Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Cowardin

168 S.W. 1133, 113 Ark. 160, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 18, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 1133 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Cowardin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas 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. Cowardin, 168 S.W. 1133, 113 Ark. 160, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 553 (Ark. 1914).

Opinion

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). 1. The court, at the request of appellant, granted prayers for instructions which told the jury that if the earlier receipt of appellee ’s request to embalm and hold the body would not have prevented the funeral from taking place when it did, and if the failure to embalm and hold the body was the result of Williams’s misunderstanding of appellee’s wish, expressed in her telegram, the jury should find for the appellant.

Appellant now contends that the evidence shows conclusively that the failure to embalm the body was not by reason of the late receipt of the message, but because Williams, the superintendent of the Orphans’ Home, did not understand that it was appellee’s desire’to take the body back for burial; that if Williams had known her desire in this respect, the body would have been embalmed notwithstanding the delayed telegram. The appellant, having requested the lower court to submit this as a jury question, is not in an attitude to complain that the verdict of the jury was erroneous on this issue. Berman v. Shelby, 93 Ark. 472. Moreover, we are of the opinion that it was proper to submit the issue to the jury. .

There was testimony tending to show that if the message had been received on the 30th, the day the child died, the body would have been embalmed and held in compliance with the request of the appellee. There was also testimony which warranted the jury in finding that the telegram was received twenty-two hours after the child died; that the child died with pellagra, an infectious disease; that the funeral cortege was ready to move when the message was received; that the superintendent, the president .of the board of control, and those in charge of the funeral arrangements, including the undertaker, thought that it was best to bury the body at that time as quickly as possible; that it was not safe to the other children in the home to have the casket opened up .and the body embalmed. The undertaker does state, in a .second deposition, that if he had known that it was appellee’s desire to have the body embalmed and removed, he would have removed the same to his parlors and embalmed it, even at that belated hour, if the telegram had been addressed to him. But the telegram was not addressed to him, and he could not have obtained possession of the body for embalming purposes without the consent of the authorities having control over the Home.

It-was a question for the jury, under the evidence, as to whether the failure to embalm and hold the body was caused by the delay in delivering the message, or by a failure on the part of Williams to comprehend the meaning of appellee’s telegram.

2. The court, .at the instance of the appellee, submitted to the jury to find whether or not appellant was negligent in the handling of the message from Williams to, appellee, and whether or not appellant was negligent in handling the message in reply from appellee to Williams. The appellant complains that these instructions are without evidence to warrant them. The learned counsel for appellant assumes that there was no negligence on the part of appellant in transmitting the message .as á day letter instead of a “straight message,” and contends that the uncontroverted evidence shows that, being sent as a day letter, there was no negligence in handling the same. But we are of the opinion that it was a question for the jury, under the evidence, as to whether or not the appellant was negligent, in the first place, in sending the message as a day letter instead of a regular message.

The sender of the message testified that he ’phoned the message to appellant’s agent at Monticello, and the agent in charge of appellant’s telegraph office at Monticello testified that he would have accepted the message from Williams by ’phone to be sent to appellee. The difference between the cost of the day letter and a straight message was sixteen cents. He never knew a death message sent as a day letter to save sixteen cents. A death message is only considered as a preferred message when on the prescribed form and sent as such. The 12:30 on the message was in his handwriting. He did not know when he put it there. The habit was to put the time of receiving the message on it. A straight message was given precedence over a day letter. The regular agent stated that he first saw the message about 1:30. The clerk who received the message, witness supposed, placed the day letter blank on it. The witness did not see the boy who brought it. Witness did not think that the handwriting on the message was that of Mr. Williams.

Witness Owens testified that he was clerk of the Iron Mountain Railway Company at Monticello, Arkansas, and on July 30,1912, he received a message, in the absence of appellant’s agent, addressed to Mrs. Pearl Cowardin, Bentonville, Arkansas. He wrote the.words, “Day letter — 23—paid.” He received it from some boy from the Baptist Orphans’ Home. The boy who brought it paid the tariff for a day letter on the message. Witness asked ’ the boy if he wanted it sent as a straight message or a day letter, and the boy told witness to send it as a day letter; so witness accepted it as a day letter and put it on .the file of the operator where he would get it when he came in. Witness did not explain to the boy the difference between a straight message and a day letter, supposing that the boy had instructions from Williams how to send it. Witness asked him how he wanted it sent, and he answered like he knew. Witness did not put the time it was received on it. He pasted the day letter blank on the back of the message. The paper on which the message was written was headed, “Monticello, Baptist Orphans’ Home, Monticello, Arkansas, July 30,1912.” The witness was in the habit of receiving messages in the absence of the operator- and collecting for them. He knew Mr. Williams’s handwriting; thought this was his handwriting. He had never seen any of his handwriting except his signature.

It appears that the testimony of Williams tended to show that the message was transmitted over the ’phone to appellant’s agent to be sent to the appellee, without directions as to the form it should take in sending. The message, on its face, showed that it was a death message. Witness was shown Williams’s signature to the depositions and testified that the signature upon the message was not similar to the signature on the deposition, but that the signature on the message looked like Williams’s signature. He did not know whether the body of the telegram was in Williams’s handwriting or not, as he had never seen any of his handwriting except his signature. When a message is received on a plain piece of paper, they usually attach it to the form it is to be sent on, and witness did so in this ease.

There is an irreconcilable conflict in the evidence as to whether the message was ’phoned by Williams to the operator at Montieello, or whether or not Williams sent the same to appellant’s operator at Montieello by a boy. If the message was given over the ’phone it appears then as a straight message; and, on the contrary, if it was delivered through Williams’s agent — a boy — then the testimony is to the effect that the boy directed the agent to send it as a day letter. If the agent received it over the ’phone, he assumed to send it as a day letter without first obtaining the authority of the sender, and was therefore negligent in causing an urgent death message to be classified as a day letter, and in thus having the same delayed in transmission and delivery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hankins v. Dooley
314 S.W.2d 691 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1958)
Pinnacle Old Line Insurance v. Ellis
307 S.W.2d 882 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1957)
Home Co. v. Lammers
254 S.W.2d 65 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1952)
Andrews v. Southwestern Hotel Co.
44 S.W.2d 675 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 1133, 113 Ark. 160, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-cowardin-ark-1914.