Fortier v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

168 So. 321, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 249
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1936
DocketNo. 16321.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 So. 321 (Fortier v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fortier v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 168 So. 321, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 249 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This suit was brought by Mrs. Edna For-tier White in a court of the state of Louisiana, to wit, the First city court of New Orleans. She seeks redress for the mental suffering she sustained because of undue delay in the delivery of a telegraphic message sent in Johnstown, Pa., addressed to her in New Orleans, and reading as follows :

“Aunt Edna Daddy on trip to Pittsburg became ill last night died this afternoon will be buried here.”

She alleges that, though the message was sent on June 6, 1934, it did not reach her until June 13, whereas it should have been delivered within a few hours. She does not charge that she sustained any financial loss, or physical injury.

*322 From a judgment maintaining an exception of no cause of action and dismissing her suit, she has appealed.

Respondent telegraph company maintains that the acceptance, transmission, and delivery of the message constitute a transaction in interstate commerce over which the Congress of the. United States, by the Amendment in 1910 (Act June. 18, 1910, § 7, 36 Stat. 544, as amended, 49 U. S.C.A. § 1) of section 1 of the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, assumed control, and that, as a result, since neither the common law nor the federal courts recognize, a right of recovery for mental anguish unaccompanied by financial loss or physical injury, there can be no recovery .here.

Plaintiff contends that the transaction is not interstate in character and that, even if it be held to be interstate in character, nevertheless recovery may be permitted in the state courts of Louisiana because, by the interpretation placed by the Supreme Court of Louisiana on the state statutes, to wit, articles 2315 and 1934 of the Civil Code, there may be recovery hete for mental suffering, even though not accompanied by financial loss or physical injury.

That the sending of a telegraphic message from one state into, or through another, is a transaction in interstate commerce, we entertain no doubt at all. There have been numerous decisions on the subject, but we deem it unnecessary to cite more than two, one by the Supreme Court of the United States and one by this court,' which latter decision was expressly approved by the Supreme Court of Louisiana.

In Western Union Telegraph Company v. Speight, 254 U.S. 17, 41 S.Ct. 11, 65 L. Ed. 104, the Supreme. Court of the United States said:

“The transmission of a message through two states is interstate commerce as a matter of fact.”

In Baker v. Western Union Telegraph Co., No. 8174 of the docket of this court decided January 2 1922 (See Louisiana and Southern Digest), we held that the sending of a message from -Biloxi, Miss., to New Orleans, is a transaction in interstate commerce.

Plaintiff contends that the facts of this case, as they appear from the allegations of the petition, warrant its being distinguished from the numerous cases to which we have alluded-and from the two which we have cited in that here there was no delay in the transmission of the message from the state in which it originated into the state in which it was to be delivered, the entire delay having occurred in one state only, to wit, that in which it should have been delivered after its interstate journey — if it may be called a journey— had entirely terminated.

In the first place, the allegations of the petition do not charge that the delay occurred solely in one state after the - interstate transmission had been completed, but, on the contrary, clearly charge that the delay had been caused “either by failure of the defendant company to transmit the same to New Orleans promptly or in the failure on the part of the defendant company * * * to properly deliver the same * * * in New Orleans. * * * ” But, even if the petition had charged that the entire delay had occurred in the state of final delivery, that fact would not strip the transaction of its interstate character because the transaction must be looked upon as one indivisible movement from the receipt of the message from the original sender to the final delivery to the addressee. If that entire transaction was interstate in character, then it must be looked upon as a whole, and we cannot say that, because some portion of the service was necessarily to be performed in one state, any delay sustained in the performance of that particular service should be looked upon as an intrastate, or local .matter, and treated from that point of view.

The actual transmission of a telegram requires only a few seconds and, wherever there is a delay in the transmission, that delay always occurs within the limits of only one state. Either the message is held at point of origin, or it is held at point of delivery, or it is not promptly relayed at some intermediate point. Thus, if plaintiff’s contention be sound and if it be true that, where the tort, that is to say, the delay occurs, within the borders of one state, redress may be sought under the laws of that state and not under the common law as applied in the federal courts then in almost no case of such delay could it be said that the matter should not be controlled by the local laws of the state in which the delay may have occurred.

But it is well settled that the matter may not be so viewed. In Western Union Telegraph Company v. Czizek, 264 U.S. 281, 44 *323 S.Ct. 328, 329, 68 L.Ed. 682, the Supreme Court of the United States held that a message delivered at a sending office in one state for transmission to another involves a transaction in interstate commerce even though it is not transmitted at all, and, hence, never crosses the borders of one state and enters another. There the court said:

“The moment that the message is received the contract attaches along with the responsibility, and the transit begins. -We can conceive no legal distinction between that moment and the next when the message is handed to a transmitting clerk, or that on which a copy is given to a boy at the further end.”

Counsel for plaintiff relies upon the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Schecter Poultry Corporation v. United States, 295 U.S. 495, 55 S.Ct. 837, 79 L.Ed. 1570, 97 A.L.R. 947, as authority for the view that, when an interstate shipment has reached its final destination in the state to which it is sent it then loses its interstate character and that thereafter any further movement involves only local or intrastate commerce.

There can be no doubt that it was so decided in that case. But the important point to determine is just when the interstate movement terminates and the local movement commences.

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Related

Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Conway
112 P.2d 857 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 321, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortier-v-western-union-telegraph-co-lactapp-1936.