Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Harding

3 N.E. 172, 103 Ind. 505, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 553
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1885
DocketNo. 12,140
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 172 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Harding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court 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. Harding, 3 N.E. 172, 103 Ind. 505, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 553 (Ind. 1885).

Opinion

Mitchell, C. J.

This suit was brought by Charles N. Harding against the Western Union Telegraph Company to recover the statutory penalty for negligently failing to transmit a message received by it from the plaintiff.

The complaint charges that the message was delivered to the defendant’s agent, at its office in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on the 27th day of September, 1884, during usual office hours, to be transmitted to Covington, Indiana, and that payment for transmission had been made according to the regulations of the company. The message set out is of the tenor following :

“To C. M. McCabe, Covington, Ind.

Can not come to-night. Write us to-morrow. Alls well.

“ C. N. Harding.”

It is charged that the defendant’s agent, at Covington, received the message in the evening of the day on which it was left for transmission, but that he neglected to deliver it until after noon of the day following.

With the general denial, the defendant filed a special answer. In this it is averred that the message was delivered to its agent at Crawfordsville at ten minutes after- seven o’clock p. m., on September 27th, 1884, that being Saturday, and that it was promptly transmitted and received off the wire at Covington by the night operator of the Indiana, Bloomington and Western Railroad Company at twenty-five minutes past seven o’clock p. M.of the same day.

The answer alleges further that the defendant’s office hours at Covington are from seven o’clock A. m. to seven o’clock p. M. That between those hours its office at that point is open to the public, and its agent and messenger are on duty to receive, deliver and transmit messages, and that it has no night operator or messenger in its employ at Covington to [507]*507send or receive messages for the public after regular office hours; that its agent and messenger there go off duty at seven in the evening, and do not return again for duty until the regular office hour on the day following, and that it does not keep its Covington office open, or hold itself out. to the public, to transact business there at any other time than between the hours mentioned; that all messages sent from, or received at, that office except during regular office hours, are sent and received by the night operator of the railroad company, or by some other person who is neither the agent, nor in the employ of the defendant. It is averred that the message sent to the plaintiff was received at Covington by the night operator of the railroad after the defendant’s regular office hours, and that it was not so received by any person who was in its employ; that its office was not kept open on Sundays for the purpose of transacting business with the public, but, as was his custom, the defendant’s messenger went to the office at nine o’clock on the Sunday morning after the message was so received, and, discovering it there, he went out to deliver it to the person to whom it was addressed, but failed to find him until about noon, when he delivered it. The paragraph closes with an averment that the message was transmitted with impartiality and good faith, and without delay, in the order of time in which it was received, without postponement, etc.

A demurrer was sustained to the second paragraph, and an exception taken. Afterwards the defendant withdrew the general denial, and, refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered for the statutory penalty.

Upon this appeal the question is presented, whether the facts pleaded in the answer constituted a sufficient excuse for the alleged default of the telegraph company ?

The defence is predicated upon the fact that, although promptly sent, the message, in its usual course, was not received at Covington within the regular or usual office hours of the company at that point.

[508]*508Section 4176, E. S. 1881, provides, in substance, that companies engaged in telegraphing for the public shall, during the usual office hours, receive dispatches,” and, on payment of the usual charge, “ transmit the same with impartiality and good faith,” in the order of time in which they are received, under penalty, etc.

The statute recognizes the common law right of the company to make reasonable regulations for the transaction of its business. It implies that to a reasonable extent it may prescribe the hours during which it will transact business for and with the public. Obviously, this must include the right to regulate its office hours according to the requirements of the service at the various points where it holds itself out for public service. It can not be implied that because the public service may require that its office hours should include a given time at one point, all other offices or places at which it serves the public must be open and fully equipped for such service an equal length of time. No x’easonable requix’ement would demand this.

The question, then, comes to this, did the defendant incur the statutoxy penalty by receiving the message at Crawfordsville during its usual office hours there, and failing to transmit it to the person to whom it was addi’essed, at Covington, at any other than usual office hours at that point?

The reasonable construction of the statute is, that the penalty is incurred by a failure to receive and transmit messages impartially and in good faith during usual office hours. We know as a matter of common knowledge, that the transmissioxx of a communication by telegraph involves necessarily two offices, one at the point at which it is delivered for transmission, and another at that to which it is transmitted. What, then, is meant by usxxal office hours, as used in the statute ?

In constx’uing a penal statute, it must be remembered that the law will intend nothing in favor of the imposition of a penalty until, upon a strict construction, it appears there has [509]*509been a clear violation of the statutory obligation for which the penalty is imposed.

In this view, it seems clear to us, contrary to our first impression, that the penalty is not incurred unless there is a failure to receive and transmit during the usual office hours, both at the point where the message is received and that to which it is to be transmitted. To hold otherwise would involve the telegraph company in the necessity of having its offices open for the reception and delivery of messages at all points an equal length of time.

If the requirements of its business at one point made it necessary to keep its office open twenty-four hours in the day, its usual office hours at such point would be continuous. It would, according to the construction contended for, be compelled to receive messages during usual office hours at that point. If it must transmit them, without delay, to every other point to which they may be directed, or incur the statutory penalty, irrespective of the requirements of its business at other points, then of necessity it must have no offices at all at points where it can not have them open continuously. We do not think this was the purpose of the statute.

The question arises whether the telegraph company should not keep its agents at all points informed concerning the office hours at all other points, so that when a message is presented for transmission, the sender may be apprised of any probable delay which may intervene at the other end.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 172, 103 Ind. 505, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-harding-ind-1885.