Leppard v. Western Union Tel. Co.

70 S.E. 1004, 88 S.C. 388, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 17, 1911
Docket7861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 1004 (Leppard v. Western Union Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leppard v. Western Union Tel. Co., 70 S.E. 1004, 88 S.C. 388, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 132 (S.C. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for negligent delay in delivering the following telegram:

“Valdosta, Ga., March 11, 1909.
To W. M. Leppard, Trenton, S. C.
“Your father died this a. m. at nine o’clock. I will leave for home with body tonight at eleven o’clock. Heart trouble cause of death, very sudden. Signed J. W. Brogden.”

According- to plaintiff’s testimony the telegram was delivered to the agent of the defendant company at Valdosta, Ga., at not later than two o’clock p. m. on March 11, 1909, over the telephone by Frank Hunter for J. W. Brogden from Clyatville, a small town about ten miles from Valdosta, and was not delivered to plaintiff at Trenton, S. C., until about two o’clock p. m. oh March 12; 1909. The home of plaintiff’s father, F. M. Leppard, was at Trenton, S. C., and he was on a visit to his brother in law, J. W. Brogden, living at or near Clyatville, Ga., when lie died. About nine o’clock on the morning of the 12th plaintiff read a notice of his father’s death in “The State,” published at Columbia, S. C., and being distressed at not hearing directly *390 from Valdosta, he soon thereafter went to the defendant’s office at Trenton, S. C., and inquired of the agent if there was any message for him, and upon the agent stating that no message 'had arrived, plaintiff at an expense of seventy-nine cents, caused the agent to send a message to the ticket agent of the railroad at Valdosta, Ga., inquiring about his father and also1 requested the Trenton agent to inquire at other telegraph stations whether there was such a message. About 12.o’clock on the 12th plaintiff received a telegram from J. W. Brogden from Augusta, Ga., notifying him that he would leave with his father’s remains at six o’clock that day. There was therefore testimony tending to show that if the telegram had been delivered at any time previous to 9 o’clock oil March 12th, the plaintiff would not have sustained the expense of the telegram sent by him and would not have suffered the mental distress for several hours from 9 to-12 or from 9' to 2, as the case may be, which- arose out of the uncertainty as to the death of his father, and as to1 the time of the arrival of the body at Trenton, S. C., and as to when necessary arrangement for its reception and burial should be made. We find nothing whatever in the testimony upon which to base a finding for mental anguish suffered at any other period than between 9 a. m. and 2 p. m. as the result of the delay in delivering the telegram, for the body arrived in the night of March 12th and the funeral was had at Trenton, S. C., on the 13th without any delay or want of funeral preparations fairly attributable to the conduct of the defendant.

1 Was there any testimony tending to show negligence of defendant? First there is the presumption of negligence arising from long delay in delivering the telegram, amounting in this case to about twenty-four hours. Poulnot v. Telegraph Co., 69 S. C. 545, 48 S. E. 622; Hellams v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C. 87, 49 S. E. 12; Arial v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C. 423, 50 S. E. 6, and other cases. Then there was evidence that the message was not transmitted *391 from the Valdosta office until about three-quarters of an hour after delivery to it, that it was then transmitted to Clinton, S. C., instead of Trenton, S. C., although Frank Hunter and another witness testified that the proper address was given to the Valdosta agent and repeated back by him as Trenton, S. C.,that at 10 a. m. the Trenton office inquired of Valdosta office as to the said message and notwithstanding this information as to the correct address the message was not delivered until four hours later. It is true the Valdosta agent testified that the address given him over the phone was Clinton, S. C., and there was testimony of numerous service messages with reference to the message in question and an effort to deliver at the proper address, but the testimony for defendant was not so conclusive that the Circuit Court could declare as matter of law that the prima facie showing of negligence was entirely overthrown.

From the foregoing statement it must follow that there was no error of law in refusing the motion to direct a verdict for defendant and for a new trial on the ground that there was no testimony tending to' establish plaintiff’s case. It may be conceded that the verdict was large in proportion to the mental anguish shown, but it is well settled that this Court cannot disturb a verdict for mere excessiveness. It should appear that the verdict is so excessive as to warrant an inference that it was the result of caprice or some improper or corrupt motive. This is particularly true in mental anguish cases, where this Court has no standard for measuring the damages.

As said in Willis v. Tel. Co., 69 S. C. 536, 18 S. F. 538: “Our statute allowing recovery in telegraph cases for mental suffering provides no rule of evidence for its ascertainment. In the consideration it should be borne in mind that this statute provides for the recovery of damages to which no legal standard of measurement can be applied more definité than the common sense of the jury, regulated by the discre *392 tion of the Circuit Judge to grant new trials, when- it seems to him common sense was not applied by- the jury.”

2 It remains to consider certain exceptions to the charge. It is alleged that the Court erred' in charging: “ ‘In arriving at actual damages:, a jury may take into consideration what it is alleged was paid out in actual money in a case. The jury can also take into consideration as far as they get at it in dollars and cents what amount a person should receive for the mental anguish he has suffered * * *. They allege in their complaint that the plaintiff paid for a telegram and that on account of the delay * * * plaintiff suffered mental anguish.’ The error being -that the charge left it to the jury to award as damages the transmission fee paid on the telegram and other sums paid out, whereas this is not alleged- in the complaint as an element of damages, and if it were, the plaintiff cannot do both, rescind the contract and get back the benefits which he had conferred on the defendant and at the same time treat the contract as existing for the purpose of recovering damages for a breach thereof. The payment or promise of the fee is what establishes the relations between the parties whether the action is on contract or in- tort.”

The complaint in the ninth paragraph alleged that “the plaintiff got the agent of defendant at Trenton, S. C., to send a message to the ticket agent of railroad at Valdosta, Ga., inquiring about the plaintiff’s father and paid the charges on this message amounting to seventy-nine cents.” We see no reason why this expense incurred because of the delay in delivering the telegram in question should not be allowed in estimating damages. The case of Gist v. Tel. Co., 45 S. C., 372, 23 S. E.

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Related

Duncan v. the Record Publishing Co.
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127 S.E. 265 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 1004, 88 S.C. 388, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leppard-v-western-union-tel-co-sc-1911.