Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Odom

52 S.W. 632, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 537, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 418
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 S.W. 632 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Odom) 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. Odom, 52 S.W. 632, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 537, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 418 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

FINLEY, Chief Justice.

Suit for damages alleged on account of mental suffering caused by negligence of the telegraph cmnpany in converting a telegram to the effect that his sister was better into a message that she was dead. The trial resulted ini a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $250, from which the company has appealed.

The plaintiff resided near the town, of Bed Water, in Bowie County, Texas, with his father, N. Odom. He -had a sister, Mrs. Mamie Harrison, who lived in the State of Arkansas. N. Odom received a telegram informing him that his daughter was dangerously ill, and he at once left home to go to her bedside. He promised the son that he would wire him on his arrival the condition of the sister. On his arrival he found Mrs. Harrison much better, and she finally recovered. He caused a telegram to be delivered to the company addressed to his son stating, “Mamie is better.” The message was accepted and the charges paid. The telegraph company delivered the message in the changed form, “Mamie is dead.” The plaintiff did not learn until two days later that his sister was not dead, and during that time he believed her dead and sustained great grief and sorrow, the same as though she had been in fact dead. He did not go to his sister on receipt of the message, because he expected her remains to be brought there for burial, which would have been done had she died.

The message ivas an unrepeated day message, and printed thereon was a stipulation that the company would not be liable beyond the price of the message for mistakes in the transmission of the message unless paid for as a repeated message, for which an additional charge was required to be paid. It was not shown how the change in the message occurred. It appeared that a simple, plain message, “Mamie is better,” was delivered to the company, and that the company delivered to appellee the message, “Mamie is dead.” It was proved by the operator at Texarkana that the condition of the instruments and wires at that point was all right; that he received the message, “Mamie is better,” and sent it over the wires to Bed Water in that form. The operator at Bed Water tes *539 tified to the good condition 'of the instrument and wires at his office, and that he received the message and understood it, “Mamie is dead,” and in this form delivered it to appellee. It appears that there was nothing unfavorable in the conditions to produce the mistake, and the conclusion is justified that it was the result of negligence on the part of some one of the operatives.

It is first contended by appellant that m> recovery of damages can be had for mental suffering arising from a mistake of fact produced by a change in the message from that of good cheer to tidings of death. It is now a well settled doctrine in this State that recovery may be had for mental suffering occasioned by the negligent breach of a contract for the transmission and delivery of a telegraphic message. The right of such recovery, as determined by our Supreme Court, is based upon principles of common law, and not upon any local law peculiarly applicable to this State. The common law principle that for the wrongful breach of a contract the injured party may reover of the wrongdoer such damages as proximately result from the wrong, as laid down and expounded in the ancient case of Hadley v. Baxendale, is the underlying principle of our decisions sustaining the recovery of damages for mental suffering in telegraph cases. Tel. Co. v. Stuart, 66 Texas, 580; Tel. Co. v. Simpson, 73 Texas, 422; Tel. Co. v. Adams, 75 Texas, 531; Tel. Co. v. Moore, 76 Texas, 66; Tel. Co. v. Richardson, 79 Texas, 651; Tel. Co. v. Edmonson, 91 Texas, 206. It is an old principle applied to conditions which have arisen in modern times. The modern telegraph is controlled by business corporations with which the public is invited and practically compelled to deal in the quick transmission of important information. They are permitted to make and exact remunerative charges for the rapid and accurate transmission and delivery of messages, and our courts have wisely kept pace with the inventions and advancements of the age in evolving, from the established principles of the common law, just rules imposing upon these corporations liability for damages inflicted by the negligent breach of their contracts. There is perhaps no class of communications sent over telegraphic wires which is esteemed of greater concern by the general public than those messages which relate to sickness and death -of near relatives, and they constitute a large portion of the business of telegraph companies. To hold that recovery may not be had for mental suffering occasioned by negligent breaches of contracts for the transmission of such messages, would give legal sanction to flagrant wrongs and put the public at the mercy of such corporations, in so far as this branch of telegraphic business be concerned. Had our courts failed to find a remedy in the common law, the Legislature would doubtless have furnished it through statutory enactments, for the principles of justice and humanity alike demand a remedy for all such wrongs. If these decisions of our courts are to continue to be recognized as sound expositions of the law, as we believe they should be, then the principle announced allowing the recovery of such damages must not be arbitrarily confined to cases where one is prevented from go *540 ing to the sickbed or attending the funeral of a dear one^ but it must also be given application to such other cases of mental anguish as the rules of reason and logic would extend it. Otherwise the decisions would and should be regarded as arbitrary and not resting upon sound principle. Assuming, then, that we are to administer the law upon established principles, not upon arbitrary rules announced by courts, we will attempt to apply the principles established by the decisions of our Supreme Court in the telegraph cases to the peculiar facts of this case. The appellee knew his sister had been very ill, his father, who went to her bedside in compliance with his promise previously made, contracted with the company to transmit and deliver to appellee the message that his sister was better. In breach of this contract the company delivered a message conveying the intelligence that his sister was dead. The company was apprised of the relation of the parties, knew that the message was intended to relieve existing anxiety, and must have known, had it contemplated the natural and probable effect of its act, that the delivery of a message to the effect that the sister was dead would cause appellee to suffer sorely from grief and sorrow. To suffer mental anguish under such conditions is that which would occur to persons generally, and must be held such a consequence as could have been reasonably contemplated, and therefore the proximate result of the wrongful act. If a telegraph company may contract upon valuable consideration paid to transmit and deliver a message of good cheer and negligently convert it into a message of death, inflicting grief and sorrow upon the addressee, free from responsibility for such injury, then the principles upon which our previous decisions are based fail, and that line of decision had better be abandoned, and the view of the question entertained by some other States, that recovery in telegraph cases for mental anguish can not be had, should be adopted. Then, perhaps, the Legislature will enact a reasonable law upon the subject which will afford the public protection from such wrongs.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W. 632, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 537, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-odom-texapp-1899.