Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Cook

30 S.W.2d 497, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 721
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1930
DocketNo. 12333.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 497 (Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Cook, 30 S.W.2d 497, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 721 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of appellee, Cook, for the sum of $1,000 assessed as damages for “mental anguish” alleged to have been caused by the failure of appellant company to exercise due care and dispatch in transmitting and delivering a long-distance telephone call from Bridgeport, Tex., to Fort Worth, Tex.

The judgment rests upon the following facts as substantially stated, to wit: Appel-lee at the time was living near the town of Bridgeport in Wise county, and was notified that his son had been accidentally killed in the town of Moran, in Shackelford county, some 140 miles distant; that he was without means of conveyance and called upon a Mr. Fred Chilton to place wit-h the appellant telephone company a call for appellee’s son-in-law, W. G. Bischofhausen, at the time living at 814 West Second street, Fort Worth, Tex. Mr. Chilton testified that he placed the call with appellant’s operator, a Miss Wilkerson, at Bridgeport, at about 12:03 a. m. January 23, 1928; that Miss Wilkerson was informed' that it was a death message and it was desired that she get the call through as quickly as she could; that the reason for dispatch was that Mr. Bischofhausen, appellee’s son-in-law, was wanted by Mr. Cook to come to his house with his car and go with him to Moran. Mr. Chilton’s testimony on this point is that he told Miss Wilkerson the call was “in reference to Mr. Cook’s son being killed, and to come on out there as quick as he could; that Mr. Cook wanted him to go with him or to assist him in going to Moran where his son was killed.”

It appears that Cook was later informed that there was no telephone at 814 West Second street and that a messenger would have to be employed for the delivery of the call; that thereupon a fee to cover the expense of the messenger was paid; that the messenger boy took the call to S14 West Second street and was met by the woman who was keeping the rooming house at that place; that the messenger, in answer to inquiry, stated that he did not know the nature of the call, but that he supposed it to be just an ordinary call, and the rooming house keeper told him that Mr. Bischofhausen was in bed asleep and that she would deliver the message in the morning. Neither Mr. Cook nor appellee having heard from Bischofhausen for several hours, they again placed a call, with information of its urgency, and this, it appears, was delivered by a messenger by placing it beneath the entrance door of 814 West Second street and was not in fact delivered to Mr. Bischofhausen until next morning about 7:30 a. m., whereupon he at once drove to Bridgeport with his car, which was in good running order, but found that Mr. Cook had already departed for Moran.

Appellee, Cook, testified to the effect that he had been informed of his son’s accidental death at Moran; that he was without a car or means of transportation across the country to Moran, and that his son-in-law Bisch-ofhausen at Fort Worth had a good car and he desired him to come to Bridgeport and take him to his son; that Mr. Chilton assured him that he would place the call and that he (Cook) dressed himself and got ready to go, expecting Bischofhausen to come within. about an hour and a half; that he was walking the floor restless and did not know what to do, only just walk the floor and look for the car lights; that he waited until about 5 o’clock the next morning, and, Bischofhau-sen having failed to come, that he (Cook) was “just about crazy”; that “I was just wild wanting to get off to the body of my son; he was among strangers, nobody there and was just wild to get to his body.”

He further testified: “After I heard of my boy’s death, the delay in getting started did affect my mind; I was just crazy to get off and get to the body of my boy. I heard that he was dead and killed that night and nobody with him; he was there among strangers; I did not know what shape his body was in; after I started on the way, the further delay had an influence on my mind; I wanted to get to the body; I could not think of anything else but to get there; that was all I had on my mind, was to get to him. The delay in getting started continued to affect my mind in the manner that I have described; after I started and on the way I could not get anything else on my mind; that excited my mind; my main motive was to get to him. I loved my boy with the natural affection of any father. My feelings toward my deceased son were that I wanted to get to him; I loved him, of course, above anything else in the world; I wanted to get to his body; I did not know what shape his body was in; I was just crazy and unnerved; and could not get anything else on my mind, just wanted to get there.”

On cross-examination and in reply to a question as to whether or not -his anxiety to go to his son’s body was just as great when he first heard of his death as it was at any other time up to the time he did get to him, . appellee replied: “That was practically all there was on my mind, was to get to him; I *499 did not know what condition Ms body was in, or anything like that. I did not have anything else on my mind only to get to him; as to whether or not my main distress and suffering was on account of my boy being gone, still, at the same time I was suffering for want of getting to him. That was the main thing on my mind all the time. That feeling came on immediately and I did not cease to be anxious to get to Mm.”

Appellee further testified that about 5 o’clock on the morning of January 23, 1928, Mr. Bischofhausen not having appeared, he hired an old Chevrolet car belonging to a neighbor and employed a boy to drive him to Moran, agreeing to pay all expenses, and to pay the boy, that the car was not in good order and they had car trouble, and that he did not finally reach Moran until between 2 and 3 o’clock of the afternoon of the same day. He further testified that his son’s body reached Bridgeport the next morning; that one of his nephews accompanied it, appellee paying the expenses; that, if he had reached Moran earlier, he could have sent the body to Cisco and from Cisco to Fort Worth and on to Bridgeport by train, at a saving of some $15; that he incurred a personal expense of some $23 or $24 on the trip for transportation to and from Moran, besides the expense of the telephone calls from Bridgeport.

Telegraphs and telephones are generally treated in the statutes and authorities relating to the subject under the same general head; both are classed as public utilities, and both are engaged in the transmission of messages between separated points by means of electric forces. The telegram is transmitted in the lettered word by means of mechanical instruments over wires. In. the case of the telephone, it is the vocalized word that is transmitted over the wire. The telegraph company is only required to receive, transmit, and deliver the written message with due care and dispatch. The duty of the telephone company is, by automatic contrivance or otherwise, to receive and transmit the call of one person for some other person and thus bring the two in contact for communication inter se.

In 26 R. O. L. p. 481, § 4, it is said: “Scientifically considered a telephone is an improvement in telegraphy, or an improved telegraph; it is to all intents and purposes a part of the telegraphic system of the country, and the business of a telephone company, in its broader aspects at least, is legally indistinguishable from that of a telegraph company.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 497, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-bell-telephone-co-v-cook-texapp-1930.