Hinson v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.

43 S.E. 945, 132 N.C. 460, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 945 (Hinson v. Postal 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
Hinson v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co., 43 S.E. 945, 132 N.C. 460, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 314 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

Connor, J.

On the 19th day of June, 1902, E. W. Hin-son, father of the plaintiff, delivered to the defendant’s agent at its office in Durham, N. C., for transmission and delivery a message in the following words and figures:

“To M. L. Hinson, Care of Olympia Mills, Columbia, S. Cl: “Come at once. Tour mother is dying. Answer.
“B. W. HINSON.”

*461 The mother of the plaintiff and wife of the sender was then sick at the home of her husband in the village of East Durham, N. C. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant negligently failed to deliver said message until the 23d day of June, 1902, and that his mother died on the afternoon of the 19th of June, 1902, and was buried on the 20th day of said month about 4 o’clock p. m.; that by reason of the failure to deliver said message the plaintiff did not reach East Durham until the 24th day of June, 1902, at about 6 o’clock a. m., and by reason of defendant’s failure to deliver said message he suffered much grief, mental pain and anguish, by reason whereof he was damaged in the sum of $3,000.

The defendant admitted the delivery of the message to its agent at Durham at 11:29 o’clock on June 19, 1902, and payment of the cost for sending the same. It averred that it promptly transmitted the message to its office in Columbia, S. C., a few minutes after its receipt at the Durham office; that immediately after its receipt in Columbia the message was delivered to the messenger boy of the defendant, who promptly carried it to the general office of the Olympia Cotton Mills, Columbia, S. C., and there enquired of the agents in charge of said mill, and particularly of the agent who was acquainted with the pay-roll and the names of all persons working for said mills, for M. L. TIinson, and informed such parties of such telegram and its urgency, but that the agent of said Olympia Cotton Mills informed the said messenger that no such person as M. L. Hinson was then working for said mills and that no such name as Hinson appeared on their June pay-roll, and that said agent of said mill refused to receipt for the message; that within a short time after the said messenger returned from the Olympia Cotton Mills to the office of the defendant in Columbia, a service message was sent by the defendant from Columbia to' Durham, asking for a better address and immediately upon the receipt of this *462 message a ’phone message was sent from the Durham office of the defendant to the Durham Manufacturing Co., at East Durham, and that thereupon and without delay inquiry was made as to M. L. Hinson’s address of the sender of said message, and the members of his family who- resided in the same house with him, and who were then and there by the defendant informed that the address of M. L. Hinson at the Olympia Cotton Mills was not correct and he could not be found at the Olympia Cotton Mills, and that a better address was wanted and must be given, or the said message could not be delivered; that the sender of the message and the members of his immediate family stated that they did not know of any other address at that time but Olympia Mills; that the residence of said M. L. Hinson on the 19th, 20th and 21st days of June, 1902, was not known to the sender of the message or to any member of his family at East Durham, nor had they or any of them at that time information enabling them to promptly reach said M. L. Hinson by wire or letter, nor was his name and address in the city directory of Columbia; that on the 23d day of June, the father of the plaintiff received information which disclosed the residence address of the plaintiff in Columbia and thereupon sent a second message to his son, the plaintiff in this action, which message was directed to him, giving his residence address, and was carefully, promptly and without delay delivered by the defendant to said M. L. Hinson at his proper address, which was not at the Olympia Mills; that the sender of the message, in not giving a full and accurate address when he delivered the message on the 19th of June, 1902, to the defendant, was guilty of contributory negligence; that Columbia is the capital of South Carolina and is a city of about 28,000 inhabitants and that it is well-nigh impossible to find a person in said city unless his residence address is written, or unless he *463 be a resident and freeholder in said city, or unless he be well known therein.

The court submitted the usual issues. The plaintiff introduced testimony tending to sustain his allegations in respect to the sending of the message, the failure to- deliver, the sickness, death and burial of his mother. He testified in his own behalf as follows: “I worked in Columbia at the Olympia Mills and was there on June 19, 1902. I received mail there, care of Olympia Mills, I received a letter from my sister postmarked June 18, which I answered on June 20. I left the Olympia Mills because they would not let me have my money to come home on. I received both messages on Monday. I got my money from the Olympia Mills as soon as I shoAved the telegram. My name is on the books of the Olympia Mills. I have seen telegrams delivered to' employees. I would have come when I received my sister’s letter if I had had the money.

The defendant introduced Theodore Rivers, who had been a messenger boy at its office in Columbia, S. 0., who testified that the message was given to him by the manager at the, defendant’s office to be delivered at the Olympia Mills as soon as it was received and copied and entered on the delivery sheet, which was about 12 o’clock, and he carried it at once to the Olympia Mills and offered to deliver it to the bookkeeper (Hammond) in the office of the mills. He received it, but before signing for it, examined his books and said that Hinson was not working for the company, and gave it back to him and refused to receive it; that he came out of the office and met a boy who said that a Mr. Hinson was living down there, but it was not M. L. Hinson, but to go on the hill and he might find him. The witness inquired for Hinson, but could not find him, and did everything he could to find him; he then Avent to the telephone and told Mr. White, the manager, that Hinson Avas not at the mill and the witness *464 could not find him. White said ‘bring the message back/ which the witness did. He then went to the postoifice at Columbia and inquired for Hinson, and if the postmaster knew where he could deliver a telegram to him. They did not know him. He then looked in the city directory and found some Hinsons named in the directory and went to see them, but they did not know the plaintiff. He then went back to the office and put his book down and did not bother it any more because that was all he could do..

H. B. Hammond testified that he was shipping clerk and assistant paymaster at the Olympia Mills on June 19, 1902, and remembered that on that day a messenger boy, Theodore Rivers, came to the office. The witness went to the window to wait on him, and he asked where M. L. Hinson was. The witness examined the pay-roll of the company hurriedly and found that one Luther Hinson had been working there, but left on the 17th of June, and he refused to receive the message, as there was no one there by the name of M. L. Hinson, and he was not working for the mill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 945, 132 N.C. 460, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinson-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-nc-1903.