Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hargrove

36 S.W. 1077, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 79, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 1077 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hargrove) 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. Hargrove, 36 S.W. 1077, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 79, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 282 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellee to recover damages from appellant for failing to deliver the following message:

“March 18, 1893.
“To Mrs. T. J. Hargrove, Smithfield, Texas.
“Daniel is very sick. Come at once.
“Maggie.”

Maggie, the sender of the message, was the wife of Daniel Hargrove, and the Daniel referred to in the message was her husband, and son of the addressee Mrs. T. J. Hargrove. Daniel Hargrove was then dangerously ill with pneumonia on his farm about two and one-half or three miles from Granbury, in Hood County, Texas, and continued to grow worse until, on the morning of the 23rd of March, 1893, he died. His mother, the addressee, resided at her home in the country, about three miles from Smithfield, in Tarrant County, Texas. Smithfield is a small station on a railroad leading out from Fort Worth, about ten or twelve miles east of Fort Worth, but the appellant at the date of said message had no telegraph office at said station.

The message was delivered to the appellant’s agent and manager at Granbury, in Hood County, Texas, a distance of about forty miles southwest from Fort Worth, but the sender of the message lived in the country on her farm two and one-half or three miles from Granbury. Appellant’s said manager at Granbury received the telegram from James Pilkinton, to whom Mrs. Maggie Hargrove, the sender, delivered it; and the manager testifies, and we find, that the man who delivered it told him that “Mrs. T. J. Hargrove lives two or three miles from Smithfield, in Tarrant County, Texas, and that he wanted the message delivered to her at her residencepthat he paid him 50 cents for the transmission of the message, and 82.50 for' special delivery of the same from Smithfield to her home in the country.” He says: “I advised him that this would be about the amount *80 required to secure a special delivery of the telegram. At the tíme I received the telegram I was under the impression that the Western Union Telegraph Co. had an office at Smithfield, Texas, but after the party who left the telegram at the office to be sent had gone we received a message from Fort Worth informing us that the company did not have any office at Smithfield at all, and I immediately went out into town to see if I could find the party who left the message at the office for transmission and delivery, as I desired to inform him of the fact that the Western Union Telegraph Co. had no office at Smithfield, and therefore I could not send the telegram. I inquired of quite a good many people as to who the man was, but was unable to ascertain either his name or for whom he acted or for whom he was sending the telegram, and was unable to advise him of the fact that we had no office at Smithfield, and was unable to return him the tolls which he had left with me. I did not know the party who left the telegram, he being a perfect stranger, and I have never seen him since. I held the money which I had received from him for some time, and then forwarded it to the treasurer of the Western Union Telegraph Company at New York.” On cross-examination he stated: “I had a book in the office when I received the telegram which contained the names of all the Western Union Telegraph offices in the United States at the time said book was issued. * * * I could have ascertained by looking in that book whether there was such a telegraph office on the line of the Western Union Telegraph Company as Smithfield, if it had been in existence at the time the book was published; but I did not do so, as I was very busy, and the telegram was handed me addressed to Smithfield, and I naturally supposed we had an office at that point. * * * It was a mistake on my part. I did not attempt to inquire of the party who left the telegram as to his address or where he could be found, or as to the purpose of the telegram which he was sending. He simply told me that he wanted the telegram sent to £T. J. Hargrove, Smithfield, Texas,’ and paid what was required for sending and delivering it. The man who brought me the telegram never told me there was any office at Smithfield. I made no inquiry as to who Maggie or Daniel, the names mentioned in the message, were, or where they lived, and did not care to know. I had all the information I wanted. The man never refused to tell me, and I never asked him anything about it.”

The message was never delivered to the addressee, nor was the sender ever notified of the failure to deliver, or that the company had no office at Smithfield. It was transmitted to Fort Worth, when that office returned answer that the company had no office at Smithfield, and no further effort was made to deliver the message to the addressee.

The manager of the company’s office at Fort Worth testified, and we find, that neither the Western Union Telegraph Co. nor any other telegraph company had an office at Smithfield, in Tarrant County, Texas, at the date of the message, and that it was impossible to transmit the-message by electricity, and there was no telephone connection with. *81 Smithfield; that- Smithfield was ten or twelve miles from Fort Worth; that a railroad runs from Fort Worth to Smithfield; that a person could have gotten on the train at Fort Worth and carried the message to Smithfield in an hour or two; that it would have cost about 75 cents to have made the trip; that he could have sent it through the country, but it was not addressed to Fort Worth, and the manager therefore concluded that the company was under no contract duty to send it from Fort Worth and deliver it from there; that the company did deliver telegrams outside of the free delivery limits, sending them out in the country from Fort Worth, but that is done only when the telegram itself is addressed to Fort Worth and a special delivery charge is collected to pay for such special delivery beyond free delivery limits. He knew where Smithfield was; had passed through it once on the train.

The record also discloses that Grapevine is one of appellant’s telegraph stations in Tan-ant County, and that it was about five miles from the addressee’s residence. It is also shown that James Pilkinton and Daniel Hargrove were well known in Granbury, and that by proper inquiry either could have been easily found and the message and money returned. If this had been done, Mrs. Daniel Hargrove could and would have sent her mother-in-law information of her husband’s dangerous illness by other means. She could have written her, or could have sent a telegram to Grapevine to James Hargrove, another son of Mrs. T. J. Hargrove, who lived at Grapevine. She did send a message to him the morning her husband died, and he it was who let the mother know of Daniel’s dangerous illness, when she started immediately to see him, but arrived after his death, in time, however, to be at his funeral, as it was delayed for her arrival.

If the telegram had been delivered, the appellee would have gone at once to her son, and would have been with him during three or four days before his death. He was conscious until the last day, and often called for mother. Her grief and mental anguish caused by her failure to be at his bedside during his last days on earth were very great, so much so that the amount of the verdict of $600 is sustained by the evidence, if the appellant is liable at all for more than the toll paid to it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Goldwire
152 S.W. 503 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Harvey
74 P. 250 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1903)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Carter
58 S.W. 198 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 1077, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 79, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-hargrove-texapp-1896.