Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Bailey

184 S.W. 519, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1916
DocketNo. 1539. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 519 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Bailey) 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
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Bailey, 184 S.W. 519, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 289 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the appellee for damages resulting from the negligent failure to deliver a telegraphic message sent by R. L. Bailey from Bethel Springs, Tenn., to T. C. Bailey at New Boston, Tex., notifying the latter of the dangerous illness of his brother. The message reached New Boston promptly, but was never delivered, and the appellee did not learn of his brother's illness and death till some time after the burial.

This is the second time this case has been before this court. See Bailey v. Western Union Tel. Co., 171 S.W. 840. On the first trial, the court in his charge to the jury limited the amount which might in any way or event be awarded to the plaintiff to the sum of $50. The plaintiff appealed from a judgment for that amount, and assigned as error the giving of the charge referred to. This court sustained the assignment and reversed and remanded the case, holding that the stipulation contained in the printed matter on the back of the telegram, which provided that $50 should be the limit of liability, was void. The last trial proceeded according to the instructions given in that opinion, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the appellee for the sum of $1,000, from which the telegraph company prosecutes this appeal. Inferentially, it appears to be conceded that, *Page 520 if the correctness of the judgment appealed from in this case is to be tested by the laws and judicial policy of this state, there is no error insisted upon which will justify a reversal. In other words, if no federal question is involved, the judgment should be affirmed. In their brief, counsel for the appellant thus state the questions which are raised:

"First. This being an interstate message and constituting interstate commerce, is mental anguish a proper element of damages to be submitted to and determined by the jury?

"Second. Is the valuation clause of the contract, limiting recovery of damages to the sum of $50, reasonable and valid, and is the unrepeated message clause, also limiting liability, reasonable and valid?

"Third. Is the free delivery limit clause, limiting liability on messages wherein the addressee was beyond the delivery limits of office, reasonable and valid?"

In view of the fact that since the former appeal some other courts of high repute have announced a ruling in conflict with what we there held, we have felt constrained to give the subject further careful consideration. We shall therefore endeavor to treat the questions raised as if this were their first presentation to this court.

The argument attacking our former ruling rests upon two propositions: First, that the judgment appealed from, being based upon damages resulting from mental anguish alone, imposes a burden on interstate commerce and violates the provisions of subdivision 3, § 8, of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States. Second, that telegraph companies engaged in interstate commerce have by an act of Congress been made subject to the provisions of the Interstate Commerce Law, which alone must be looked to in determining their liability for damages and the validity of their contracts designed to limit or qualify that liability. These propositions present two separate and distinct federal questions, depending upon two distinct federal provisions for their support. If the judgment in this instance violates the provisions of the commerce clause of the Constitution, it should be set aside, regardless of whether or not Congress has undertaken to regulate this class of commerce. On the other hand, if Congress has undertaken to regulate telegraph companies doing an interstate business, and has prescribed a rule for determining their liability for negligently failing to deliver messages intrusted to them for transmission from one state to another, that law is supreme and should control, without reference to the constitutional objection. But if it should appear that neither of these grounds for federal intervention is well taken, then the judgment of the court below should be affirmed.

We shall now take these questions up for discussion in the order stated above.

First, does the judgment appealed from violate the commerce provision of the federal Constitution? As authority for answering that question affirmatively, counsel for the appellant have referred to the case of W. U. Tel. Co. v. Brown, 234 U.S. 542, 34 Sup.Ct. 955, 58 L.Ed. 1457. This case was considered, and an effort made to distinguish it from the case now under consideration on the former appeal. The message in that instance was sent from a point in South Carolina, addressed to Brown at Washington, D.C. It was forwarded to the latter place without delay, but through the negligence of the agents of the telegraph company in Washington was not delivered. It was a death message; and Mrs. Brown, claiming damages subsequently filed a suit in the court of common pleas in the state of South Carolina, where she recovered a judgment for damages, based upon mental anguish. That judgment, after being affirmed by the Supreme Court of South Carolina (92 S.C. 534, 75 S.E. 542), went before the Supreme Court of the United States and was there reversed for the reasons stated and quoted in our former opinion. It appears from the facts set out in the opinion that the suit was based upon a statute of South Carolina which provided that damages for mental anguish were recoverable in such cases. It also appears that under the rulings of the courts of the District of Columbia, over which the Supreme Court of the United States exercised appellate jurisdiction, mental anguish was not regarded as a proper element of damages in such suits. Justice Holmes, who rendered the opinion, held that the action was one of tort; that, the misconduct having occurred in the District of Columbia, the question of liability must be determined by the laws of that place. We deem it unnecessary to again quote at any length from that case, and shall merely refer to the extracts made in the opinion in this case on the former appeal. The decision in the Brown Case announces these three propositions: First, that the measure of damages for an act of negligence, when treated as a tort, is to be determined by the laws of the place where the tort is committed; second, that in the District of Columbia, where the common law, as construed by the Supreme Court of the United States, prevails, the mental anguish doctrine, as commonly understood in telegraph cases, will not be enforced; third, that the laws of a state prescribing a measure of damages for a tort cannot be given any extraterritorial effect.

The dissimilarity between the facts of that case and the one here under consideration may be thus pointed out: There the action was one sounding in tort; here the suit is for the breach of a contract. There the misconduct occurred in another jurisdiction; here it occurred in the state of the forum. There the trial court undertook to measure the, damages to be recovered by its own laws, which were different from those of the district where the tort was committed; here the judgment may be sustained whether tested *Page 521 by the laws of this state or by those of the state from which the message came — and this is true whether the negligence charged be treated as a tort or as the breach of a contract. There is no evidence in the record as to what were the laws of Tennessee, and we must therefore assume that they are the same as those of this state. We understand that in reviewing the decisions of a state court the federal Supreme Court will follow the same rule. Liverpool Gr. West. Steam Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 519, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-bailey-texapp-1916.