Brockwell v. Western Union Telegraph & Cable Co.

171 S.E. 784, 205 N.C. 474, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 S.E. 784 (Brockwell v. Western Union Telegraph & Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brockwell v. Western Union Telegraph & Cable Co., 171 S.E. 784, 205 N.C. 474, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 595 (N.C. 1933).

Opinion

CoNNOR, J.

The plaintiff, Philip L. Brockwell, is a citizen of this State, and a resident of the city of Raleigh. He is a veteran of the World War, and was injured while in the military service of the United States. He is now 35 years of age, and from time to time, since the war, has been a patient in various hospitals maintained by the United States for the care and treatment of disabled veterans. He is well known in the city of Raleigh, where he owns an established business, and where he is generally regarded as a man of good character.

The evidence offered by the plaintiff at the trial of this action was sufficient to show the following facts:

On 3 October, 1930, the plaintiff was a patient in the National Soldiers Home, at Johnson City, in the State of Tennessee. He had been in said home, as a patient, since the 24th or the 25th of September, 1930. A few days prior to 3 October, 1930, the plaintiff had communicated with his brother, Edgar Brockwell, at Raleigh, N. 0., by telegraph or telephone, and had requested his brother, who had charge of his business, during his absence from his home, to send him money. At that time, his brother had in his possession money which he had collected for the plaintiff. Having received no response from his brother, during the afternoon of Friday, 3 October, 1930, the plaintiff went to the office of the defendant, Western Union Telegraph and Cable Company, in Johnson City, and after a conversation with A. J. Bryant, the manager of said office, filed with the defendant a telegram addressed to his brother, at Raleigh, N. C., requesting his brother to send him money at Johnson City, Tennessee. No amount was named in the telegram, but on previous occasions, when the plaintiff had requested his. brother to send him money, during his absence from home, his brother had sent him amounts varying from a few dollars to two hundred dollars. About two hours after he had filed the telegram with the defendant, to be transmitted to his brother, the plaintiff was notified that there was a telegram at the office of the defendant for him. He went at once to the said office, and was there informed by a clerk that the defendant had been directed by a telegram from its office at Raleigh, N. C., to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $108.00. The clerk hesitated to pay said sum to the plaintiff, without further identification, but upon being instructed by A. J. Bryant, the manager of the office, to pay said sum to the plaintiff, handed to the plaintiff defendant’s cheek for $108.00, drawn on a bank in Atlanta, G-a., and payable to the order of the plaintiff. At the suggestion of A. J. Bryant, the manager of the office, the plaintiff en *477 dorsed tbe check, and upon its delivery to the said manager, received from him the sum of $108.00, in currency. This transaction occurred during the afternoon of Friday, 3 October, 1930.

Some time during the morning of Saturday, 4 October, 1930, A. J. Bryant, the manager of defendant’s office at Johnson City, was informed by a message received from the office of the defendant at Ea-leigh, N. O., that a mistake had been made by a clerk in the office at Ealeigh in preparing the telegram of the previous day, requesting the payment of money to the plaintiff by the defendant at Johnson City, Tennessee. The amount which the defendant was directed to pay to the plaintiff should have been three dollars, instead of one hundred and eight dollars. A. J. Bryant, the manager of defendant’s office at Johnson City, was requested by the defendant’s office at Ealeigh, to notify the plaintiff of the error and to demand of him the return of the sum of $105.00. A. J. Bryant was further notified by the Ealeigh office, that if he failed to get the money from the plaintiff, the clerk in the Ealeigh office, who had made the mistake, would be required to pay said sum to the defendant, and that if she should fail to do so, she would be discharged by the defendant.

Upon his receipt of the message from the Ealeigh office, advising him of the error in the telegram of the previous day, A. J. Bryant at once began a search for the plaintiff, but could not find him on Saturday.

Early Sunday night the plaintiff was informed that his brother, Edgar Brockwell, had requested by telephone, that plaintiff call him'at Ealeigh, N. O. In consequence of this request, the plaintiff went to a hotel in Johnson City and put in a call for his brother at Ealeigh. While plaintiff was in the hotel, waiting to talk with his brother over the telephone, A. J. Bryant, accompanied by a constable, came into the hotel, and at once pointed to the plaintiff, saying to the constable, “That is the man.” The constable, in the presence of A. J. Bryant, demanded that plaintiff return to A. J. Bryant, the manager of defendant’s office at Johnson City, the sum of $105.00. This demand was accompanied by a threat that if plaintiff did not return the money to A. J. Bryant, the constable would arrest him for embezzlement. A. J. Bryant then explained the situation to the plaintiff who declined to return the money until he could ascertain from his brother at Ealeigh, whether or not a mistake had been made in the office of the defendant at Ealeigh, as contended by the defendant. Plaintiff told the constable and A. J. Bryant that he would comply with their demand, if his brother told him that a mistake had been made by the defendant. Within a short time, the plaintiff talked to his brother at Ealeigh, and was informed by him that a mistake had been made in the Ealeigh office, and that he should refund to the defendant the sum of $105.00. The plaintiff then *478 told the constable and A. J. Bryant that he had spent all of the money paid to him by the defendant on Friday afternoon, except the sum of $90.00, and that this amount was on deposit with the Postal Savings Department of the post office at the National Soldiers Home. The plaintiff then delivered the certificates for said deposit to the constable, saying that he would go with him to the post office the next morning, get the money, and refund it to the defendant. The constable took the certificates, and immediately arrested the plaintiff under a warrant which was dated 4 October, 1930, and was issued on an affidavit signed by A. J. Bryant. In this affidavit, the money which it was alleged had been paid to the plaintiff by mistake and which plaintiff had fraudulently refused to- return, was described as the property of the 'Western Union Telegraph and Cable Company. After his arrest by the constable in the presence of A. J. Bryant, the plaintiff was taken by the constable to the jail in Johnson City, where he was confined until the next morning. A. J. Bryant did not go to the jail with the constable, but remained in the hotel. The next morning the plaintiff was taken by the constable to the post office at the National Soldiers Home where the money was paid to the constable, who thereupon discharged the plaintiff from custody. The warrant was subsequently marked, “Settled, received my costs.” The money was paid by the constable to A. J. Bryant, the manager of .the defendant’s office at Johnson City, Tennessee.

The plaintiff was confined during the night of Sunday, 5 October, 1930, in the jail at Johnson City, and as the result of his confinement and of the conditions in the jail, he suffered injuries, both mental and physical. He was deeply humiliated by his confinement. There was no heat in the jail and he contracted a deep cold, and was threatened with pneumonia. The plaintiff testified that he was worried over being locked up in the jail.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hammond v. Eckerd's of Asheville, Inc.
220 N.C. 596 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1942)
Long v. Eagle 5, 10 & 25c Store Co.
198 S.E. 573 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1938)
Parrish v. Boysell Manufacturing Co.
188 S.E. 817 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.E. 784, 205 N.C. 474, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brockwell-v-western-union-telegraph-cable-co-nc-1933.