Lyles v. Western Union Tel. Co.

65 S.E. 832, 84 S.C. 1, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 211
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 20, 1909
Docket7327
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 S.E. 832 (Lyles 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
Lyles v. Western Union Tel. Co., 65 S.E. 832, 84 S.C. 1, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 211 (S.C. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

On 1st July, 1908, the plaintiff sent from Columbia over defendant’s lines this telegram, addressed to J. B. Burley, Rockton, S'. C.: “Charlie died today. Meet at Bookman tomorrow.” The plaintiff’s purpose in sending the message was to> notify Burley, her brother, of the death of her husband, and have him to meet the remains at Bookman and provide for interment at a place of burial some distance from the station. ’ This notice was printed on the back of the message as sent from Columbia: “Messages will be delivered free within the established free delivery limits of the terminal office. For delivery at a greater distance a special charge will be made to cover the cost of such delivery.” The defendant’s agent at Rockton, on receipt of the message, sent to Columbia this service message, dated 1st July, as a statement of the reason for non-delivery:

“Yours date to Burley, signed Ryles, undelivered. Party lives about ten miles in the country.” No attempt was made to deliver the service message to- the plaintiff, notifying her that her telegram had not been delivered, until the morning of 2d July, and it was not actually delivered until about 6 :30 p. m. on that day.

In the meantime the plaintiff, relying on the delivery of her telegram, had sent her husband’s body to Bookman, in charge of friends, on a train which left Columbia at 12 o’clock on the 2d July. As Burley did not receive the death *4 message he did not meet the body at Bookman, and no arrangements were made for its conveyance to, the place of burial or for proper interment. The consequence was that the body of plaintiff’s husband remained at Bookman, a small railway station, exposed to the sun for several hours, and,was interred late in the night, without the usual burial rites. The plaintiff recovered judgment for mental anguish, alleged to have been suffered by her, due to the defendant’s alleged negligent, wanton and wilful breach of duty in failing to deliver the message sent by her, and in delaying the notice of its non-delivery until after her husband’s body had been sent to Bookman. The questions raised by the appeal will be considered without referring in detail to the numerous and elaborate exceptions.

1 2 There was no error in admitting testimony as to the body lying in the sun at Bookman, and the delay in the burial. It is true the plaintiff was not suffering mental anguish from these things at the time they occurred, for she had no knowledge of them. But, if they were the proximate results of the defendant’s breach of duty, there is no reason why she could not recover for the mental anguish suffered when they did come to her knowledge. The remarks of the Circuit Judge, in passing upon the admissibility of this evidence, was not such -a statement of facts to the jury as is forbidden by the Constitution. It was not made in the charge, and could not have been prejudicial, because there could be no difference of opinion that a wife, with normal feelings, would suffer mental anguish from the lack of attention to her husband’s remains and from such delay in interment as here occurred.

3 On the former appeal the Court, in disposing of a demurrer to the complaint, held that the message itself was notice to the defendant that delay in the delivery of the message “would probably result in some want of care of the body and some delay in the burial.” There is, therefore, no foundation for the exceptions *5 alleging error in admitting evidence that such lack of proper care and delay actually did result. 77 S. C., 174, 57 S. E., 725, 12 L. R. A., (N. S,), 1040; n.

4 Burley, the addressee of the original message, lived about ten miles from Rockton; and the Circuit Judge charged the jury: “That where a telegraph company has received for transportation and delivery a telegram, and after-wards discovers that the party to' whom same is sent lives beyond its free delivery limits, then it is the duty of the company to notify the sender that additional charges are demanded for the delivery; and if it fails to do so, and its failure is negligent, and that negligence as the proximate cause — results in injury to the person sending the message, or for whose benefit it is sent, — then the company is liable.” The defendant excepts to. this instruction, taking the position that, as the fact of Burley’s residence being ten miles away was- known to the plaintiff, and she paid only the charge to Rockton, and failed to notify the defendant and tender the additional charge for delivery beyond the free delivery limits, she could not recover damages for the failure to deliver the message. The instruction was certainly correct, as a general proposition. Campbell v. Tel. Co., 74 S. C., 300, 54 S. E., 571; Lyles v. Tel. Co., 77 S. C., 174, 57 S. E., 725, 12 L. R. A., (N. S.), 1140, n.; Martin v. Tel. Co., 81 S C., 432, 62 S. E., 833. If the defendant’s counsel wished it modified, so as to cover the principles for which they contend, there should have been a request to that effect.

5 It may be true that good faith requires that the sender of a message, who knows it cannot be delivered within the free delivery limits to any one authorized to receive it, should notify the telegraph company of that fact when he sends the message, and tender any reasonable amount demanded to cover the expense of delivery beyond the free delivery limits. But there can be no doubt that any one expecting an early dispatch may name to the company any person, or any place, within the free *6 delivery limits, as the place of delivery, and require it to be delivered or tendered to such person or at such place.

In this instance the mail carrier, Elkins, testified that at the instance of Burley he notified the agent at Rockton to deliver the message to Burley by telephone or send it in the mail by the carrier himself, who passed Burley’s house every day; that the agent assented to the arrangement, and that he was at the telegraph office on both the first and second days of July. But the instruction was expressly given to the jury to disregard all this testimony, as incompetent, so far as it related to the arrangement with the operator at Rockton, and to consider only such portion as tended to put the operator on notice that an important death message was expected. There is, therefore, no foundation for the exception alleging error in admitting the conversation between Elkins and the operator as evidence of a promise to deliver the telegram by telephone or mail.

6 Assuming the exclusion of the testimony as to the alleged arrangement to have been proper, it was not error to refuse to direct a verdict or to instruct the jury to find for the defendant, either on the whole case or on the issue as to punitive damages, for there was, nevertheless, evidence from which a wanton disregard of defendant’s duty to the plaintiff, resulting in mental anguish, could be inferred. The operator at Rockton, according to his own testimony, received the message at about 3 p.

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Related

Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Franklin
129 Tenn. 656 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)
Hinson v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
74 S.E. 752 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.E. 832, 84 S.C. 1, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyles-v-western-union-tel-co-sc-1909.