Harris v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

281 S.W. 877
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1926
DocketNo. 307.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 281 S.W. 877 (Harris v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 281 S.W. 877 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

GALLAGHER, C. J.

David Harris, appellant herein, sued Western Union Telegraph Company, appellee herein, for dainages for alleged negligent delay in delivering a telegraxffi message announcing the death of his mother. The parties will be designated as in the trial court. The message was delivered to defendant at San Antonio, Tex., for transmission and delivery to plaintiff at Mexia, Tex., by Miss Cameron, a relative of plaintiff, in pursuance of a request on his part to be advised in case of his mother’s death. The telegram was addressed to plaintiff at Mexia, Tex., Box 414. No other or further address was given. Said telegram was as follows: “Mothers dead. Come.” The contract for the transmission and delivery of said telegram alleged by plaintiff was that defendant “contracted, agreed, and bound itself to transmit from San Antonio, Tex., and deliver to plaintiff, in Mexia, Tex., with all reasonable prudence, and dispatch,” the message aforesaid. Plaintiff’s allegation of failure of duty on the part of defendant was that it “did not transmit and delivel- said message to plaintiff with reasonable and proper diligence, or within the time it could and should have delivered it, but that it carelessly and negligently failed to so transmit and deliver said message until about 9 o’clock in the morning” of the next day, when it was too late for him to Secure any means of transportation which would enable him to attend the funeral of his mother. He further-alleged “that said failure, neglect, and refusal of defendant to use and exercise ordinary care and diligence in transmitting and delivering said message to plaintiff was the sole and only cause” of his being deprived of an opportunity to attend the funeral and; burial of his said mother.

Defendant, among other things, pleaded that, at the time said message was received at its office in S'an Antonio, its Mexia office was closed, and that said message was not received at said office until the opening of the same, early the next morning, and that upon its receipt it was promptly delivered. Defendant further pleaded that at the time it received said telegram for transmission it advised Miss Cameron that its Mexia office-was -then closed, and would not open until next morning, and that it also asked for abetter address to aid in delivering said message ; that Miss Cameron replied that the box number given was plaintiff’s post office box,, and that she had no better address; that she was then informed by defendant’s agent that the telegram would be delivered by placing it in the post office next morning.

Defendant proved that its office at Mexia-was open daily for the transaction of business from 8 o’clock in the morning until 8 o’clock in the evening, and closed during the-night; that such office hours were adequate for the handling of all its business at that point; that the message here involved was received on the opening of its Mexia office next morning, and started to the post office in accordance with said address, but delivered, by reason of a chance meeting between its messenger and plaintiff, before such messenger reached the post office The existence of such office hours at Mexia, the reasonableness thereof, and the fact of the delivery of such message and the time of such delivery were not contested by plaintiff. There was, however, a sharp conflict with reference to what occurred when Miss Cameron delivered such message to the defendant for transmission and delivery to plaintiff at Mexia. Miss Cameron testified that she wrote the message, signed her father’s name-thereto, delivered it to defendant’s agent, and paid him the charges demanded; that said, agent requested her to give her father’s address and telephone number, both of which she indorsed on the message; that she was-sure no other conversation was had between her and said agent at that time. Defendant then introduced evidence tending to sustain its said pleadings with reference to what oc *879 curred at the time its agent at San Antonio received such message. Miss Cameron testified in rebuttal of such evidence as follows:

“Mr. Herring, who received my message, made no statement in my presence about any connection or anything having reference to whether the Mexia telegraph office was closed. * * * He made no statement that would indicate that the Mexia office was not open at that time; none whatever. He did not say anything to me about mailing this telegram. If he had told me about the Mexia office being closed, I would have put in a long distance call instead of sending the message. If he had wanted to mail the telegram, I would not have sent it. * * * I would have telephoned my uncle, Mr. Harris. I knew he had no telephone, but I could have gotten him at a grocery store that has a telephone; this grocery store being but a few blocks of my uncle.”

Mrs. Harris, appellant’s mother, died, and her funeral was held at Fitzhugh, about 22 miles southwest of Austin on the Fredericks-burg road. There was no testimony from any source that defendant’s agent at San Antonio was notified when the message was delivered where nor when the funeral of plaintiff’s mother would be held, nor when he would have to leave Mexia in order to reach such place in time to attend such funeral. Had the message been delivered to plaintiff at any time before 12 o’clock on the night it was sent, he could and would have taken the midnight train at Mexia, and would have arrived at Austin early the next morning, and he could have there secured a conveyance to Fitzhugh, and could have arrived there in ample time to attend said funeral. After receipt of said message, he went to Fitzhugh by the first available meáns of transportation, but arrived there about night, three or four hours after the burial of his mother.

The court submitted the case to the jury on special issues, which issues and the answers of the jury thereto were as follows:

“Question No. 1: Find and state from the evidence whether or not Mr. Herring, defendant’s employé, at the time of receiving the message in question from Miss Vi Della Cameron, advised her of the office hours of the defendant company at Mexia, or that the office of said company at Mexia would be, or might be, closed during the night, and the message would not, or might not be, delivered -until the next day. Answer: No.
“Question No. 2: If you have answered question No.- ‘Yes,’ you need not answer this question, but if you have answered question No. 1 ‘No,’ then find and answer from the evidence whether or not a person situated as Mr. Herring was, at the time he received the message, in the exercise of that degree of care and prudence which a person of ordinary prudence would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances, would have advised Miss Cameron that the Mexia office of defendant company would not be open or might not be open during the night. Answer: Yes.
“Question No. 3: Find and state from the evidence whether or not the employés of defendant company exercised that degree of diligence which an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances to transmit and deliver the message in question with reasonable dispatch and expedition. Answer: Yes.
“Question No. 4: What sum of money, if any, if paid now in cash, would be necessary to compensate plaintiff for the distress, disappointment,-grief, pain, and anguish, if any, suffered by plaintiff on account of not being present at the funeral and burial of his mother, Mrs. Jan Harris? Answer: $1.”

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281 S.W. 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-western-union-telegraph-co-texapp-1926.