Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Fitts

79 S.E. 156, 13 Ga. App. 248, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 25, 1913
Docket4377
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 156 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Fitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia 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. Fitts, 79 S.E. 156, 13 Ga. App. 248, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 109 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Russell, J.

Fitts sued the Western Union Telegraph Company, in a justice’s court, for damages on account of the non-delivery of a message he had delivered to the defendant’s agent at Carrollton, Georgia, to be transmitted to one Cobb at Brookhaven, Mississippi. Upon the trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant sued out a certiorari, which was overruled by the judge of the superior court. There are various .assignments of error in relation to the judgment of the trial court, but all of them were abandoned upon the hearing in the superior court except two: (1) that the verdict is contrary to the evidence .and without evidence to support it, and (2) that the verdict is contrary to evidence in that it was not shown that within sixty days from the date when the message was filed for transmission, the plaintiff presented in writing his claim for damages.

We shall consider these propositions in reverse ordér, because unless the requisite notice of the claim was given in writing, or the requirement that the claim should be in writing was waived, .the plaintiff would have had no right of action, and it would not be necessary to determine whether the verdict was authorized upon other grounds. A condition upon the blank, upon which the plaintiff’s message was presented for transmission, is as follows: "The company will not be liable for damages or statutory penalties in any case where the claim is not presented in writing within sixty days after the message was filed with the company for transmission.” In Hill v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 85 Ga. 425 (11 S. E. 874, 21 Am. St. R. 166), it was held that a like stipulation was both reasonable and obligatory; and that when the plaintiff used for his message the blank containing the stipulation, he thereby [250]*250agreed to it, and it became- a part of his contract. See, also, Western Union Telegraph Co. v. James, 90 Ga. 254 (16 S. E. 83); Stamey v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 92 Ga. 613 (18 S. E. 1008, 44 Am. St. R. 95); Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Waxelbaum, 113 Ga. 1017 (39 S. E. 443, 56 L. R. A. 741). It was admitted upon the trial that no written claim was presented within the sixty days stipulated in the contract. The only question is whether an agent of the company waived the requirement that the claim should be in writing; and if so, whether the agent was authorized to bind the company by this waiver. We do not concur in the views of the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error that it was held in the Hill case, supra, that an agent of the telegraph company can not waive the time and accept a notice of a claim for damages after the expiration of sixty days. On the contrary, we think that if the agent is authorized to waive at all and to bind his principal by the waiver, the time within which the claim for damages may be presented can as well be waived as the mode of its presentation. There is nothing to the contrary in the ruling of Chief Justice Bleckley in the Hill case. He was dealing with a case like the one now before us, in which the claim for damages, though presented within sixty days, was not in writing; but the question of a waiver of the time was not before the court, and the learned Chief Justice did not rule upon this point. In discussing the case he merely alludes (in confining his ruling to the proper limits) to the fact that a waiver of the time was not involved. After stating that the "telegraph company was entitled to have a claim for damages presented in writing within sixty days after the message was sent,” he proceeded to say, "We think that right could be waived, and that the evidence in the record tended to prove that it was waived, not indeed as to the time, but as to the mode of making the demand.” The waiver insisted upon in the case at bar must, for the same reason, be confined to the "mode of making the dqmand,” because there is in the record no evidence of a waiver of the condition that the demand should be presented within sixty days. The evidence shows that within a week after the message was filed for transmission Fitts orally presented his claim for damages to the operator of the company with whom he had filed the message. The operator accepted this as a sufficient demand for damages, and so treated it. Without requiring that the claim [251]*251should be made in writing, he took the matter of adjusting the claim up with the superintendent of the company, and repeatedly informed Fitts that the claim was being investigated and was only delayed on account of change of superintendents of the company. The first time that the plaintiff made a claim for damages the agent of the company offered to return to the plaintiff the amount he had paid for sending the message; but, as he could not pay more than this, he stated that he would at once take the matter up with the superintendent. Upon several occasions, about every week thereafter, the plaintiff approached the agent of the telegraph company and inquired if he had received instructions from the superintendent. And while he was told that the agent had as yet received no instructions, he was informed each time that the matter was up for investigation, and that as soon as the investigation was completed he would notify the plaintiff. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, the agent several times informed him that his claim was being investigated, and that the only cause of the delay was the change in superintendents. It appears from the record that the agent of the company had in fact informed the superintendent, by letter, of the plaintiff’s claim for damages. We think that under this evidence the jury was clearly authorized to infer a waiver of the requirement that the claim for damages should be put in writing.

The local agent could waive the stipulation as to writing. The Supreme Court has ruled in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Blanchard, 68 Ga. 299 (45 Am. R. 480), that the demand for damages could be made upon the agent of the company on duty at the place from which the telegram was sent; and this ruling was reiterated in Hill v. Western Union Telegraph Co., supra. Chief Justice Bleckley, in the TIill case, supra, said: “The agent was not bound to recognize an oral demand. But if he did so, making no objection to it on the ground that it was not in writing, we think it was sufficient.” Counsel for the plaintiff in error attempted to draw a distinction between the Hill case and the case at bar, because in the Hill case there was, after the investigation, a refusal to pay. The fact that the plaintiff in the present case was compelled to bring suit upon the claim for damages now before us would seem to indicate that there was in this case a refusal to pay. But whether there was or not is immaterial. If an agent upon [252]*252■whom the claim could properly be made recognized the oral demand as sufficient, and followed this up by informing his superintendent of the claim, so that the superintendent could or - did make an investigation into the merits of the claim, with a full understanding of the nature of the claim upon which it was insisted that the company was liable, a waiver of the condition that the claim should be in writing might be implied. The officers properly charged with the settlement of claims had received notice of this particular claim, and all had been accomplished by the oral notice that could have obtained in case the claim had been put in writing.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 156, 13 Ga. App. 248, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-fitts-gactapp-1913.