Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Graham

244 S.W. 579, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1922
DocketNo. 779.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 579 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Graham) 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. Graham, 244 S.W. 579, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1302 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, O. J.

This was a suit by the plaintiff, Mae Graham, represented by her mother, Mrs. Minnie Graham, as next friend, against the Western Union Telegraph Company, as defendant, to recover damages because of mental anguish claimed to have been suffered by plaintiff in consequence of the alleged negligent .failure on the part of the defendant to transmit and deliver to her a .telegraphic message. A trial before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor for $1,500, from which judgment the Western Union Telegraph Company has prosecuted an appeal to this court, assigning several grounds of error upon which it is insisted the judgment should be reversed. These claimed errors relate to the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s pleading to warrant the judgment in her favor, and to the action of the trial court in permitting her to file, a trial amendment after the cause had proceeded to trial, and to the action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for a continuance, after the trial amendment had been permitted, and to the judgment itself as being excessive.

At.the time the message in question was ■delivered to appellant’s agent for transmission to appellee, appellee’s mother was living at Cleveland, in Liberty county, Tex., and ap-pellee, a young lady of about 18 years of age, was working as operator in a telephone office at the little town of Hull, in said county, where she had been employed for a period of some two months. Up to the time she took the position as operator at Hull, appellee lived with her mother at Cleveland. On Sunday, September 19, 1920, a little brother of appellee, about two years of age, who was with its 'mother at Cleveland, became seriously ill, and at about 4:10 p. m. on that day plaintiff's mother sent and caused to be delivered to appellant’s local operator at Cleveland a telegraphic message directed to appellee at Hull, as follows:

“Cleveland, Tex. 4.10 P. M. Sept. 19, 1920.
“Mae Graham, Hull, Texas. Come at once.
“H. F. Tanner.”

H. F. Tanner, whose name appears signed to the message, Was the person by whom Mrs. Graham, appellee’s mother, sent the message to appellant’s operator at its Cleveland office, and Mr. Tanner was acting for the benefit of appellee in so handling the message.

Appellee alleged in her original petition, substantially, that at the time of the delivery of the message to appellant’s Cleveland agent for transmission to her her baby brother, Winslow Graham, two years of age, was seriously and dangerously ill at the home at Cleveland, and that there was little hope of his recovery; that defendant’s charges for transmission and delivery of such message were paid by appellee’s mother, but that the-message was not delivered to plaintiff until the following morning, September 20th, about 9:15 a. m.; that appellee had.but recently gone from her home at Cleveland to Hull, and that her little brother was very much atached to hex-, and she devoted to him; that her little brother died on the morning of September 20, 1920, at 4:40 o’clock, and before appellee reached Cleveland in response to the message; that, if the message had been properly and promptly delivered to ap-pellee, she could and would have reached hen home at Cleveland, where the little brother was sick, before his death; that by the use of reasonable and proper diligence appellant could have delivered the message -to her in time for her to have left Hull and to have arrived at Cleveland at about 10:30 o’clock on the night of September 19, 1920, but that the appellant ^negligently failed to deliver the telegram to her until the next morning, as stated, and that, by reason of such negligence, appellee “was prevented from being present at the bedside of her said baby brother before he died, and denied the opportunity of being there to administer to him and wait, upon him in his last hours, and *581 by reason and in consequence thereof she has suffered the most severe disappointment and great grief, and much mental pain and anguish, in all to her damage in the sunt of $2,500.” The prayer was:

“Wherefore, plaintiff prays that defendant be cited to appear and answer this petition, and that on final hearing she have judgment against the defendant for her said damages in the suim of $2,500, for costs of suit, and all other and further relief, both legal and equitable, general and special, to which she may be justly entitled.”

There was no allegation in appellee's petition to the effect that any information or notice whatever was given ’to appellant’s Cleveland agent, at the time of the delivery to him of the message in question, that-the purpose of the message was to inform ap-pellee that her little brother was sick at Cleveland, or that the message was sent for appellee’s benefit in order that she might come home and be with the brother. Neithef was it alleged anywhere in the petition that appellant’s Cleveland agent knew that the little brother was sick, or that he knew the purpose of the message; and there was nothing alleged in the petition to show that appellant’s Cleveland agent had any reason to believe, at the time of his receipt of the message, that it related to any sickness in ap-pellee’s family, or that appellee would probably be caused to suffer any mental anguish or disappointment in the event the message should not be properly and promptly delivered, other than what was contained on the face of the message itself, as we have copied it above.

Appellee’s original petition was filed on January 29, 1921, and in answer to same appellant filed a general demurrer and general denial. The record does not disclose that any further pleading was filed by either party, except a trial amendment filed by the ap-pellee, which we will refer to hereinafter. Upon the pleadings as stated, both parties announced ready for trial on August. 25,1921, and a jury was waived and the case submitted to the court. Appellee’s attorney thereupon proceeded to introduce evidence in behalf of his client, and concluded the. same, and rested the appellee’s ease. Counsel for appellant introduced no evidence, but also announced that the defendant rested. Thereupon appellee’s counsel proceeded to argue the case to the court, and fully concluded his argument, and he was then followed by counsel for ¿ppellant, who concluded his argument also. Thereupon, and before the court had announced his decision, appellee’s counsel -requested the court to permit him to file á trial amendment. The request was oral, and was as follows:

■ “We ask leave to file a trial amendment, and will dictate it right now or afterwards, setting up that, when Mr. H. E. Tanner, the person who attended to the actual sending of this message from Cleveland, handed it-to the operator at Cleveland- on the date in question, he informed said operator that it related to the illness of the brother of Miss Mae'Graham, the little baby boy then dangerously ill, whose recovery was doubtful, and the object of sending it was to give Miss Mae Graham an oppor-' tunity to arrive home before the baby’s death; that he further stated, told the agent MePheár-son at Cleveland that this Miss Mae Graham was telephone operator- at Hull, and could be found about the time .this message reached there in all probability at the telephone office; that her hours of work required her to be on duty; and that infonmation was imparted to the agent at the time this message was' delivered for transmission and paid for by Mr. H. E. Tanner.”

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 579, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-graham-texapp-1922.