LeHue v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

93 S.E. 843, 174 N.C. 332, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 17, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 843 (LeHue v. Western Union Telegraph 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
LeHue v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 93 S.E. 843, 174 N.C. 332, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 85 (N.C. 1917).

Opinion

Hoke, J.

It is well established in this jurisdiction that, in proper instances, damages for mental anguish can be recovered for negligent failure to deliver an intrastate message, and that in case of public-service companies an action therefor will lie, either in contract or tort. Penn v. Telegraph Co., 159 N. C., 306; Va. Peanut Co. v. R. R., 155 N. C., 148; Bright v. Telegraph Co., 132 N. C., 317.

In the former case the positions held to be controlling with us are stated as follows:

“Under certain circumstances, substantial damages for mental anguish may be recovered against a telegraph company for wrongful and negligent failure to deliver or correctly transmit a telegraphic message, independently of bodily or pecuniary injury by the sender, addressee, or the beneficiary whose interest therein has been sufficiently made known to the company. Damages for mental anguish are permitted to be recovered in this State, not only as a rule of interpretation¡ and adjustment of the rights of the parties growing out of the contract between • them, but because of our public policy, adopted and recognized as necessary to enforce the proper performance of duties incumbent on telegraph companies as public-service corporations. A party entitled to recover damages from a telegraph company for its failure in its duty to transmit and deliver a message may bring his action either in contract or in tort.”

The second ease was a suit against a railroad company for negligent delay in the shipment of goods, and, on the character of the action that could be brought, the same general principles were presented and approved.

In the latter action Associate Justice Allen, in his concurring opinion as to the right to sue in tort* quotes with approval from Merritt v. Earle, 29 N. Y., 122: “The liability of a common carrier does not rest in contract, but is imposed by law. It exists independently of contract, .having its foundation in the policy of the law, and it is on this legal obligation that he is charged as carrier for the loss of property entrusted to him”; *334 and later, in bis opinion, proceeds as follows: “We have, then, in the ■case of a shipment of freight, a contract between the shipper and the carrier, by which the carrier has agreed to transport and to deliver, and the law has imposed on the carrier the duty to carry safely and to deliver within a reasonable time; and our next inquiry is, what is the remedy for a breach of the duty imposed by law? I think the shipper may, at his election, sue in contract or in tort. He may treat the obligation imposed by law as entering into and becoming a part of the contract of carriage, in which event his action would be for breach of contract, or he may sue for a breach of the public duty, which has caused him special damage, and his action would be in tort. Elliott on Railroads, Yol. 4, see. 1693, says: 'Where there is a breach, both of contract and of duty imposed by law, as in case of loss or injury by a common carrier, the plaintiff may elect to sue either in contract or in tort.’ ”

A perusal of these and other authorities on the subject will disclose, too, that one principal difference as to admeasurement of damages in the two classes of actions is, that in contract the damages were such as were in the reasonable contemplation of the parties at the time the contract is entered into, while in tort they are reasonably probable under the relevant facts existent at the time of tort committed.

In the Peanut Company case there had been a shipment of machinery from Petersburg to Williamston, N. C., and there was negligent delay in transit while the goods were at Rocky Mount, continued and persisted in after full notice of special circumstances which made additional damages likely.

In the opinion the Court said: “This, then, being the position of the parties, if the nominal consignee and the president of the company gave the notice embodied in the proposed evidence, and there was negligent delay on the part of the defendant, after being afforded full and reasonable opportunity to correct the wrong, such negligence would constitute a tort, giving plaintiff the right to recover damages on facts as they then appeared. This is one principal difference in the elements of damages obtaining in breach of contract, and consequential damages arising from a tort. In the one case damages are recovered, as a rule, on relevant facts in the reasonable contemplation of the parties at the time the contract is made, and in the other on the facts existent or as they reasonably appeared to the parties at the time or tort committed.”

While that was a railroad case, the governing principle is the same, giving the right to sue in'tort when there is a breach of contract involving the breach of a duty growing out of the exercise and enjoyment of a public or quasi public franchise.

On application of these principles to the facts stated in the complaint and admitted by demurrer to be true, the judgment of the court is clearly *335 •correct. From these facts it appears that early in the morning of 22 November, 1915, plaintiff’s husband, at Raleigh, N. 0., remitted to plaintiff at Black Mountain, N. C., a telegraphic order for $11.45 with which to pay her fare to Raleigh, to which place she was ready and expecting to go; that the message was promptly sent and received by •defendant’s agent early in the morning of 22 November, and was not •delivered until the middle of the day on 23 November, causing plaintiff to remain at Black Mountain till that time, without money or funds, etc., to her great damage; that at 3 o’clock p. m., while plaintiff was awaiting and expecting money from, her husband to enable her to leave for Raleigh, N. 0., at 4 p. m., she received a message from Falkland, N. 0., announcing the death of plaintiff’s mother, to be buried at that place on 23 November, and for lack of said remittance so negligently withheld she'was prevented from attending her mother’s funeral, to her .great damage and mental anguish, etc.

The complaint then proceeds further, as follows:

“That, as plaintiff is informed and believes, the order to pay the plaintiff the sum of $11.45 was promptly sent from Raleigh and duly received by the defendant at Black Mountain early Monday morning, 22 November, to-wit, shortly after 8 :30 a. m.

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Related

Lehue v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
96 S.E. 29 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 843, 174 N.C. 332, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehue-v-western-union-telegraph-co-nc-1917.