Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Redding

129 So. 743, 100 Fla. 495
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 2, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 129 So. 743 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Redding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida 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. Redding, 129 So. 743, 100 Fla. 495 (Fla. 1930).

Opinion

Brown, J.

— When this ease was before this Court the first time, (See 114 So. R. 533, 94 Fla. 905) it was held that the declaration was defective in that it alleged that ‘ ‘ plaintiff was subjected to great anguish and mental suffering,” etc., and it was remarked, in the opinion by Mr. Justice Terrell, that “there may be a marked distinction between actually suffering mental anguish and being ‘subjected’ to it.”

The declaration was amended to meet this criticism, and on the second trial of the case,, upon evidence differing in some respects from that introduced at the first trial, the *497 jury found in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000.00, upon which verdict judgment was rendered. Upon an examination of the record, it appears that there was evidence before the jury to sustain all of the allegations of the declaration which were put in issue by the pleas. Nor do we find that any reversible error was committed in the rulings upon the pleadings or in the giving or refusing of instructions to the jury.

■Upon the first trial, it was observed in the opinion of this court that even if the declaration had alleged that the negligent transmission of the telegram had caused the. plaintiff to suffer the mental anguish complained of, the evidence failed to prove such allegations; that the negligently transmitted telegram merely had the effect of confirming Dr. Creekmore’s diagnosis, which was already known to Mr. Redding. The evidence on the second trial, however, goes to show that while Dr. Creekmore did not tell Mr. Redding about the receipt of the erroneously transmitted telegram until he had received the correction of it, it also shows that prior to receiving the misleading telegram, the doctor had never positively diagnosed the case as diphtheria; he had merely strongly suspected that it might be diphtheria, which suspicion he had communicated to Mr. Redding, and immediately upon the receipt of the erroneous telegram from Dr. Venters, of the State Health Department, about noon, Dir. Creekmore promptly administered the full “curative dose,” 20,000 “units” of diphtheria anti-toxin; that about thirty minutes later Mr. Redding saw his little girl and saw that the anti-toxin had been administered, the two places on her back where the injection had been made being obviously noticeable, and he found her crying- with pain from the effects of such injections ; that about two hours later Redding saw the doctor who told him about the two telegrams. Mr. Redding testi *498 fied that he came home as soon as he could get off from his work that afternoon, and that his little girl was very much worse; that her fever was higher and that her pulse was very rapid; that he and his wife sat up with her all night and thought that she was going to die; that during the night her pulse was so rapid that they could not count it; that by morning it had slowed down to where they could count it but that one or the other stayed with the little girl all that day and all the following night as her high fever and rapid pulse continued to make her condition appear to them as very serious.

It appears from the testimony that Dr. Creekmore would not have administered the diphtheria anti-toxin tothe little girl had it not been for the error in the first telegram. The evidence also tends strongly to show that the administration of the anti-toxin had seriously deleterious effects upon the little- girl and of such nature as to create fright and anguish on the part of her parents.

It is -contended by the plaintiff in error that the sending of the specimen swabbed from the child’s throat to Dr.. Venters for examination and telegraphic report thereon, was due entirely to'the voluntary act of Dr. Creekmore;. that he had of his own volition and acting on his judgment as a physician, requested a report from Dr. Venters by telegram. There is some foundation for this in the doctor’s testimony. However, the declaration alleges that the request made by Dr. Creekmore to Dr. Venters was made at the instance and' request of the plaintiff and this allegation is sustained by the testimony of Mr. Redding. That Dr. Creekmore was at the time the employed physician of Mr. Redding is not denied.

Thus, while the evidence does not expressly show that Mr. Redding was himself informed of the receipt of the erroneous telegram until the corrected telegram had come *499 in, and hence could not have suffered any mental pain merely on account of the error in its transmission, unless his inspection of the little girl shortly after the injections were made caused him to suspect the import of the telegram, yet the fact remains that the painful and harmful effects of the injection of the diphtheria anti-toxin into the body of a little girl, who was already very sick from a different disease, was the result of the erroneous transmission of Dr. Venters’ telegram, and that the condition of extreme suffering and apparent danger created by these injections naturally must have cause, and, as the evidence indicates, did cause, considerable mental pain and anguish on the part of Mr. Redding and his wife for a period of several days. While it appears from the evidence that the little girl was already quite sick with tonsilitis, the evidence tends to show that the needless injection of the diphtheria anti-toxin had very severe and painful effects upon the little girl, greatly aggravating all her symptoms, which caused her parents great mental pain and anguish for several days, and the jury were justified in finding that this condition would not have been brought about had it not been for the negligent and erroneous transmission of the original telegram, which was the efficient, moving and proximate cause thereof.

We think that a telegraph company, when transmitting a telegram from a physician, who was a bacteriologist of the State Health Department, which shows on its face that it is a report of a laboratory test as to whether a certain throat culture shows, or does not show, diphtheria, is charged with notice of the fact, that an erroneous transmission of such a telegram may have disastrous effects upon the person from whose throat the culture specimen was taken, and may also cause great mental pain and anguish to such person’s family. Telegrams of this kind may easily in *500 many cases involve the life or death of the person to whom the telegram relates. The nature of the telegram itself puts the company on notice of the reasonably possible effects of a mistake in its transmission sufficient to bring it within one phase of the rule in Hadley v. Baxendale as quoted in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Taylor, 114 So. R. 529, 94 Fla. 841, wherein it was said:

“It is not essential that the message disclose all the details of the transaction to which it relates, nor the particular business intended. The rule in Hadley v. Baxendale does not require that the parties must have contemplated the actual damages which are to be allowed, but such as may reasonably be supposed to have been contemplated. It is not essential that the particular loss or injury sustained was contemplated, but the company is liable if the loss sustained should have been contemplated as a probable and proximate result of its negligence. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Merritt et al., 55 Fla. 462, 46 So. R. 1024, 127 Am. St. R. 169; Western Union Telegraph Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 743, 100 Fla. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-redding-fla-1930.