Dunn v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

59 S.E. 189, 2 Ga. App. 845, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 533
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1907
Docket532
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 189 (Dunn v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 59 S.E. 189, 2 Ga. App. 845, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 533 (Ga. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Powell, J.

Dunn brought his action against the Western Union Telegraph Company and the Southern Railway Company by a petition, which, omitting formal parts, is substantially as follows: Defendants are, the one a telegraph company, the other a railway company, doing business in Floyd county; and, by their acts done in said county, have injured the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000; for that “on August 13, 1906, petitioner and one Walter Jeffries went to the office of the said Western Union Telegraph Company at said Lindale, which said office is in the depot of the said Southern Railway Company, at said Lindale, said office of the said Western Union Telegraph Company being the usual place for the reception and sending of telegraphic messages at said Lin-dale, for the purpose of delivering and having sent a message for two minor and orphan children by the names of Yeager; said message being for the uncle of said children and announcing the death of said children’s mother and requesting that their uncle come [847]*847.and bury their dead mother. -After arriving at said depot of the ■said Southern Railway Company and office of said Western Union Telegraph Company, petitioner informed the agent in charge of said office and depot--of his desire to send a message to Yeager, the aforesaid uncle of said Yeager children, for the said Yeager -children, announcing the death of -their mother. Petitioner had a right to be in said depot and at said office, and it was the duty of defendants to allow petitioner to remain in said depot and at said telegraph office, to transact his said business, and until he had transacted his business. While in said depot and at said office;, •and before petitioner had transacted his business or before petitioner had had time to transact said business, the agent in charge ■of said office and depot wilfully, wantonly, malignantly, maliciously, and illegally evicted petitioner from the office of the said Western Union Telegraph Company and the depot of the said Southern Railway Company. In evicting the petitioner as . aforesaid by the agent aforesaid, said agent was brutal, inhuman and insulting, in that said agent told petitioner, when he tried to get -said agent to send said message, to 'Go to hell with your God damn messaged Petitioner then told said agent that his message was ■one of necessity, and begged-said agent to receive and send same, whereupon said agent said "God damn you, get out from here. Reave, God damn you, git.” Whereupon petitioner, fearing bodily harm, immediately left said depot and office, and said agent did not receive said message. The conduct of the said agent was wanton, willful, malicious, and illegal, and, being done by said agent so wilfully and wantonly, entitles petitioner to punitive damages for which he sues.

By amendment the petition further alleges, that "the telegraph office of the Western Union Telegraph Company at said Lindale was located in the depot and office of the Southern Eailway Company, and the agent in charge of said depot was also the agent of said telegraph company, and the acts hereinafter complained of were committed at the time and place where said agent was the agent of both defendants. The said Yeager children had no father, their mother had just been killed by lightning, and it was .at the request of these children that plaintiff went to said office ip send the telegram as herein set out.”

By -separate demurrers the defendants raised the following [848]*848points: "That there is a misjoinder of defendants, the business of the defendant Western Union Telegraph Company being altogether different from and independent of the business of the Southern Kailway Company. That the allegations of the fifth paragraph are vague and indefinite, in that it is not alleged whether-it was the purpose of the petitioner, or of Walter Jeffries, to deliver and have sent said message; nor is there any allegation that said petitioner and said Jeffries or either of them were connected with, had any interest in, or were requested to send any. such message, nor by what authority said petitioner or said Jeffries represented or pretended to represent said minor children. That there is no allegation that any telegram was ever written out on any blank of defendant or any other paper writing, and tendered to said agent for transmission; nor is there any allegation that the regular charges of such transmission were ever offered or tendered said agent. That there is no allegation at what hour of the day of August 13, 190C, petitioner went into the office of the defendant for the purpose alleged. That no cause of action is set forth. That petitioner seeks damages for injury to his feelings,, and indignities offered to the plaintiff hv defendants’ agent, and nowhere alleges any loss of time, personal injury, or pecuniary loss of any kind. That no action for injury to feelings, insult or personal indignities can be maintained, unless there is alleged in connection with such acts and conduct some pecuniary loss, as loss of time, personal injury, or other ground of actual injury for which a recovery can be had. That there can be no punitive damages recovered in the case, for the reason that no actual injury is shown, as loss of time, loss of money, personal injury, or some other injury for which pecuniary compensation can be had. That the only recovery sought in this case is for alleged injury to the plaintiff’s feelings, and any recovery therefor must in its. nature be punitive, and such damages can not be recovered when not accompanied by some pecuniary loss, as loss of time, increased expenses, personal injury, or some other circumstances or fact which would entitle plaintiff to compensation under the law. That the petition shows that two parties are sued in this case for separate and distinct causes of action, and that said parties can not be sued jointly in the said case. In the one the cause of action alleged against the Western Union Telegraph Company is for a failure to [849]*849send a message through its agent at Lindale; the cause of action against the Southern Railway Company is for misconduct of its agent in ejecting from its depot at Lindale the plaintiff, who had gone into said depot for the purpose of sending a message by the Western Union Telegraph Company. That the petition shows on its face that the defendant was not at the railroad office for the purpose of transacting any business with the Southern Railway Company, and that whatever the man in charge did was done as the agent of the Western Union Telegraph Company, and that in what he did he in no way represented the railroad company, and that the railroad company is not responsible for any act of the man at its depot in connection with the matter complained of in the petition.”

Both demurrers were sustained, and the plaintiff brings error. In this court the plaintiff in error concedes that the Southern Railway Company was not a proper party to the suit.

1. For the conceded misjoinder, the judgment of the lower court will be affirmed; but since this is not a matter going to the merits of the transaction, and since the general demurrer of the telegraph company was also sustained, it will be necessary for us to look further into the case, that such direction may be given as will be proper under the circumstances. Civil Code, §5498, par. 2. See also Jarrell v. American Pipe Bending Machine Co., 2 Ga. App. 765 (59 S. E. 186).

2. The grave question remaining in the case is whether the petition sets forth a cause of action against the telegraph companj1-.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 189, 2 Ga. App. 845, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-western-union-telegraph-co-gactapp-1907.