Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Johnson

164 S.W. 903, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 164 S.W. 903 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 164 S.W. 903, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1453 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Western Union Telegraph Company has appealed from a judgment in favor of Lester Johnson for damages for the defendant’s alleged negligence in delaying the delivery of a telegram sent over defendant’s line from Glazier, Tex., to Comanche, Tex. The trial was without the intervention of a jury, and the trial judge has filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, which are as follows:

As conclusions of fact, I find:

“I. I find that the plaintiff, Lester Johnson, was the son of-Johnson, and that his said father resided in the city of Comanche Tex., and died at 2 o’clock p. m. on Tuesday, the 6th day of February, A. D. 1912, in the city of Comanche, Tex., where he had been very sick for a week or two previous thereto, and that Lewis Johnson was a brother of Lester Johnson, who at and before his death was residing with his father in the city of Comanche, Tex., and taking care of him.
“II. I find that, for the purpose of giving Lester Johnson an opportunity of coming from his home at Ochiltree, Tex., to see his father while he was yet alive, and for the benefit of Lester Johnson, from defendant’s office in the city of Comanche, Tex., on the 30th day of January, A. D. 1912, Lewis Johnson sent to Lester Johnson at Ochiltree, Tex., the following message: ‘Comanche, Texas, 1/30/1912. Lester Johnson, Ochiltree, Texas. If you want to see your father alive, come at once. Lewis Johnson’ — and at the same time paid the agent of the defendant for said message, and at said time stated to said agent that his father was dangerously sick, and that he wanted to send this message to his brother in order that he might come to Comanche, Tex., and see his father before he died, and that he, Lewis Johnson, expected a reply from this message, and told the said agent, where he lived, and that he did not have a phone in his house, but that Mr. G. W. S. Gage or Albert Lafferty, or Mrs. Gerganess, all of whom live just across the street from Lewis Johnson, all had phones, and told him some of the numbers of said phones, and requested that when the reply came he phone it to him at once, by phoning either of the above-named phones of his neighbors, who would come and get him, Lewis Johnson, to the phone; and said agent agreed to immediately phone the reply to said message to Lewis Johnson, as requested on receipt of same.
“III. I And that this message was correctly and properly transmitted, and delivered at Ochiltree, Tex., to Tom Atehley, a brother-in-law of Lester Johnson for the benefit of Lester Johnson, who at that time was absent, from Ochiltree on a freighting trip at a considerable distance from his home, and that. Lester Johnson did not return to Ochiltree,. Tex., until about sundown on Saturday, February 3, 1912, when the message was delivered to him, Lester Johnson, and which was-the earliest time that it could have been delivered to him, and I find up to this time there was no negligence committed by the-defendant.
“IV. I find that on Saturday, February 3,. 1912, at 11:45 a. m., Lester Johnson not having returned home from his freighting trip, his brother-in-law, Tom Atehley, acting for Lester Johnson, caused to be delivered to the defendant’s agent at its office in Glazier, Tex., the following message for transmission to Lewis Johnson at Comanche, Tex.: ‘Glazier,. Texas, Feb. 3, 1912. Lewis Johnson, Comanche, Texas. Is your father alive? Lester not here, will be home tonight. Answer. Tom Atehley.’ And that defendant transmitted said message, and it arrived at the defendant’s office in the city of Comanche, Tex.,, at 8:21 o’clock p. m. Saturday, February 3, 1912, and at that timé the defendant’s office-in Comanche, Tex., was open, and its agent was in the office attending to the defendant’s-business as such agent, and at said time received said message off the wire in said office,, and another message to a different party at about the same time, and at said time said agent then knew and remembered that this-was an answer sent to Lewis Johnson by Tom Atehley for Lester Johnson, in answer to the telegram that Lewis Johnson had sent, and to which Lewis Johnson had told him that he-would receive an answer, and then knew and remembered the telephone number that Lewis Johnson had given him to deliver said message to, which number was at that time connected with the phone then in his office, and then knew and remembered that he had. promised Lewis Johnson to immediately telephone said answer to said telegram to and. thus make delivery of the same.
“V. I find that Tom Atehley acting for Lester Johnson sent this telegram in order to-find out whether or not the father of Lester Johnson had died, so if he had not and was still alive, that as soon as a reply was received to it stating that he was alive that. Lester Johnson, who would return that evening, would then leave Ochiltree, Tex., immediately and come to see his father, and. *905 come in order to be with his father before he died.
“VI. I find that the message referred to in paragraph 4 above of these findings of fact was phoned from Ochiltree to Glazier, Tes., and was, at the latter point, delivered to the defendant’s agent at Glazier, Tes., at 11:45 a. m. on February S, 1912, by a boy by the name of Russell, and was worded as.follows: ‘Glazier, Texas, Peb. 3, 1912. To Lewis Johnson, Oomanche, Tesas, Is your father alive? Lester not here, will be home; tonight. Answer. Tom Atchley.’ That at the time the defendant agent received said message at Glazier, Tex., for transmission, he did not know any of the parties to said message, and he had no knowledge of the intent or purpose of said message, except what appeared on the face of the message itself, and this fact was agreed to on the trial of this case.
“VII. I find that when.the agent at Glazier, Tex., received said message, it was sufficient to put him on notice that it was sent for the benefit of the party therein named as ‘Lester,’ who the message stated was not yet at home, and that Lewis Johnson and Lester were brothers, and the sons of the Johnson, their father, at Oomanche, Tex., who was about to die, and that it was sent for the benefit of Lester to enable him, if his father was still alive, to start at once to his bedside.
“VIII. I find that at the time the message was received at Comanche, Tex., it was and had been the custom, rule, and habit of defendant company, and was so' at the time said agent, made the promise to Lewis Johnson, without reference to delivery limits, to deliver messages outside and in the residence portion of Comanche, Tex., over the telephone, and I further find there was no sufficient evidence to support the claim of the defendant that the point at which the agent had agreed to deliver the telegram over the phone was beyond the free-delivery limits claimed by it, from its office, and the defendant failed to prove said allegation in its answer. I further find in this connection that if, under the particular circumstances disclosed by these findings, if the defendant had any rule as to delivery beyond the free-delivery limits that forbade the delivery of this telegram under the circumstances above disclosed, it was unjust, unreasonable, and should not be enforced.
“IX. I find that the defendant had regular established office hours at Comanche, Tex., during the months of January and February, 1912, and that its said office hours during week days was from 8 o’clock a. m. to 8 o’clock p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 903, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-johnson-texapp-1913.