Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Guinn

130 S.W. 616, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 716
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 616 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Guinn) 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. Guinn, 130 S.W. 616, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 716 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

CONNEB, Ci-tiee Justice.

— Appellee instituted this suit to recover damages, alleging that on the first day of October, 1907, one Leonard Depauw, acting for the plaintiff, delivered to the defendant at Wichita Falls for transmission to plaintiff at Memphis, Texas, the following message: “J. E. Guinn, Memphis Texas. Come tonight; Hugh is no better. Ann Guinn.” That said telegram was delivered to the defendant and the charges of twenty-five cents paid to, and accepted by the defendant for the transmission of the message; that the plaintiff resided in the town of Memphis at the time the message should have been delivered, and could have been there found had the message been transmitted with reasonable diligence and reasonable effort put forth to deliver the same; that the defendant negligently failed to deliver the said message until the third day of October, 1907; that Ann Guinn, whose name was signed to the message, was the wife of the Hugh Guinn referred to therein, and that said Hugh Guinn was the son of the plaintiff, who or some time prior to the date of the message had been sick in Wichita County, and that said message was sent to plaintiff to notify him of the serious condition of said son; that the sickness of said son resulted in his death within a few days after the date of the said telegram, and that on account of the delay in the delivery of the message, the plaintiff was deprived of seeing Ms son alive, and only reached Wichita Falls in time for his burial.

The defendant answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, the general denial, plea of contributory negligence, and specially that if there was a delay in the delivery of the message, it was by reason of unavoidable interruption in the working of defendant’s lines between Wichita Falls and Memphis, Texas, caused by the wrongful, unlawful, and disloyal acts of a large number of defendant’s employees and their sympathizers, who, both openly and secretly, in violation of law and their duties, were constantly grounding or opening defendant’s wires so that messages could not be transmitted over them, which condition had existed for weeks before and existed for weeks after the alleged delivery to defendant’s agents at Wichita Falls, of the message in ques *180 tian, and which defendant had used ordinary and extraordinary care to prevent and remedy, but had been wholly unable to do so. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in appellee’s favor for the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars.

Omitting formal parts, the court thus submitted the case:

“Gentlemen of the jury: — You are instructed as to the law of this case as follows:

“1st. .Where a telegraph company receives a message for transmission and agrees to do so for the charges made for the same, the law implies that it will transmit and deliver the same within a reasonable time. What is such reasonable time is not susceptible to definition, further than to say, that it is such time as a man of reasonable diligence and prudence would require for the transmission of his own message under the same or similar circumstances. And a failure to use such diligence would constitute negligence on the part of the telegraph company so receiving such message, as above stated.
“2nd. If you shall find from the evidence that Leonard Depauw as agent for the plaintiff, on October 1st, 190?,- delivered to the agent of the defendant at Wichita Falls, Texas, a message directed to the plaintiff, J. E. Guinn, at Memphis, Texas, purporting to be signed by Ann Guinn to the effect following: 'Come tonight; Hugh is no better,’ and that said Depauw delivered the same to the defendant’s agent, and which was accepted by said company, to be transmitted to the plaintiff, and that the person referred to was the son of plaintiff, who at that time was seriously sick at Wichita Falls, and who afterwards died; and you find that the defendant company, by such message, was informed of its importance, and that it was urgent that it be delivered with diligence, and that if it had been transmitted with diligence and delivered to plaintiff, he could and would have gone to his son, and could and would have seen him and been with him,before his death; and you find that the company did not with diligence, transmit and deliver the message until it was too late for plaintiff to see his son before his death, and that by such delay plaintiff was deprived of being with his son before his death; and you find that the message was delivered to the plaintiff too late for him to see his son before his death, and such delay was negligence on the part of the defendant company, and from which plaintiff was caused to suffer mental distress and anguish, because of the fact of his inability to see his son before his death, and be with him in the hour of his death, you may then find for him such damages as will reasonably compensate him for such mental anguish suffered by plaintiff, by reason of his failure to see his son before his death, and be with him at the time of "his death. It is for you to say from all the facts and circumstances before you in evidence what sum will reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the mental suffering and anguish he has endured thereby, if any; but you can not assess any damages against the defendant as a punishment of said company for negligence, if any, but only such sum as will reasonably compensate plaintiff for his mental suffering, if any, by reason of his failure to see his son before his death.
“3rd. You are instructed that all that can be lawfully required of a telegraph company in respect to the transmission and delivery of a *181 message is, that it shall exercise reasonable care to forward and deliver same promptly. There is no absolute duty resting on a telegraph company in the transmission and delivery of messages within what is, under ordinary circumstances, a reasonable time, when the action of men acting unlawfully, such as strikers and the like, interferes with the transmission of messages over its lines through no fault on its part. Its only duty under such circumstances, if not otherwise at fault, is to use reasonable care and diligence to overcome the obstacles interposed, and to forward such messages as promptly as reasonable diligence and care permit and require.

“If, therefore, you believe' that there, was an unusual delay on the part of the defendant in the transmission and delivery of the message in question, but that such delay was caused, as pleaded by the defendant, by strikers among its employees or sympathizers, and that defendant exercised reasonable diligence and care to overcome the obstacles interposed by such strikers and sympathizers, and that said delay was not caused by the doing or the omission to do on the part of defendant, anything which a reasonably prudent man would have done, or would not have omitted to do, as the case may be, under the same or similar circumstances to facilitate the transmission and delivery of his own message, you will then find in defendant’s favor on this issue.

“4th.

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Related

Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hicks
47 S.W.2d 466 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)
St. Louis, B. & M. Ry. Co. v. Cole
14 S.W.2d 1024 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 616, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-guinn-texapp-1910.