Kester v. W. U. Telegraph Co.

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 410
CourtHenry Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 410 (Kester v. W. U. Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Henry Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kester v. W. U. Telegraph Co., 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 410 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Sbney, J.

The Pennsylvania company owns and operates a line of telegraph from Bloomville, Ohio, to Mansfield, Ohio. The Western Union Telegraph Co. owns and operates a line of telegraph from Mansfield, Ohio, to Holgate, Ohio. On January 4, 1892, one J. F. Kester, who was the son of the plaintiff, for and on behalf of her, and as her agent, presented to the agent of the Pennsylvania company at its office in the said village of Bloomville, Ohio, for transmission to Holgate, Ohio, the following message:

“Bloomville, January 4, 1892.
“H. J. Kester,
“Holgate, O.
“Father dead; send word to Brinkman.- funeral. Wednesday, eleven A. M.
J. F. Kester.”

That he paid to said agent the usual charges for the transmission of a like message to Holgate, Ohio, and the full amount charged for the transmission of said message.

That the Pennsylvania company duly delivered said message at Mansfield, Ohio, to the defendant, The Western Union Telegraph Co., which company duly received it for transmission to Holgate, Ohio. That the defendant did not transmit or deliver said message to the said H. J. Kester, owing to the carelessness and gross negligence of said defendant.

That on January 3, 1892, said plaintiff’s husband died in Crawford county, Ohio. That had said message been promptly delivered to said H. J. Kester, he could have and would have gone to the home of the plaintiff (his mother), and ‘would have been with her to comfort and console her during her great grief; that the presence of her said son would have been a comfort and a consolation to said plaintiff, and would have greatly lessened her grief; but in consequence of the said carelessness and gross negligence of said defendant, said H. J. Kester had no knowledge of the death of his father until after the funeral, when he received a letter notifying him of the death and burial of his father. That said plaintiff lived a considerable distance from a railway station; said plaintiff was put to great extra expense in having men go to said station and wait for the train, on which the said H. J. Kester might have arrived had he received said message; that said plaintiff, fully expecting and relying upon the arrival of said H. J. Kester, delayed the funeral of her husband for a long time. That said plaintiff was greatly worried and distressed in mind by reason of the non-arrival of her son, and suffered great pain, mental anxiety and distress; that the injury inflicted on her feelings was painful in the extreme, and by reason thereof she was damaged in a certain sum alleged in her petition.

Do the facts as stated entitle the plaintiff to recover ? is the question presented to the court by a petition in error by reason of the common pleas court having sustained a general demurrer to the petition alleging said facts.

The petition in the lower court contained two causes of action. The first cause of action claimed a recovery by reason of secs. 3462, 3463 and 3465, Rev. Stat. The second cause of action claimed a recovery by reason of the breach of a contract, or a wrong inflicted by the breach of a contract.

Section 3462, Rev. Stat., provides:

“Every company, incorporated or unincorporated, operating a telegraph line in this state, shall receive dispatches from and for other telegraph lines, and from or for any individual ; and on payment of its usual charges for transmitting dispatches as established by [412]*412the rules and regulations of the company, transmit the same with impartiality and good! faith, under a penalty of one hundred dollars for each case of neglect or refusal so to do, to-be recovered, with cost of suit, by civil action in the name and for the benefit of the-person or company sending or forwarding, or desiring to send or forward the dispatch.”

Section 8463, Rev. Stat., provides:

“When the person who sends a dispatch desires to have it forwarded over the line of other telegraph companies, whose termini are respectively within the limits of the usual delivery of such companies, to the place of final destination, and tender to the first company the amount of the usual charges for the dispatch to the place of final delivery, the company shall receive the same, and, without delaying the dispatch, shall pay to the succeeding line the necessary charges for the remaining distance; and the succeeding li'ne shall accept the same and forward the dispatch in the same manner, as if the sender had appeared to itin person and paid the usual charges, and for the omission so to do it shall be liable to a like penalty, as-provided in the last section.”

As to sec. 3465, Rev. Stat., we do not think it has any application to the facts in the case.

These sections of the statute are penal, and being such must be strictly construed.

The person that can maintain an action for this penalty is limited to the one “sending or forwarding, or desiring to send or forward, the dispatch.’'' The one that sends is the person whose name is attached to the dispatch. The one that forwards has reference to the company that forwards it upon its delivery from another company, which had received it from the sender. The one desiring to send is the person who presents it to the company for transmission.

The succeeding line or company, before it is subjected to the penalty as provided by sec. 3463, must be paid for its service in advance by the first company. Otherwise it is under no obligation to any one to forward the dispatch.

Applying these rules of construction to the facts in the case, we find that the plaintiff had no cause of action against the defendant for the claimed violation of those sections of the statute.

The Pennsylvania company received and accepted the dispatch from the sender, J. F. Kester, whose name is attached to the dispatch. So it was not the action of one desiring to send. The plaintiff, Sevilla Kester, is not the sender of the dispatch, for her name is not attached thereto. The Pennsylvania company,, who received the dispatch from the sender, J. F. Kester, did not pay the necessary charge for the remaining distance to the succeeding line, viz.: the defendant, The Western Union Telegraph Co.

As to the second cause of action, it presents the question as to whether or not the plaintiff can recover for mental pain, distress or anxiety alone, where neither pecuniary loss nor physical injury accompanies the mental pain and distress. We think it well settled, as the law of the country, that where a physical injury occurs, caused by the negligence of a defendant, that included in the damages may be mental pain and distress. The reason assigned is, that the pain incident to the physical injury is one and inseparable from the mental pain. As they cannot be separated, a recovery can be had. The physical pain cannot be measured by any certain, definite and specific rule, and is left to the discretion of the jury, as ,to the damages sustained thereby. While such damages are in their nature speculative damages, they are taken out of the general rule, viz.: that remote and speculative damages cannot be recovered,, from the fact that from the injury sustained, the physical pain necessarily endured is susceptible of proof.

While this is true, learned courts of the country and able text-writers are greatly in conflict as to whether an action lies for mental pain and distress alone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kester-v-w-u-telegraph-co-ohcircthenry-1894.