Telegraph Co. v. Frith

58 S.W. 118, 105 Tenn. 167
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 118 (Telegraph Co. v. Frith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telegraph Co. v. Frith, 58 S.W. 118, 105 Tenn. 167 (Tenn. 1900).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is an action for damages against the telegraph company for negligence in the delivery of the following telegram:

“IIazeN, AekaNsas, July 11, 1899.
“To R. A. Frith, Somerville, Term.:
“Little Robert died this morning. Come at once; waiting here for you.
“(Signed) W. K. BacoN.”

Plaintiff, Frith, lived ' in Somerville, Tennessee, with his wife and one child, Robert. His dwell[169]*169ing was within the corporate limits of the town and about four hundred yards from the office of the telegraph company. ITis wife’s father lived at Des Arc, Arkansas, and she, with her little child, Robert, about seven years old, had a few days prior to duly 11, 1899, gone there to visit her father and relatives. The child became ill on the 5th of July and died on the morning of Tuesday, July 11. W. X. Bacon, the brother-in-law of the wife, went to Tlazen, a station on the Little Rock & Memphis Road, about fifteen miles from Des Arc, it being the nearest telegraph office, and sent the telegram above set out, between 2 and 3 o’clock in the afternoon, paying the charge 'for transmission and delivery, about 8 o’clock in the evening returned to the office, and, upon ascertaining that the operator had heard nothing of the delivery of the message to plaintiff, sent another telegram to the operator at Somerville^ requesting that the first one be delivered without delay, and paid also for this latter telegram.

Mr. Bacon remained at Tlazen until after the arrival of the train from Memphis (the next day), upon which Mr. Frith was expected to come in response to the telegram, and when he did not come, and he did not hear from him, he returned to Des Arc, and, Mr. Frith not coming and not having been heard from, the child was buried. Tt is shown that the operator at Somerville received the message at 4:40 on the [170]*170afternoon of July 11, 1899, and Frith was then in Somerville, and the operator knew him and where he resided, and had delivered telegrams to him at his residence on other occasions. Frith remained at his residence that night, and the next day was at work in Somerville . near the public square until 4:45 in the afternoon, when he went out to work at Jackson’s, some eight miles in the country, and remained until the afternoon of Saturday, the 15th, when he returned, and through the mail received a letter from his wife, informing him of the death of his child, itobert. Soon thereafter a friend told him . there was a message for him at the telegraph office. He telephoned to that office and inquired if there was a telegram there, and the operator answered there was, and to come and get it and he would explain why it had not been delivered earlier. About 6 o’clock in the evening the operator found the plaintiff at a store up-town, and explained to him that he had put the telegram in his pocket after receiving it, intending to deliver it when he came up-town, as he usually did in the evening. When he came up-town he foi'got all about the telegram, and did not think of it again until Frith telephoned to him about it, four days thereafter. It appears that the operator lived some 325 yards from the residence of the plaintiff. Frith, after receipt of the letter and telegram on Saturday, went to Des Arc. If [171]*171the telegram had been delivered promptly, as it should have been, he would have been able to reach Des Arc before the burial of his child, by either of' two roads from Memphis, and would have gone.

There was' a trial before the Court and a jury, and a verdict for $1,900, the amount sued for. Upon suggestion of the trial Judge, there was a remittitur of $900 and judgment for $1,000 and costs. Defendant, telegraph company, has appealed and assigned errors.

It is said it was error to admit evidence of the sending of the second telegram, as that was a separate and distinct matter. We think it was not error, but was pertinent to show the urgency of the sender of the message, and the negligence of the company in not delivering the original telegram, and this is true whether, as a matter of fact, the second message was "or was not sent. The wording of the message carried with it notice of its importance and the necessity for immediate. delivery. This was made still more prominent and important by the effort to trace it and procure its delivery. The sending of the second message bore directly. upon the question of the defendant’s discharge of duty and accentuated its negligence in that regard.

Telegraph companies, like common carriers, are public servants and held to a very high degree of diligence and a strict discharge of duty. M'arr [172]*172v. Telegraph Co., 85 Tenn., 529; Wadsworth v. Telegraph Co., 86 Tenn., 695; Telegraph Co. v. Mellon, 96 Tenn., 66; Jones v. Telegraph Co., 101 Tenn., 442.

Haying violated its duty and been negligent in its discharge, the company is liable in damages. These damages must be such as to reasonably compensate the- party injured' not only for his pecuniary loss, but also for the mental anguish, grief, and disappointment caused by the negligence. Railroad v. Griffin, 92 Tenn., 694; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Robinson, 97 Tenn., 638; Jones v. Telegraph Co., 101 Tenn., 442.

It is said that, conceding this doctrine to be now established by the decisions of this Court, still the verdict in this case was so excessive as to indicate passion, prejudice, corruption, or caprice on the part of the jury, and it should, therefore, have been set aside and treated as void and a new trial awarded, and that it is an error such as is not, and cannot be, cured by a re-mittitur. The insistence is that when the verdict is based upon passion, prejudice, corruption or caprice, the proper remedy is not to remit, but to set aside the verdict altogether and award a new trial.

An ingenious and forcible argument is made, and it is not without authority, that in actions for personal injuries, when there is no fixed standard for the measure of damages, every verdict [173]*173■which is by the trial Court considered as excessive must be so deemed on account of passion, prejudice, corruption or caprice on the part of the jury, and that when a trial Court refuses to approve such verdict it can only be upon such ground. Even if this be conceded to be true, and if it be admitted that in the present case the trial Judge refused to approve the verdict because he deemed it to be so excessive as to indicate passion, prejudice, corruption or caprice, still the question remains, Should the verdict be set aside or a less amount approved and judgment rendered therefor upon a remittitur. Although a verdict may be the result of passion, prejudice, caprice or corruption, it is nevertheless a valid verdict until and unless it is set aside. If it is reduced by the trial Judge to such an amount as makes it a proper verdict on the facts of the case, and this is assented to by the plaintiff, it is purged of its taint, and judgment may be rendered lor such reasonable amount without the necessity of another trial. This has been the practice and rule of this Court and the Court below for a long number of years, and we can see no reason why it should not apply in cases of tort as well as in cases of contract.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 118, 105 Tenn. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telegraph-co-v-frith-tenn-1900.