Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hadley

119 N.E. 870, 69 Ind. App. 75, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 121
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1918
DocketNo. 9,601
StatusPublished

This text of 119 N.E. 870 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals 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. Hadley, 119 N.E. 870, 69 Ind. App. 75, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 121 (Ind. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Hottel, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in appellee’s favor for $129 in an action brought by her [77]*77against appellant to recover the penalty for the delay of delivery of a telegraph message, in violation of §5780 Burns 1914, Acts 1885 p. 151.

There was an answer in seven paragraphs, viz., a general denial, a verified general denial and five affirmative paragraphs. For reasons which will later appear herein, we deem it unnecessary to further indicate the contents or nature of said pleadings. A demurrer was filed to each of said affirmative paragraphs, which was overruled to the third and seventh, and sustained as to the other paragraphs.

There was a trial by the court and a special finding of facts and conclusions of law. A motion for new trial filed by appellant was overruled.

Each of the several rulings on the demurrers to the pleadings adverse to appellant, indicated supra, and the ruling on the motion for new trial, are separately assigned as error and relied on for reversal.

The only objection to the complaint suggested by appellant in his brief is that contained under his first point, which challenges the ruling on the demurrer thereto on the ground that it contains ho averment that appellant was engaged in doing a general telegraph business.

1. We think the complaint contains the equivalent of said averment, or, at least, contains averments from which such absent averment may be reasonably inferred, and hence is sufficient under the rule recognized and followed by the more recent decisions of both the Supreme Court and this court.

2. However, assuming that the complaint is open to appellant’s objection, this court would be justified, and indeed required, by the decided cases, to treat the complaint as amended in said respect. The case was submitted to the court below for [78]*78trial and determination upon an agreed statement of facts. Snch. statement, being of controlling influence in the determination of tbe question under consideration and of other questions presented by the appeal, is now set out. Omitting the caption and preliminary part thereof, it is as follows:

“It is now hereby agreed that the following statement of facts shall be taken by the court, as the evidence and all the evidence in said cause, and that the facts in said statement constitute the evidence, and all the evidence to be given, and that is given in said cause, and that the said facts are hereby agreed to by the parties in lieu of the evidence to be given on the trial of said cause, and it is agreed that upon said statement of facts the court may decide the controversy between these parties as shown by the pleadings in said cause, and which facts and which statement of facts are as follows, to wit:
“The defendant, The Western Union Telegraph Company, on November 5,1910, owned and operated a telegraph line and maintained and had a public telegraph station at Clayton, Indiana, and at Bushrod, Indiana, and was at said time a common carrier and deliverer for the public, of messages and telegrams over said lines, and at each station above named, as well as other stations. (Our italics.)
“That on Saturday, November 5, 1910, Lizzie Hadley died near Monrovia, Indiana. That her sister, Nancy Hadley, is the plaintiff in this action. That the plaintiff lived at said time near her said sister, and all of said parties lived near Monrovia, Indiana, a distance of about seven [79]*79miles from Clayton, Indiana, where the said defendant kept and maintained a public telegraph station.
“That on Saturday, November 5, 1910, at 7:41 o’clock p. m., the plaintiff called the operator at Clayton, Indiana, office, via telephone and asked to send a telegraphic message to her son, Francis Hadley, at Bushrod, Greene County, Indiana, at which station, at Bushrod, the defendant maintained a public station for the transfer and delivery of messages for hire, and the plaintiff gave to the defendant at said time, to wit: 7:41 p. m. on said day, the following message:
“ ‘To Francis Hadley, c/o Railroad Hotel, Bushrod, Indiana. Aunt Lizzie is dead. Funeral eleven o’clock Monday. Nancy Hadley.’
“The defendant’s agent reduced said message to writing on the regular and usual form of defendant company. That at the time said message was delivered to the defendant, the operator at Clayton, Indiana, office, asked the plaintiff how she wanted said message sent, and the plaintiff answered, ‘Send collect,’ and that was all that was said about it. That the usual and regular schedule charge of defendant for transmission and delivery .of such message was twenty-five cents. That the plaintiff did not pay the charge therefor and did not tender such charge to.defendant, and no responsible party guaranteed such charge to the defendant, and plaintiff had no charge account with defendant, and said message was not a free’message and not an answer to a prepaid message. That said telegram was sent by said defendant and transmitted by it [80]*80from said station at Clayton, Indiana, to said station at Bushrod, Indiana, and was received by the defendant company’s agent at Bushrod, Indiana, at 8:52 p. m. on November 5, 1910.'
“That said Francis Hadley lived at the Railroad Hotel at Bushrod and within three hundred feet of the said defendant’s telegraph office at said time, and was at home all the time from Ñovémber 4 to November 8,1910. That said tele- • gram was transmitted by said defendant and retained at said office at Bushrod until it was delivered to said Francis Hadley on Monday November 7, 1910, at 1:41 o ’clock p. m. That the said Francis Hadley paid to the defendant at the time of delivery of said message and the defendant accepted twenty-five cents for the transmission and delivery of said telegram. The defendant, except as above stated transmitted said telegram with impartiality and in good faith and in the order of time in which it was received, and did not in any manner discriminate in the rate charged, or words or figures charged for, or manner or condition of service, between plaintiff and any of its patrons. That on November 5, 191Ó, and at the time the plaintiff filed the above telegram with defendant at its Clayton, Indiana, office for transmission, the defendant had rules and regulations governing its business and the filing, receipt, transmission and delivery of messages and dispatches, and the manner and condition of service' and rules and regulations as to charges, rates and the payment of charges and rates for receiving and transmitting messages and dispatches, and all of such rules and [81]*81regulations and terms were in force and governed all the business and all the offices of the defendant, and were in force and effect generally, and had been so in force and effect generally, for a number of years past. That said terms, rules and regulations were as follows:
“ ‘Rule 12. Messages to be Prepaid. All messages will be prepaid, except free messages and those covered by Rules 13 and 47.
“ ‘Rule 13. Collect Messages. An answer to a prepaid message, or a message for which payment for transmission, or for special delivery is guaranteed by a responsible party, may be accepted “collect.”
“ ‘Rule 47. Sending Offices. Instruction as to Delivery. .

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E. 870, 69 Ind. App. 75, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-hadley-indctapp-1918.