Western Union Telegraph Co. v. McLaurin

66 So. 739, 108 Miss. 273
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 66 So. 739 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. McLaurin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi 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. McLaurin, 66 So. 739, 108 Miss. 273 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was begun by appellee against appellant to recover damages for injuries caused by appellant disclosing the contents of two telegrams. The messages were sent from Selma, Alabama, to appellee at Toomsuba, Mississippi, and were in the following words:

(1) “Call me up at once at 9196.- [Signed]* Alice.”
(2) “Please come home, I am sick. [Signed] Alice.”

The first message was dated November 3,1912, and the second November 4, 1912, and' each was delivered to the sendee on the day of their date.

The first telegram was written on a tissue paper train sheet and folded on itself, but was not placed in an envelope or sealed. This message was delivered to a third party by appellant, and the evidence discloses that the third party did not open or read the message. The second message was delivered by the telegraph company to a sister of the sendee, about eleven years of. age, and was by her first delivered to her .mother, who opened and read it, and it was then delivered to appéllee. The last, message was written on the same kind of paper as the first, and was not sealed or inclosed in an envelope. After reading the message, appellee’s mother asked him if he was married to the sender of the telegram, and it seems from the evidence that she pursued this line of inquiry far enough to learn that “Alice” was a prostitute, and that her son had been her paramour.

It also appears that the messenger of the company at Selma disclosed the contents of the telegraphic corres[277]*277■pondence to the friends of appellee at Selma, and it is alleged and proven, that his relations with the woman of the underworld thus became public property to his humiliation and shame, caused him to lose caste with women of respectibility, and ultimately forced him to resign a lucrative position at Selma to take another elsewhere less lucrative and pleasant. The wags of his acquaintance, after the disclosure of the contents of the messages, commonly called him “Alice,” and the urchins of the street promptly tagged him with the same sobriquet. In short, the record tells a story that appeals to the sympathy of the sternest moralist. There can be no doubt that, when his sins had thus found him out, appellee suffered not only mentally, but also financially. Doubtless, the messenger boy did not appreciate the enormity or the consequences of his offense when he satisfied the curiosity of inquiring feminine friends of appellee by disclosing that “Alice” was a demirep and appellee was her Don Juan.

We refrain, for obvious reasons, from a further statement of the harrowing details'of appellee’s humiliation when it dawned on him that he had been exposed, found out, caught. Will the law compensate him for his injured feelings, or for his damaged exchequer, is the question.

It may be suggested that had the disclosures not been made, in all probability, appellee would have continued to stray in the primrose paths of dalliance; whereas, and since the “blessed .sunlight of publicity” has caused him to abandon the pleasures of sin, appellee is in fact the winner rather than a loser; but, as the telegraph company does not file this as an offset, we will not consider that feature of the case.

“The test whether a demand connected with with an illegal transaction is capable of being enforced by law is whether the plaintiff requires the aid of the illegal transaction to establish his case.” Swan v. Scott, 11 Serg. & E. (Pa.) 164; Thomas v. Brady, 10 Pa. 170; Scott 1. Duffy, 14 Pa. 20.

[278]*278If a plaintiff cannot open his case without showing that he has broken the law, a court will not aid him. It has been said that the objection may often sound very ill in the mouth of the defendant, but it is not for his sake the objection is allowed; it is founded on general principles of policy which he shall have the advantage of, contrary to the real justice between the parties. The principle of public policy is that no court will lend its aid to a party who grounds his action upon an immoral or illegal act.

The principle has been applied in numerous cases wherein its application seems to have been of doubtful propriety, but the principle as stated is undoubtedly sound in logic, and necessarily. affords, the true test for the guidance of the courts.

Speaking of the principle here invoked, Judge Cooley, in his valuable work on Torts (volume 1, marginal page 172), says:

“It may be thought that the maxim that the law will not relieve a party from the consequences of his own wrongdoing partakes more of severity to the particular person singled out by 'the plaintiff for pursuit, than it does of general justice. It may be right to punish him, but is it right to exempt from punishment others equally guilty? If strict justice, as between individuals, were all that was aimed at, we should be compelled to answer this question in the negative; and we must therefore look further for the reason of this rule. ’ ’

The author then proceeds to state the reasons for the rule, as he sees it, this way:

“It has already been intimated that the rule, as we have given it, is one of very general application, and not by any means, confined to cases of joint torts. Whoever, by his pleadings in any court of justice, avows that he has been engaged with others in an unlawful action, or has concerted with them in an unlawful enterprise, and that in arranging for or carrying it out he has been un[279]*279fairly treated -by his associates, or has suffered an injustice which they should redress, will be met by the refusal of the court to look any further than.his complaint, which it will at once order dismissed. The following reasons may be assigned for this action: (1) The discouragement of all illegal transactions by distinctly apprising every person who engages in them that the risk he incurs is not merely of being compelled to share with the others' the loss that may follow, for this, in many cases, would be insignificant, and in all cases would be small in proportion to the size and formidable character of the combination. He is therefore given to understand that whoever takes part in an illegal transaction must do so under a responsibility only measured by the whole extent of the injury or loss; an understanding very well calculated to make men hestitate who, under a different rule, would be disposed to give full scope to evil inclinations. But (2) the state, from a consideration of its own pecuniary interests, and of the interests of other litigants, may wisely refuse to assist in adjusting equities between persons who have been engaged in an unlawful action. The expense of administering justice is always a large item in the state’s exependitures, and one which must be borne by the common contributions of the people. Where one has suffered from participation in an unlawful undertaking, what justice can there be in any demand on his part that the state shall supply courts and offiéers and incur expenses to indemnify him against a loss he has encountered through a disregard of its laws ? Here the question is not merely one of what is right, as between himself and his associates, but what is best for the interests of the state. When that question is up for consideration, the fact is not to be overlooked that there are unavoidable difficulties and necessary evils connected with litigation which multiply rapidly as the cases increase in number.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 So. 739, 108 Miss. 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-mclaurin-miss-1914.