71 Tex. 507 | Tex. | 1888
Appellant claims that its demurrers to plaintiff’s petition should have been sustained because injury to feelings disconnected from all actual personal injury are •exemplary damages, and the facts alleged are not sufficient to recover exemplary damages.
The very question raised here was before the Supreme Court in the case of Stuart v. Western Union Telegraph Company, and the court, after discussing the SoRelle case (55 Texas, 310) and the two Levy cases (59 Texas, 543, 563), the case of Hays v. The Railroad (46 Texas, 272) and other authorities, use the following language:
“But it is claimed that the mental is an incident to the bodily pain, and that without the latter the former can not be considered as actual damages. In cases of bodily injury the mental suffering is not more directly and naturally the result of the wrongful act than in this case—-not more obviously the "consequences of the wrong done than in this case. What difference exists to make the claimed distinction? That it is caused by and contemplated in doing the wrongful act is the principle of liability. The wrong doer knows that he is doing this damage when he afflicts the mind by withholding the mes•sage of mortal illness as well as by a wound to the person.”
The conclusion derived from the opinion in the case from which the foregoing extract is taken is, that, injury to feelings caused by a failure to deliver a message relating to domestic affairs, where the failure is the result of negligence on the part of the company or its servants is an element of actual damage. The same principle was decided by the Commissioner of Appeals, in the case of Miller v. G. C. & S. F. Ry. (erroneously styled in the Reports Wilson v. G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co.), 69 Texas, 739, and it was held that the right to recover would not depend upon the degree of negligence caus ing the injury. If the inexcusable negligence of the defendant’s servants is found to be the proximate cause of the injury, damages may be recovered commensurate with the injury.
2. The husband is the proper party to bring suit for such injuries to his wife. She is not a necessary party. (The Texas Central R’y Co. v. Burnett, 61 Texas, 638; San Antonio Street R. R. Co. v. Helm, 64 Texas, 147:)
3. We do not think the death of the child before birth and the grief or sorrow occasioned thereby can be an element of damages in this character of suit. If it is made to appear from
4. It is impossible to see upon what principle the husband can claim damages for injury to his feelings. His suffering could only be from alarm and sympathy for his wife’s suffering; his distress is merely a reflection from her distress, and that might be very considerable, but it is too remote and consequential. She is allowed to recover in this suit, or rather he is, under, the forms of law, on account of her injuries of body and mind; to allow him damages for the same injuries would be to allow two recoveries upon the same cause of action. We know of no authority that would justify such a conclusion. The person who suffers the injuries proximately resulting from the wrong done, and such person alone, is entitled to compensation, except in cases where death results and the cause of action is mafle to’survive to the relatives by virtue of a statute. The husband can sue for such injuries to his wife, but he can not recover on his own account for his anxiety and sympathy.
5. Dr. Cooper having shown himself competent to testify as an expert, could give his opinion as to whether the child would have been born alive if he had received medical assistance in time. The death of the child was a proper inquiry if it tended to prolong labor as above explained, not
6. The correspondence by wire between the operators sending and receiving the message not communicated to Dr. Cooper or his wife would not be legitimate evidence. George S. Stewart, the sending operator, received a telegram from the receiving operator that Dr. Keating had gone to the country. The question and answer were both properly excluded by the court. The fact that Dr. Keating had gone to the country could not be established in this way.
7. Any information the messenger received at the drag store as to the whereabouts of Dr. Keating, and the communication of such information to the receiving operator at Cleburne, would be admissible upon the issue of negligence or not on the part of the operator and messenger in failing to deliver the message. Hence the messenger ought to have been allowed to state, if he would, that he was told at the drug store where Dr. Keating kept his office while attempting to find Keating, that he was gone to the country. There was error in excluding his statement to that effect.
8. The court, in its charge, referred to the operator at Cleburne as the person charged with the duty of delivering the message, and stated that if he “made no effort to deliver” the same, or “used so little cave to deliver it” as to satisfy the jury “that he was indifferent,” etc.
The charge is criticised by appellant on the ground that the operator was not required to deliver the message; that this was the duty of the messenger. While we think the objection hypercritical, the charge would have been clearer if the court had merely instructed the jury to the effect that if defendant’s servants whose duty it was to deliver the message used so little care, etc. Under the facts of the case, it would not be proper to hypothecate a charge upon the supposition that “no effort” had been made to deliver the message. The message was sent at once by the operator, and the messenger went twice to the office of Dr. Keating with it, and, failing to find him, made no further effort to find him. Whether he was negligent and indifferent in regard to the delivery of the message, and whether there was negligence of the company’s operator in failing to perform her duty, were questions for the jury, and should have been left to them, without the supposition that “no effort” had been made to perforin such duties.
10. The court should have given a special charge asked by defendant to the effect that even if there was negligence on the part of defendant’s servants in delivering the message, yet if by the exercise of proper care on their part it could not have been delivered in time for Dr. Keating to have reached the patient and assisted in the delivery of the child, plaintiff could not recover damages for the pain and suffering claimed. The facts justified the giving of such a charge. It may be.a question whether, if the message had been delivered as soon as it could have been by the use of necessary diligence, Dr. Keating could have arrived at Mrs. Cooper’s bedside in time to have delivered her. The question should have been submitted to the jury.
11. It was not error to refuse instruction asked by defendant, that 6£if the messenger went to Dr. Keating’s office, and failed to deliver the message because of his absence, and went a second time to his office about noon of the same day, and could not deliver it by reason of Dr. Keating’s absence, such facts would excuse defendant from failure to deliver the message, and in such case the jury should return a verdict for the defendant for all the damages claimed except the price paid for the telegram.” The court correctly refused the charge. Going to Dr. Keating’s office was not the extent of the messenger’s duty. His residence was close by, he was well known in the town, and the messenger knew him and knew where his residence was. He had been in the country, but had returned before the message was received at the telegraph office. He says he had left word where he could be found, and that he and his wife were in readiness to attend upon Mrs. Cooper when called, and could have driven there in two hours. The messenger had an important telegram for him, the confine
12. Again: The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury “that if a party has a known place of residence and a known place of business in a city, it is no part of defendant’s duty to hunt said party up on the streets of the city, and the failure of defendant’s messenger to hunt the party on the streets is no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant.”
The court refused the charge. It would have been error if it had been given. The messenger did not go to the residence -of Dr. Keating; if he had gone there he might have learned where he was; certainly that he was not in the country. He only went to the office on two occasions—when the message was received, and then after an interval of two hours. He should have used reasonable diligence to deliver the message, even if that would require him to go upon the streets to find him. What such diligence was, would depend upon the circumstances, of which the jury were the exclusive judges.
13. Defendant asked the court to charge the jury as follows: “The plaintiff in his petition states that the message was promptly transmitted from Grandview to Cleburne. There is no question before you as to any delay of the message at Grandview or any other point prior to its reaching Cleburne.” The jury should have been told that there was no complaint or question about delay at Grandview. The petition did allege, as stated in the requested charge, that the message was immediately sent from Grandview, and there was evidence of delay in sending it from that place—a delay of one-half hour. The charge was upon a material point, and should have been given as to the delay at Grandview.
Other assigned errors not disposed of in the foregoing opinion are that the court should have granted a new trial because of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. Of that we do not express any opinion.
For the errors committed and noticed above, we report the case to be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded„
Opinion adopted October 23, 1888.
Stayton,
Chief Justice.