Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Chouteau

1911 OK 216, 115 P. 879, 28 Okla. 664, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 9, 1911
Docket776
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1911 OK 216 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Chouteau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma 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. Chouteau, 1911 OK 216, 115 P. 879, 28 Okla. 664, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 178 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

DUNN, J.

This action was originally brought in the United States court for the Northern District of the Indian Territory, on April 29, 1905, by John Chouteau, defendant in.error, against the plaintiff in error, the alleged cause of action being predicated upon the negligent delivery of the following prepaid telegram, announcing the serious illness of plaintiff’s father: “William very low; notify Ed and Julia.” It is conceded that as a result of the negligence of the company in making delivery, plaintiff was deprived of the opportunity of taking a train which arrived at Kansas City, Missouri, where his father was, in time to have seen him prior to his death. On the trial to a jury, a verdict was re *665 turned for plaintiff, to reverse which the cause has been duly lodged in this court.

A number of questions have been argued by counsel, but the decision of the following will determine the controversy: May a party to whom a prepaid telegraphic message is sent, announcing the serious illness of his father, recover substantial damages solely for the mental distress occasioned by negligence'on the part of the company in its delivery, where such negligence results in denying him an opportunity of attending upon his father in his last illness, and seeing him prior to his death.

The “mental anguish” doctrine in telegraph and other cases throughout the United States has been a fruitful field of discord. Not only are courts of different jurisdictions at direct variance with each other, but some of the courts which allow recovery have been at cross-purposes with themselves in their adjudications, and in all numerous instances of dissent and dissenting opinions without reference to the holding have been made and filed. The courts which have held against the allowance of such damages have found a ready reason for this discord in the fact that such damages were unknown at common law, and hence the courts which have adopted the innovation have not enjoyed the benefit, guidance, and support of its rules. No court had ever declared and no legal text-writer or author had ever declared for damages in such cases until the year 1879, when Shearman & Redfield’s work on Negligence was issued containing a statement of the opinion of the authors that where by cause,of delay or total failure of delivery of messages relating to domestic and personal matters suffering followed, they did not think that the telegraph company in fault ought to escape with mere nominal damages because such delay was often productive of injury to the feelings which could not be easily estimated in money but for which a jury ought to be at liberty to award fair damages. No authority was cited to support this declaration, and we think it must be conceded that none existed. In 1881, the Supreme Court of Texas, in the case of So Relle v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 55 *666 Tex. 308, 40 Am. Rep. 805, allowed substantial damages in a case similar to the one at bar, citing in support thereof the section from the work on negligence above referred to, and two other cases, neither of which support the proposition involved in the -case, but both of which are sound on the doctrine they do announce. This was the beginning of the doctrine which has spread into some of the other states until counsel, to sustain their claim for damages, in this court, are able to cite authorities not only of Texas, but of Alabama, Louisiana, Washington, Nevada, Tennessee, North Carolina, Iowa, and Kentucky. Cases so relied on may be noted as follows: Western Union Telegraph Company v. Crumpton, 138 Ala. 632, 36 South. 517; So Relle v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 55 Tex. 308, 40 Am. Rep. 805; G., C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Levy, 59 Tex. 542, 46 Am. Rep. 269; Stuart v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 66 Tex. 580, 18 S. W. 351, 59 Am. Rep. 623; Western Union Telegraph Company v. Jones, 81 Tex. 271, 16 S. W. 1006; Graham v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 109 La. 1069, 34 South. 91; Davis et al. v. Tacoma Ry., etc., Co., 35 Wash. 203, 77 Pac. 209, 66 L. R. A. 802; Barnes v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 27 Nev. 438, 76 Pac. 931, 65 L. R. A. 666, 103 Am. St. Rep. 776; Wadsworth v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 86 Tenn. 695, 8 S. W. 574, 6 Am. St. Rep. 864; Young v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 107 N. C. 370, 11 S. E. 1044, 9 L. R. A. 669, 22 Am. St. Rep. 883; Mentzer v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 93 Iowa, 752, 62 N. W. 1, 28 L. R. A. 72, 57 Am. St. Rep. 294; Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 90 Ky. 265, 13 S. W. 880. It smacks considerably of rethreshing old straw to again take up^ and consider at length the arguments pro and con raised by counsel and involved in the decisions presented to us on this question, but we have been given the advantage of able briefs and oral arguments, and as this is the first time the question has been presented to this court since its organization, we feel a rather extended examination of the decisions and a presentation of our conclusions thereon may not be amiss.

*667 The reasons adduced in support of the rule allowing damages are stated by Judge Thompson in his work on Negligence, vol. 2, § 2477, as follows: First. That by the terms of the message, the company is advised, in a general way, of its importance to the addressee and of the consequences which may inure to him from its failure promptly to transmit and deliver it, so as to bring the case within the rules of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, 354, s. c. 26 Eng. Law & Equity, 398. Second. That the principles of the common law award damages predicated upon an injury to the feelings in other cases, such as an assault and battery, the unlawful expulsion of a passenger from the vehicle of a common carrier, the seduction of a daughter, etc. Third. That a rule which denies the recovery of damages predicated on injury to the feelings in the case of the default of a telegraph company in the discharge of its public duties, places mere business communications above those relating to the most intimate and sacred relations of life and touching the deepest and tenderest feelings of the human heart, and that if the company is to be held merely liable for the fee which has been paid, it may prefer commercial messages to messages announcing the sickness or death of near relatives, and throw the latter into the waste basket, or refuse to transmit them at all and then return the fee on being challenged with dereliction, and thereby absolve themselves from all damages.

There are, generally speaking, but two sources from which the courts of this nation derive their rules and power to adjudicate between litigants. The first is the unwritten or common law, and the second is the written or statute-law. If a cause of action and the right to relief is claimed and the suitor is unable to' point to either a written or an unwritten law giving the right to that which he claims, it cannot be other than a safe proposition to hold that his right does not exist. If the right is not found in the common law, courts lack the power to place it there. Authority to supply it is vested in the Legislature, or as this court said *668 in the ease of State ex rel. v.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 216, 115 P. 879, 28 Okla. 664, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-chouteau-okla-1911.