Western Union Telegraph Co. v. M'Caul

115 Tenn. 99
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 115 Tenn. 99 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. M'Caul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. M'Caul, 115 Tenn. 99 (Tenn. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the Court.

W. F. McCaul brings this action to recover , damages for the grief and anguish sustained by him in consequence of the delay in receiving an answer to a telegram sent by him over the wires of the defendant from Sikeston, Mo., to Trenton, Tenn., addressed to Mrs. M. C. McCaul, care of Joe Knox, in these words:

“Send me fifty dollars at once. Hugh is dead.”

W. F. McCaul was at Sikeston, Mo., where his son Hugh had just died, and desired $50 to bring his remains to' Tennessee for interment. Joe Knox resided in Trenton, and Mrs. M. C. McCaul, in the country, three miles distant.

The telegram was delivered to the agent of the company by the sender at Sikeston, addressed as stated. [102]*102The fact that Mrs. M'cCaui lived in the country was not disclosed to tbe agent of tlie company at that place. The agent at Trenton, who knew all the parties, received the message at 9 :30 o’clock in the morning, and knowing that Mrs. McCaul did not live within the delivery of his office, sent it out to be delivered to Joe Knox, in whose care it was addressed. The messenger inquired for him at his usual place of business, and was reliably and correctly informed that he had gone to the country, and would not return for some time, and the message-was then returned to the office. About 12 o’clock of the same day, it was again sent out and delivered to Mrs. Joe Knox, at the residence of her husband, and she immediately forwarded it to Mrs. McCaul. Joe Knox returned from the country at 1:30 o’clock that evening, and later receiving directions from Mrs. McCaul to do so, had $50 wired the plaintiff, as requested by him, but the latter did not receive notice of the fact until after the burial of his son on the succeeding day.

The negligence averred is two and one-half hours’ delay in delivery at Trenton, resulting in the failure of the plaintiff to receive the money until after the burial of his son upon the next day.

There was a verdict and judgment for $300 against the plaintiff in error, and it has appealed and assigns a number of errors, only three of which it will be necessary to notice.

1. The first assignment is predicated upon the action of the trial judge in instructing the jury that the plain[103]*103tiff in that conrt was entitled to recover damages for the mental anguish and grief sustained by him, if any, by the delay in receiving the money for which he wired to bring the body of his son to his home in Tennessee for burial, and in haring to bury him away from home and in a strange place, and in refusing to charge that the proper measure of damages in this case was the cost and expense of exhuming and reinterment in Tennessee. It must be sustained. This court has held that parties injured could recover damages for mental anguish and grief sustained by them in being denied the privilege of attending to the bedside of near relatives during their last hours, of superintending the preparations of their bodies for interment, and of being present at their burial; but in no other cases. The rule upon which such damages are allowed is of difficult application, and its policy and soundness has been questioned in many courts of high authority, and we do not deem it proper to extend it to other cases than those to which it has been applied in this State. This also seems to be the tendency of other courts of last resort in States where the mental anguish doctrine prevails. Telephone Co. v. Arnold (Tex. Sup.), 73 S. W., 1043; Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Gotcher (Tex. Sup.), 53 S. W., 686; Telegraph Co. v. Edmondson (Tex. Sup.), 42 S. W., 549.

The mental anguish claimed here is not for failure to reach the son of the plaintiff before his death, or for loss of the privilege of attending his funeral, but for de[104]*104lay in the reception of money with which to bring the body to the home of the father for burial. This is a. right and a privilege that can yet he exercised in every respect to the fullest gratification of the desire of the father. It would seem, therefore, that the proper measure of damages would be as insisted upon by the company. Ordinarily the damages which one is entitled to recover for delay in the reception of money is simply the interest for the period of the delay.

2. It is further assigned as error that the trial judge declined to instruct the jury when seasonably requested in proper form by the defendant company, “that it was under no obligation to deliver the message in question to any person except to Mrs. M. C. McCaul, or Joe Knox, and that if the jury should find that neither of these persons were in Trenton upon the day the message was received, the defendant was not required to deliver it to either of them, or to any one else, and that it was not its duty to deliver it to Mrs. Knox, the wife of the party in whose care it was directed^ and the failure to do so was not negligence or a breach of duty upon its part.” There was no contract to deliver the message to Mrs. McCaul at her residence in the country. The fact that she lived in the country was not disclosed to the receiving operator, and without such knowledge and express or implied agreement otherwise, the contract was to deliver it at Trenton, Mrs. McCaul did not reside there, and was not there that day. It was sent in care of Joe Knox, who did live there, and it must [105]*105be presumed that it was intended that it be delivered to him for the sendee. He was made the special agent of the sendee to' receive and forward it. It was under these facts, the duty of the company to deliver it to Joe Knox, and no one else. It was not its duty to deliver it to Mrs. Knox, or other member of the family of Joe Knox. They were not the agents of either the sender or the sendee, and had no' authority to receive it. A delivery to them would have been unauthorized. It may be that under some circumstances, as where the wife has been in the habit of receiving telegrams sent her husband, that delivery to her ought to be made, and would be a discharge of the duty of the company. Telegraph Co. v. Mitchell (Tex. Sup.), 44 S. W., 274, 40 L. R. A., 209, 66 Am. St. Rep., 920; Telegraph Co. v. Moseley (Tex. Civ. App.), 67 S. W., 1059.

But that is where the telegram is addressed to the husband in his own right. He cannot delegate the trust and agency imposed upon him to another. In this case Joe Knox had no beneficial interest in the telegram, and Mrs. Knox no right to' receive it. The party in whose care a message is sent is simply the agent of the addressee to receive and deliver the message. He has no beneficial interest in it, or authority to open it. Telegraph Co. v. Houghton (Tex. Sup.), 17 S. W., 846, 15 L. R. A., 129, 27 Am. St. Rep., 918.

The delivery of a telegram to' the brother and business partner of the party in whose care it is addressed [106]*106is unauthorized. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hendricks (Tex. Civ. App.), 68 S. W., 720.

The clerk of a hotel is not the agent of the guests of the hotel, and has no authority to receive telegrams for them. Telegraph Co. v. Cobb (Tex. Sup.), 67 S. W., 87, 58 L. R. A., 698, 93 Am. St. Rep., 862; Telegraph Co. v. Redinger (Tex. Civ. App.), 63 S. W., 156.

The captain of a steamboat is not the authorized agent of passengers to receive and receipt for telegrams. Davies v.

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Jackson v. Kemp
365 S.W.2d 437 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1963)
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Bluebook (online)
115 Tenn. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-mcaul-tenn-1905.