of said Evansville & Indianapolis Eailroad Company, where said Evansville & Indianapolis train Ho. 34 regularly stopped, and where it stopped on said day. Appellant’s agent Webb, and conductor Smith, of said train, were well acquainted and had been for a long time prior to August 26, 1904; and said Webb knew at that time that said train was designated as Evansville & Indianapolis train Ho. 34, and that said conductor and said addressee were acquainted with each other; and upon the arrival of said train said appellant’s agent conversed and transacted business with said conductor, while said train was stopping at said station, but wholly failed to deliver said dispatch to him. Appellant cites two cases: Western Union Tel. Co. v. Timmons (1893), 93 Ga. 345, 20 S. E. 649; Moore v. Western Union Tel. Co. (1890), 87 Ga. 613, 13 S. E. 639.

Both eases are based upon a statute imposing a penalty *570upon telegraph companies for failure to deliver messages to persons to whom they were addressed, who at the time resided within one mile of the telegraph office, or within the town or city within which the office is located. No other statute is referred to. In each case the court held that the nonresident could not recover. In the last-named case the plaintiff was a transient visitor. In the course of- the opinion the court says: “If, after notifying the operator' that he [the plaintiff] would he in Knoxville, and to send the message to him there, he had given him a definite address, such as a given street and number or the name of the owner of a particular house where the message should be delivered, perhaps he would have come within the spirit of the law, if not the letter of it.” The facts bring the case before us within the spirit of the act of 1852, supra.

7. This message was not one to be delivered to a stranger. It appears from the findings that since the message was delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant for delivery to the addressee, the defendant has received, transmitted and delivered other telegraph messages to other addressees at said town of Petersburg, some of whom resided within said town and within one mile of the telegraph station situated therein. The findings show that defendant was not free from impartiality, and was wholly lacking in diligence, and under either statute the company is liable.

Judgment affirmed..

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