Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Holley

119 S.W. 888, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 S.W. 888 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Holley) 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. Holley, 119 S.W. 888, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

CONNEE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in appellee’s favor in the sum of three hundred and eighty dollars for the failure to deliver to appellee’s wife a death message, resulting in alleged damages of two thousand dollars. Appellee and his wife at the time lived at 1003 Kennedy Street, Fort Worth, Texas. Her sister Alice died in the city of Austin on the morning of March 9, 1907. The surviving husband, Otis E. Carter, entrusted the transmission of a message to Mrs. Holley to his friend W. J. J. Terrell, who delivered to appellant’s agent at Austin, about three fifteen o’clock p. m. on said 9th day of March, 1907, a telegram in the following terms:

“To Mrs. W. C. Halle)r, 1003 Kennedy Street, Fort Worth, Texas. Alice passed peacefully away this morning. Funeral Monday afternoon. Otis E. Carter.”

The telegram arrived in Ft. Worth about 3:40 o’clock p. m. on the day of its transmission, and had it been seasonably delivered to Mrs. W. C. Holley, she would have been enabled to attend her sister’s funeral, but the telegram was in fact not delivered until some time Monday morning, March 11, when it was too late for her to do so.

Appellant’s principal contention on the trial below and here is that Otis E. Carter and his agent at Austin were guilty of negligence in misdirecting the telegram, and that such negligence or mistake was the cause of the failure to deliver it promptly. This is denied by appellee, who further insists, as pleaded below, that Mrs. Holley lived immediately across the street some sixty feet away from 1003; that she was well known in the vicinity, both by the name of Holley and Halley, and that notwithstanding the misdirection pleaded and shown, appellant by the exercise of ordinary care could and would have delivered the telegram to appellee in ample time to have visited her sister’s funeral.

The questions presented are dependent upon a proper construction of the facts. We will not set out the evidence at length, but in addition to what has already been stated will undertake to summarize it as follows:

E. L. Gordon, appellant’s delivery clerk at Fort Worth, testified that the message came to his desk at three forty-five or three fifty o’clock Saturday evening, and that he at once turned it over to the *436 telephone clerk to be phoned ont to the addressee if she had a telephone, and if not, to return it to him. The telephone clerk returned it to him promptly, saying that the party had no phone. He then gave the message to a delivery boy to be taken to the address named in the telegram; that he read the message and knew that it was a message relating to death, and knew the importance of speedy delivery; that he so told the boy, to whom the message was given, who left the office about four o’clock; that a Mr. Hare took his (Gordon’s) place in the office when he went off duty; that he was not in the office when the boy came back with the message; that Mr. Hare worked until six o’clock, when a Mr. Sparks, the night clerk, came on; that he (Gordon) laid off on Sunday and Mr. Sparks worked for him as a substitute; that when he got hack on duty Monday morning at seven o’clock, he found the message in a drawer in the office and went to work to see what could be done with it; that in ten or fifteen minutes he ascertained it was for Holley and phoned out and talked with Mr. Holley, and later sent the message to Mrs. Holley at 1003 Kennedy Street; that “finding the name Holley was just mere guesswork;” that if the message had come directed to W. C. Holley he did not think there would have been any difficulty in delivering it; “you could have looked him up in the phone book and telephoned the message to him in five minutes.”

Ernest Trott, the boy who attempted to deliver the message on Saturday evening and who at the time of the trial was in the employ of Collins Art Company, testified that the message had been given to him by Mr. Gordon, and that he had taken it out to 1003 Kennedy Street; that a lady came to the door, whom he did not know, and that he asked her if that message went there; she replied that it did not and that she did not know the party; that she was not able to give him any information as to where the party lived to whom the message was addressed; that he then went out and started to inquire at another place, when a lady across the street at 1003 came out and asked him whom the message was for and that he told her “whatever was on the envelope—W. O. Halley;” that this lady did not claim the message nor ask him to let her see it; that he later went to 1004 Kennedy Street, 1008 Kennedy Street, and to the corner of Pine and Kennedy; at neither of the places named was the party to whom the message was addressed known by those of whom inquiry was made.

The record fails to show that Mr. Hare was offered as a witness, but J. E. Sparks testified that he went on duty about six o’clock, March 9, and remained until about one on Sunday, March 10; that soon after he went on duty on Saturday afternoon he gave the message to a delivery boy and told him to deliver it; that the boy soon thereafter returned and reported that he could not locate the party. The record fails to show who this boy was or what he did, and "after he returned the message to the office, no further effort appears to have been made to deliver it, until Mr. Gordon came back on duty Monday morning. Nor does the record show who was on duty as delivery clerk from one o’clock on Sunday, when Mr. Sparks went off duty, until seven o’clock the next morning, when Mr. Gordon carné back. Mr. Sparks testified on cross-examination that he had had six *437 years’ experience as a delivery clerk and knew that names were often misspelt; that he knew the telegram in question was a death message, and knew the importance of prompt delivery; that it had not occurred to him that the message was intended for W. C. Holley; that after the return of the boy tú whom he had delivered1 the message on Saturday evening, he gave it no further attention.

Appellee’s evidence tended to show that Mrs. Holley and her husband, W. C. Holley, had resided continuously in Fort Worth since 1893, and had resided at 1003 Kennedy Street about four years at the time the message should have been delivered; that Mr. Holley had been a laundryman, had served on the police force in Fort Worth for several years, and that he and his wife were well known in the neighborhood where they lived; that they had been known in that neighborhood by the names of “Halley,” “Haley” and “Holley ;” that they frequently received mail, and bills and accounts which they paid, addressed to W. C. Halley; that there was no one else in that neighborhood writh a similar name; that many people who knew them called them by the name of Halley instead of Holley.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W. 888, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-holley-texapp-1909.