Seddon v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

126 N.W. 969, 146 Iowa 743
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 969 (Seddon 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
Seddon v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 126 N.W. 969, 146 Iowa 743 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

Evans, J.

On February 5, 1907, one George Seddon delivered to the defendant at Mystic, Iowa, the following prepaid telegram: “2-5-1907. Mystic, Iowa. To Ralph Seddon, Eutledge, Iowa. Ralph Sims is dead. Funeral here tomorrow. Tell James Seddon. (Signed) George Seddon.” This message was received by the defendant’s operator at Eutledge at 1:50 p. m. on that day. Eutledge is a small station in the immediate vicinity of a coal mining camp, and its only business is such as is incidental to sucb camp. Plaintiff was a coal miner, but had been confined to his borne with sickness for some weeks, and was so confined on the date in question. The defendant’s operator carried the message to tbe coal office, and made inquiry concerning the sendee, but failed to elicit any information. He “stuck it in a grating at the office” and left it there. The only person in the office was the bookkeeper, Mary Eobinson, and it is in dispute in the evidence whether the operator called her attention to the fact that he was leaving the message or not. He testified as a witness that he spoke to her about it, and she testified that she beard no sucb statement, and did not know that tbe message was left there. - It was discovered about one o’clock on the next day by one Erskine who inclosed it in an envelope addressed to James Seddon, a son of the plaintiff. James received it tbe same 'afternoon, and carried it to tbe plaintiff who lived a quarter of a mile away. It is claimed by tbe plaintiff that tbe failure to deliver tbe telegram to him on tbe afternoon of its receipt prevented bis attending the funeral which occurred at Mystic forty miles away, and that he suffered great mental pain because thereof!

[746]*7461. Telegrams: delay in delivery: damages: notice. [745]*745I. The first ground of reversal pressed upon our attention by tbe appellant is that tbe plaintiff failed to [746]*746comply with section 2164, in that he never presented to the defendant company any claim in writing for his alleged damages. As against -^is, p. ¿s gbown by the plaintiff that he began his action on March 5, 1907, by serving original notice upon the defendant; and that his petition was filed on March 11, 1907, and that his action was brought for the March, 1907, term, which commenced on the 25th day of March, and that the defendant appeared to the action on the 26th day of March.

The question presented for our consideration is whether this state of facts is a sufficient compliance with section 2164 which provides that “no action for the recovery of such damages shall be maintained unless a claim therefor is presented in writing to such company, officer, or agent thereof within sixty days from the time the cause of action accrues.” It is 'the contention of appellant that no action could be brought until after the presentation of the claim in the manner above provided. This argument is based on the analogy of other .statutes and our holdings thereon. One of such statutes is .section 3528 of the Code which provides that no action on an unliquidated demand against a county .shall be “brought until the same has been presented to such board and payment demanded and refused or ignored.” We have held that the presentation of a demand under this section is a condition precedent to the right to maintain suit against the county. Sections' 1050 and 1051, which relate to suits against special charter cities, require a written verified statement of an alleged injury to be presented and filed with the city recorder within thirty days after the injury, and forbids suit to be brought until thirty days after such filing. We have held that the presentation and filing of such statement thirty days before suit brought was a condition precedent to the bringing of the same. Ulbrecht v. Keokuk, 124 Iowa, 1; Kenyon v. Cedar Rapids, 124 Iowa, 196. [747]*747IJpon 'the analogy of these cases the appellant contends that the same rule should be applied in the construction of section 2164. It will be noted that the language of section 2164 is essentially different from that contained in the other sections referred to. Sections 3528 forbids an action to be “brought until,” etc. Section 2164 provides that uo action shall be “maintained unlessThe manifest purpose of section 2164 is that the defendant company shall have timely notice of the claim for damages while the event is recent and the facts are fresh. This object is of course attained by the bringing of the action and the filing of the petition within the' sixty-day period provided for by the statute. The statute does not in terms forbid the bringing of the action before the presentation of the claim provided only that the claim be presented wtihin sixty days. If a written claim had been presented simultaneously with the service of the notice, it would undoubtedly have complied with the literal terms of the statute. Nor do we see any reason why such a course should not be deemed as complying with the spirit of the statute.

It is urged by appellant that the presentation of such a claim is intended to perform the function of a demand and to give to the defendant time for investigation before it be subjected to the cost of an action. This argument adds something to the terms of the statute. The presentation of such a claim would undoubtedly operate as a sufficient demand. But the statute does not provide for time to be allowed for investigation before the commencement of the suit. And if we should grant that a demand upon the defendant was due from the plaintiff before the. commencement of the suit, the only purpose of such a demand would be to enable the defendant to discharge a conceded liability without the burden of costs. Such a question can become material only where the defendant does concede .his liability and is defending only [748]*748against liability for costs. But where the defendant appears and denies all liability, as in this case, the question of preliminary demand involves only, a naked formality which can affect the substantial rights of neither party. Our conclusion is that the manifest purpose of section 2164 is to require prompt claim on the part of claimants, and ’to require such claim to be brought to the attention of the company within the statutory period in order that it may have the benefit of an investigation of the circumstances while the facts are fresh and ascertainable. We can not avoid the conclusion that the serving of an original notice and the filing of the petition within the sixty days is a compliance with both the letter and the spirit of the statute so far as the claim set forth in the petition is - concerned. To have presented a separate claim a few moments 'before the serving of the original notice or simultaneously therewith would have been 'a formality so idle and without purpose that we ought not to say that such requirement was implied by the statutes in the absence of express provision to that effect.

2. Same: instructions. II. It is next urged that the charge in the petition was that the defendant had failed to deliver the telegram, whereas the disclosure of the testimony was that it had only delayed the delivery of such telegram. This alleged discrepancy is urged upon us as having a twofold significance. It is first urged that this was sufficient to defeat the -availability of the petition as a substitute for the written presentation of a claim provided for by section 2164. It is further urged that the petition in this form furnished no basis for such instructions by the trial court as permitted the jury to consider whether the defendant was.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 969, 146 Iowa 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seddon-v-western-union-telegraph-co-iowa-1910.