91 Ga. 449 | Ga. | 1893
It was admitted that the dispatch was in these words: “Meet the E. T. train at 3 o’clock,” and that the day on which it was received for transmission, and on which the delay complained of occurred, was Sunday. That ordinary telegraphic messages, or rather the work and labor of transmitting and delivering them, are within the prohibition of the Sunday law, was ruled in the case of Western Union Telegraph Company v. Hutcheson, this term (ante, 252). Neither on the face of the message nor by any averment in the declaration does it appear that the subject-matter of the message concerned anything in the
Judgment affirmed.