Poteet v. Western Union Tel. Co.

55 S.E. 113, 74 S.C. 491, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 113 (Poteet 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
Poteet v. Western Union Tel. Co., 55 S.E. 113, 74 S.C. 491, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 147 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

.The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

This is an appeal from an o-rder of nonsuit in an action to- recover damages for mental anguish *493 of the plaintiff Lottie P’oteet, caused by the alleged tort of the defendant in “wilfully, wantonly, recklessly and negligently” failing to deliver a telegram. The complaint thus sets forth the telegram and Mrs. Poteet’s connection with it: “That on July 17th, 1904, Lottie Poteet, then sojourning in the city of Union, S. C., lost her infant child, and in the first agony of her grief, and desirous of the presence of her husband, the above mentioned R. W.- P'oteet, father of said infant, she, the said Lottie Poteet, procured a friend to authorize the defendant company at its office in Union, S. C., to send a message to her husband, the said R. W. Poteet, a "copy of which is as- follows:

“Union, S. C., July 17.
“Mr. R. W. Poteet, 1910 Assembly St., Columbia, S. C. Come on first train. Your baby is dead. W. R. Sox.”

The mental anguish for which damages are demanded is thus stated: “The plaintiff Lottie P’oteet was: deprived of the assistance and comfort of her husband, and she was in that time of great mental anguish and worry, in a city of strangers, and had to: leave the tender duties of the shipment of the body of her dead infant to stranger’s hands.” The plaintiff R. W. Poteet joins in the action merely as the husband of Lottie Poteet and claims nothing in his own right.

1 The Circuit -Judge ordered the nonsuit on the ground that the message failed to disclose on its face that Mrs. Poteet had any interest in it, and there was no extraneous proof of notice to- the company of such interest. We do not think this conclusion has been successfully assailed. Mrs. Poteet was a visitor at the home of Sox, who sent the telegram at her instance, but its wording gave no-intimation to the defendant of this fact, or that she was in Union with her dead child anxious for her husband to- come to her in her distress; nor is there any evidence outside the telegram to charge the defendant with notice of plaintiff’s interest. For this purpose reliance is placed by the plaintiff on the testimony of Sox as to statements made to him by the *494 defendant’s agent at Union. The telegram upon which the action is brought and which was intended to announce to Pbteet the death of bis baby and bring him to Union was delivered to. defendant at the Union office between 8 :45 and 9 :45 o’clock on Sunday morning. For reasons which will be referred to hereafter it did not reach Poteet in time for him to take the train for Union that day. When Pbteet failed to come in responsé to the death message, Sox, in the afternoon, sent another telegram in these words: “Make arrangements to' meet Lottie to-night.” Sox intended this message for Pbteet, but wrote the name Boieet or Bohit, and the defendant’s agent when he received this second message. from Sox called his attention to the name and inquired, “Is this the same person that has been telegraphing up here about this child ?” referring as we understand to telegrams sent by Pbteet to. his wife. When the witness answered in the affirmative, the agent then said, “You’ve got his name wrong,” and the name of the addressee was changed to1 Poteet. If all this had occurred when the telegram upon which Mrs. Pbteet sues was delivered in the morning to the defendant, there would be some ground for the inference that the defendant’s agent then knew: that Mrs. P’oteet was the-wife of R. W. Pbteet, the addressee, and the mother of the dead infant, and hence interested in the prompt delivery of the telegram which would probably alleviate her distress by bringing her husband to her. But while there was a similar mistake in the name of the addressee in the 'first telegram, there is no. evidence whatever that the agent when he received that message for transmission connected in his mind the name of the addressee with Mrs. Poteet, or knew that it was intended for her husband or related to her child. The fact that the agent in receiving the second telegram suspected a mistake and made inquiry, furnishes no ground to charge the company with notice of Mrs. Poteet’s connection with the first telegram when that telegram: came into the company's hands, there being no evidence whatever that the agent even 'suspected that the name was incorrectly written *495 in the first telegram and that the name of Mrs. Poteet’s husband was intended. On this point, therefore, we agree with the Circuit Judge that there was no evidence to charge the defendant with notice of Mrs. Ptoteet’s interest in the telegram.

2 But the plaintiff’s counsel insist by their fourth exception, even if there was nothing to indicate to. the defendant Mrs. Pateet’s interest, yet it was error to grant the nonsuit, “because this was an action of tort, not arising ex contractu; the defendant was and is a public common carrier, and owes a duty to; every one who is interested in its public services, .and is responsible in tort for any injury or wrong which it may inflict upon any one under the mental anguish statute, whether such be as a contractual relation with it or not.”

The general distinction between contract and tort in this respect is thus well stated by Mr. Justice Jones., in Hughes v. Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 516, 527: “In actions for damages for 'breach of contract, it is usual ¡to say that compensatory damages may be recovered for such consequences as are within the contemplation of the parties to the contract at the time of contracting, but in an action in tort it is- usual and proper to1 say that 'compensatory damages may be recovered for such consequences as naturally and proximately result from the negligence of performing a duty imposed- by law.” In cases of this character the suit is usually for the tort committed in breach of the -public duty owed to the plaintiff, but the duty -springs out of the contract and depends on. it, for manifestly the defendant owes no public -duty concerning a particular telegram except to those for whom or in whose behalf or interest it has undertaken to transmit it. All others are of the outside public, and damages which they incidentally suffer cannot by any stretch be regarded the natural and proximate result of failure to transmit a particular telegraphic message. The contract fixes, the relation, and he who sues for tort based on contract must show privity with the party to be charged by connecting himself with the *496 contract as a party or a known beneficiary. Hellams v. Tel. C., 70 S. C., 83, 49 S. E., 12; Jones v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 540, 50 S. E., 198; Rogers v. Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 290; Hughes v. Tel. Co., supra. In further support of this view, it may be remarked that as. to the ’subject matter of a telegram it is too well established for discussion, before there can be a recovery the telegraph company must have notice that the particular result alleged as the basis of the claim was to. be apprehended from- delay in transmission. Arial v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 418, 50 S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 113, 74 S.C. 491, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poteet-v-western-union-tel-co-sc-1906.