Potter v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

116 N.W. 130, 138 Iowa 406
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 N.W. 130 (Potter v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 116 N.W. 130, 138 Iowa 406 (iowa 1908).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

Plaintiff’s mother, who was eighty-six years of age, lived at Leland, in the State of Illinois, and plaintiff with his wife lived in the city of Cedar Rapids, in this State. Late in the afternoon of August 1, 1905, plaintiff’s brother, who lived at Leland, delivered to the defendant a message, addressed to plaintiff, by proper street number, reading as follows: “ Mother can’t live till morning.” This message was received at defendant’s office in the city of Cedar Rapids at about 8:40 p. m., August 1st, but was not actually delivered to plaintiff until about 8:30 a. m. August 2d, when it was handed to plaintiff’s wife, she receipting therefor at her home in the city of Cedar Rapids. She immediately telephoned its contents to her husband, and upon receipt thereof plaintiff made proper inquiries to find how he could reach Leland, and was informed that he could not do so except by train leaving at 3:33 a. m., August 3d. He took that train, reached Leland during that day, and found that his mother had died at 4:55 p. m., August 2d. Had the message been delivered at any time after its receipt at the Cedar Rapids office, and in season for him to have taken the 3:33 morning train, he might have reached his mother’s bedside before she died. The trial jury found that defendant was negligent in delivering the message, and awarded plaintiff the amount heretofore stated. The appeal presents four principal questions for our determination. The instructions [408]*408are not set forth; and, as they are not challenged, we must presume that they announced correct principles of law, and, so far as possible, corrected any errors committed during the trial.

i. telegraphs: eryTadmission of evidence: affi™aioSeofy law. Plaintiff was permitted to prove that two or three times just preceding her death his mother called for him, and wanted to know of those in attendance why he did not come, and that this fact was communicated to him almost immediately upon his reaching Leland, . . , ° ’ musing him great pain and mental anguish, This testimony was objected to as hearsay, incompetent, and immaterial, but the objection was overruled. The courts which have passed upon this character of testimony are in hopeless conflict in their holdings. See W. U. Co. v. Jackson, 35 Tex. Civ. App. 419 (80 S. W. 649), and W. U. Co. v. Mellon, 96 Tenn. 66 (33 S. W. 725), holding that such testimony is inadmissible, and Whitten v. W. U. Co., 141 N. C. 361 (54 S. E. 289), and West. Union Co. v. Waller, Tex. Civ. App. (72 S. W. 264), holding that it is proper to be received, as bearing upon the amount of damages to be awarded. The question was before us in the case of Collar v. Telegraph Co., affirmed without opinion September 27,1906, and, the members of the court being equally divided in opinion, no pronouncement was made. No change of view has occurred since that time, and the ruling must be affirmed by operation of law.

2 SAME-submissufficiency1^ evidence. II. It is contended that plaintiff should have shown not only that he could but that he would have reached Leland before his mother’s death had the message been properly de^vere¿- d11 passing upon this question we must, for reasons already stated, assume that C01ir£ correctly stated the law upon this proposition, and that the jury found the facts necessary to a recovery to be as plaintiff claimed them to be. The only point which we may consider in this connection is, was there enough testimony to take the case to a jury upon these [409]*409propositions? It very clearly appears from the testimony that, had the message been delivered in time for plaintiff to have taken the 3:33 train on the morning of August 2d, he could have reached his mother some time before she died, and, as we shall see, it was a question for the jury to determine whether or not defendant was negligent in failing to make delivery of the message so that he might have done so. It is true that plaintiff did not testify directly that he would have taken that train had there been time to have done so; but it does appear that, as soon as plaintiff received the message, he instituted immediate inquiries of the proper railway agents as to how he could reach Leland in the most expeditious manner, and that he took the first train which promised to get him to his mother’s home. Surely this showing as to what plaintiff did do after the receipt of the message toward reaching his dying mother is sufficient evidence as to what he would have done had the message been delivered the previous evening. At any rate, it was enough to take the question to the jury.

s. delivery os TELEGRAM: negligence: evidence. III. ■ The next proposition is that there was not sufficient testimony of delay to justify the submission of defendant’s negligence to the jury. Solving this question, we must start with the conceded facts that the mes- . . sage was received at defendants office m Cedar Rapids not later than 8:40 p. m., August 1st; that it was addressed to plaintiff by street and number, and that he lived but five and one-half blocks from the defendant’s office; that the message was not in fact delivered to plaintiff’s wife until about 8:30 the next morning, when its contents • were telephoned to plaintiff. It also appears, without conflict, that defendant’s Cedar Rapids office was open all night, and that it had three messenger boys in service during the entire evening. If this makes out a prima facie showing for plaintiff, then there was enough to send the case to a jury. Section 2164 of the Code provides that, in actions such as this, negligence will be presumed upon proof [410]*410of -unreasonable delay in the delivery of the message, and that the burden in such cases is upon the defendant to show that the delay was not due to negligence on its part. Appellant contends that this section has no application, for the reason that there was no showing of unreasonable delay. This argument overlooks the conceded facts as to the actual delivery of the message. We shall refer, in a moment, to this proposition, more at length, but it is sufficient now to say that the facts regarding the time of the receipt of the message and of its actual delivery are not in dispute. The message was what is known as a “ sick ” or “ death ” one, and the diligence of the defendant in delivering it must be considered with reference to the character thereof. Such messages should be promptly delivered; for, as a rule, they are of much more importance, to the parties concerned than those pertaining to business transactions. We are constrained to hold that the circumstances disclosed by the undisputed evidence show an unreasonable delay in the delivery of the message, and that negligence on the part of the company will be presumed. That being true, the case was manifestly for the jury. But, should we hold that the effect of the statute is to do no more than shift the burden of the proof, the same result must follow.

Defendant introduced testimony showing that plaintiff and his wife, being the. only members of his family, were away from home, attending a circus on the evening of August 1st, and that he did not return until after 10 o’clock. There is no dispute that one of defendant’s messenger boys went to plaintiff’s home about 9 o’clock in the evening, and made an attempt to deliver the message.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.W. 130, 138 Iowa 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-western-union-telegraph-co-iowa-1908.