Erie Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Grimes

17 S.W. 831, 82 Tex. 89, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1084
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1891
DocketNo. 6812.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 831 (Erie Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Grimes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erie Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Grimes, 17 S.W. 831, 82 Tex. 89, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1084 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

COLLARD, Judge, Section A.

This suit was brought by the appellee, A. C. Grimes, against the appellant, the Erie Telegraph and Telephone Company, in Karnes County (the venue changed to La Salle), to recover damages (actual $5000 and exemplary $5000) for failure to send a telegram from Kenedy to Bastrop, whereby plaintiff failed to see his mother in her last sickness and to attend her funeral. *92 There is no question as to exemplary damages in the case. Defendant filed general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, plea of contributory negligence, electrical disturbances preventing the transmission of the message, and tender of the price of the message. There was verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $667.56, from which defendant has appealed.

The facts of the case are substantially as follows:

Plaintiff was a lieutenant in the Ranger service in the company of. Captain Schmidt. The headquarters of the company was in camp about ten miles from Kenedy (a station on the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway), at which place defendant carried on its business of telegraphing, its lines and connecting lines extending- to Bastrop, in Bastrop County, about 100 miles from Kenedy; Plaintiff’s mother, an old lady, lived at Bastrop-with plaintiff’s married sister, and was and had long been afflicted with a tumor of the womb. Her health was failing and it was thought that the tumor would have to be removed to save her life. Plaintiff had not seen her for about two years, but he knew of her condition, and had an understanding with his sister at Bastrop that if the tumor was to be removed he should be notified, and .that it was not to be done unless he was present, as it was considered a very dangerous operation. Kenedy and Bastrop were connected by railways and it was about a fifteen hours run to Bastrop. Answers to messages from Kenedy to Bastrop ought to have been received in two hours, if promptly sent and delivered.

Plaintiff was on a scout and arrived at camp on the morning of the 19th of August, 1887, at daylight. There he found a telegram from his brother at Bastrop, W. H. Grimes, of date August 15, as follows: “Operation will bevperformed Wednesday. Come if you can.” He at once answered it: “Just received your message. Am I too late? Answer to-day;” writing the message on ordinary paper. He sent the message over to Kenedy, and it was delivered to defendant’s operator about 9 a. m., and 90 cents paid for sending it, the charge made.

The messenger returned to camp and brought a telegram to plaintiff from one Coy to meet him at Kenedy to go with him to arrest a party. He went over to Kenedy, arrived there at about 2 p. m., when he immediately inquired of the operator if any answer had come to his telegram, and was told that none had come. He told the operator that the message was important. , Coy was to come in on the train from “Corpus” at 4 or 5 p. m. He asked the defendant operator about an answer to his dispatch three times before the train from Corpus came in, and was told that no answer had come. He says the operator was “just knocking about there.”

Coy came on the train and plaintiff went with him to San Antonio by rail, reaching there about 9 p. m., where they remained until the next day about 12 m., when they took the International train to Pear- *93 sail, about fifty miles south of San Antonio,- got to Pearsall, took horses and went into the country, and were gone until the 25th of August, at which time he returned to Pearsall and there found a telegram from his captain, dated August 20, to go home at once, that his mother was in a dying condition. He went at once to Bastrop, reached there on the 26th, found that his mother had died on the 22d, and was buried same day.

On the 20th of August a telegram came for him from his brother-in-law D. A. Morris, at Bastrop, to Kenedy, as follows: “Tour mother is in a dying condition. Come at once.” It was addressed in care of Captain Schmidt. He dispatched to several places to inform plaintiff of the condition of his mother and to go home, and one of these dispatches plaintiff found at Pearsall as before stated. The dispatch to plaintiff from Morris shows that it was received at San Antonio on the 20th at 10 a. m., where it seems it had to be repeated on defendant’s line.

When plaintiff left Kenedy to go on a scout with Coy he left no instructions to forward any telegrams to him to any place. San Antonio is on the way from Kenedy to Bastrop, both by rail and wire. Plaintiff stopped there all night and until 12 m. on the 20th. His hotel was near the telegraph office of the defendant and another of another company. He sent no dispatch home to Bastrop while in San Antonio.

Plaintiff’s dispatch to his brother was never sent from Kenedy. If it had been promptly sent and answer promptly returned he would have received the answer before he left on the scout, and would have had ample time to have seen his mother before she died.

Plaintiff by leave of the court filed an amended original petition in the District Court of La Salle County, giving the style and number of the case, the court in which the suit was pending, and the term. It was in part a supplemental petition replying by exceptions and denial to the answer of defendant previously filed. It was not addressed to any court, nor did it point out the date of the instrument amended. After styling the case, giving its number, designating the court and its term, it simply commenced: “How comes the plaintiff by leave of the court and files this his first amended original petition, and for amendment says.” It then replied to the answer of defendant, after which the entire cause of action was alleged in full. It states plaintiff’s residence, that the defendant the Erie Telegraph and Telephone Company was duly incorporated, had a local agent in the county where suit was brought, giving his name, etc. $ that it owned and on the 19th day of August, 1887, operated a telegraph line from Kenedy Station to Bastrop for hire, etc., and transmitted telegrams for the public between said points.

Defendant filed a general demurrer, which was overruled, and now assigns error to the sufficiency of the amendment as such as follows: *94 Because the amendment was not addressed to any court; made no complaint against defendant or any person, natural or artificial; did not state the domicile of the defendant, or by what authority it was incorporated; contained allegations that could have been made only in a supplemental petition, and failed to make a clear statement of the cause of action.

The object of these assignments is to show that the amendment as such does not conform to the rules of pleading. The defects pointed out in so far as they exist are defects of form only, and could not be reached by a general demurrer. The objection as to statement of the cause of action is that it was not clearly and fully stated, not that it was not stated at all. This objection also goes to the form only of the statement. A defective statement of a'cause of action is not subject to a general demurrer; if it is so stated that it is amendable it is good as against a general demurrer. Wells v. Fairbanks, 5 Texas, 582; Warner v. Bailey, 7 Texas, 517; 40 Texas, 341.

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17 S.W. 831, 82 Tex. 89, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-telegraph-telephone-co-v-grimes-tex-1891.