Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Johnson

226 S.W. 671, 111 Tex. 1, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 72
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1920
DocketApplication No. 11673.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 671 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas 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. Johnson, 226 S.W. 671, 111 Tex. 1, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 72 (Tex. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The application for writ of error is to review the affirmance of a judgment in favor of Mrs. R. L. Johnson in a suit against the telegraph company for mental suffering in being deprived of the aid and • comfort of her son following the death and through the .burial of her husband, because of the company's negligent failure to promptly deliver to the son a message sent by her from Kosse, Texas, to him at La Mesa, Texas, advising of the husband’s approaching death and requesting the son to immediately come to her.

As originally delivered by a Mr. Mills for Mrs. Johnson to the telegraph company for transmission, the message, addressed to J. W. Smith, the son, read:

“Come at once. Death message.
(Signed) Mother.”

The company’s agent was well acquainted with Mrs. Johnson and her husband. On receiving the message he re-wrote it so as to have it read:

“Mr. Johnson not expected to live.
Come at once.
(Signed) Mother.”

*3 The telegraph company maintains that the message afforded it no notice that a prohable consequence of a failure to effect its prompt delivery would be the suffering of mental distress by Mrs. Johnson in being deprived of her son’s presence. It urges the case of [Western U.] Telegraph Company v. Luck, 91 Texas, 178, 66 Am. St., 869, 41 S. W., 469, as decisive of the proposition. Unless the company can justly be held to have had such notice, it is not liable.

The primary thing about a message of this nature is its purpose— the object of it as fairly disclosed by the communication and in view of the relationship between the persons whom it concerns. The damages recoverable in these actions are such, and such only, as may be deemed to have been within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made for the transmission of the message. Hence, it is the purpose of the message as known to. the parties, or as justly held to have been known, which must determine what damages may reasonably be regarded as within their contemplation.

The relationship between the persons whom such a message concerns, is what prompts the sending of it. The purpose must accordingly be gained in the light of their relationship. As revealing the purpose it is in most cases the controlling element. It is for this reason that the law charges the telegraph company with notice of the relationship, if any, existing between all the persons named in the message (Western U. Telegraph Company v. Carter, 85 Texas, 580, 34 Am. St., 826, 22 S. W., 961), or between the persons named and those in the message referred to in such a way as to prompt inquiry (Western U. Telegraph Company v. Adams, 75 Texas, 531, 6 L. R. A., 844, 16 Am. St., 920, 12 S. W., 857); but not of the relationship to the others of persons not so named or referred to (Western U. Telegraph Company v. Kirkpatrick, 76 Texas, 217, 18 Am. St., 37, 13 S. W., 70). Being so charged in law with respect to notice of the relationship between the persons concerned in the message, the company, as respects the purpose of the message, is charged by law with notice of such purposes as, having regard for such relationhip and the usual manner of expressing such messages, are disclosed by the communication or are fairly inferable from it.

In most instances such messages are sent for the benefit of the person addressed — to afford him opportunity of coming to the bedside of the stricken relative or attending his obsequies in the case of death. Because of this common experience, it is, as Judge Henry expressed 'it in the Adams Case, “a common sense suggestion” that the person addressed has a serious interest in the message. Accordingly, there has grown up the rule that the telegraph company is charged with notice of his interest. He may in fact have none in the sense that the message is for his benefit. It may be addressed to him, as is sometimes the ease, merely as a quick or convenient method of *4 communicating its contents to others as its real beneficiaries. In other instances, thé addressee’s want of near relationship to the other persons concerned denies him any beneficial interest. Notwithstanding this, the rule exists, for his protection. It in all cases subserves the real purpose of the message. Whether the message be for his benefit or not, for the fulfilment of its purpose the addressee has, always, an interest in its prompt delivery. Generally, he has a serious interest in the message. Therefore the rule in his favor.

As to the interest of the sender, the same rule does not obtain. It does not, because he is not so generally intended as the beneficiary. The law takes account of this difference in common experience and therefore does not ¡^resume for him an interest in the message, as it does for the addressee. Frequently the message is in nowise for his benefit. It is sometimes sent, by him purely for the accommodation and benefit of others. Hence, his interest must fairly appear from the message itself or be disclosed by other information, for the telegraph company to be affected with notice of it.

The rule, however, which charges the telegraph company with notice of whatever relationship exists between all persons named in the message or so therein referred to as to prompt inquiry (Telegraph Company v. Carter and Telegraph Company v. Adams), necessarily includes him. It is generally because of relationship that he is the sender. While the law will not presume his interest, yet it is common experience that many times he has a serious interest; and when he has, there can be no just reason for requiring that the message descend to a detailed recital of his relationship. The message, it should be remembered, is not to the telegraph company. Relationship in some degree between all the persons named in the message is ordinarily to be presumed; the nature of such a message indicates it sufficiently to prompt inquiry; and therefore the law charges the telegraph company with notice of it as it could readily have been ascertained. Accordingly, the message as an instrument of notice to the company of the sender’s interest must in reason be interpreted in the light of the company’s presumable knowledge of the sender’s relationship to the other persons named in it or so referred to as to prompt inquiry.

Here, under the rules stated, the knowledge which the telegraph company through its sending agent necessarily had, as disclosed by the message itself, was that a mother was advising her son of her husband’s impending death and requesting that the son immediately come to her. That the primary purpose of the message was'to summon the son to the mother, is shown by the original form of it. As originally written and delivered to the agent, its opening sentence was an urgent request for the son to come. This disclosed that its chief object was to convey such request, the cause of the request being shown by the added statement, that the telegram was a death message. Only as *5 re-written by the agent was the mother’s husband named as the dying person.

The mother’s interest in the message was obvious.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 671, 111 Tex. 1, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-johnson-tex-1920.