Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Rogers

68 Miss. 748
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 68 Miss. 748 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Rogers) 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. Rogers, 68 Miss. 748 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. '

A telegram was sent from Chattanooga, Tenn., to the plaintiff who resides in Meridian, Miss., informing him of the death of-his brother, and the time and place at which he would be buried. If this dispatch had been seasonably delivered, the plaintiff could and would have attended the burial. By negligence of’the agent of the defendant company at Meridian, it was not delivered until after the last train had left Meridian for Chattanooga, by which the plaintiff could have travelled to attend the funeral services. This suit was brought to recover the damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the non-delivery of the message.

The facts are undisputed. They are that the message was sent and its transmission paid for by the sender; that it was, by the negligence of the agent, not delivered; that the plaintiff sustained no pecuniary loss, his damages being merely nominal, unless he is entitled to recovery for the disappointment of not being informed of the death of his brother in time to attend his burial.

[753]*753The court below instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover as compensation, damages for the mental suffering sustained by him by reason of being deprived of the privilege of attending the funeral of his brother, it being conceded that no such negligence was shown as would warrant the infliction of punitive damages. The jury returned a verdict for $800, and from a judgment thereon the defendant appeals.

It thus appears that the single question presented is, whether under the circumstances named damages for mental suffering may be recovered.

It is immaterial, in the determination of the question involved, whether the action be considered as one for the breach of the contract to transmit and deliver the message, or as an action on the case for the tort in failure to perform the duty devolved on the telegraph company under the contract. The substance and nature of the default and the consequent injury are the same in either view, and, in the absence of circumstances warranting the imposition of punitory damages, the measure of damages must be the same whatever be the form of the action.

We have given to the investigation of the question that consideration which its importance demands, and, though the right of the plaintiff to recover the damages awarded in this case finds support in the decisions of several of the states, we are unwilling to depart from the long-established and almost universal rule of law that no action lies for the recovery of damages for mere mental suffering disconnected from physical injury, and not the result of the wilful wrong of the defendant. That such damages are recoverable in actions for breach of contract of marriage is well settled; but it is equally true that until recent years this action stood as the marked and single exception in which such damages were recoverable in actions for breach of contract. This action, though in form one for the breach of contract, partakes in several features of the characteristics of an action for the wilful tort, and, though the damages recoverable by the plaintiff for mental suffering are spoken of as compensatory, the fervent language of the courts indicates how shadowy is the line that separates them from those strictly punitory. Har[754]*754rison v. Swift, 13 Allen, 144; Kurtz v. Frank, 76 Ind. 595; Thorn v. Knapp, 42 N. Y. 475 ; Johnson v. Jenkins, 24 Ib. 252; Coryell v. Colbaugh, 1 N. J. L. 77. So much indeed does the motive of the defendant enter into the question of damages that in Johnson v. Jenkins, he was permitted to give in evidence in mitigation of damages, the fact that he refused to consummate the marriage because of the settled ’ opposition of his mother, who was in infirm health.

Some of the text-writers upon the subject of damages, notably Sutherland (vol. I. 156), assuming that the action for breach of contract of marriage is not of an exceptional character, accept the ■measure of damages therein applied as appropriate in all actions for breach of contract where the losses sustained are not, by reason of the nature of the transaction, of a pecuniary nature. The authorities cited by Sutherland, other than those in actions for breach of contract of marriage, are: Hobbs v. Railway Co., 10 L. R. Q. B. 111; Ward v. Smith, 11 Price, 19; Williams v. Vanderbilt, 28 N. Y. 217; and Jones v. Steamship Cortes, 17 Cal. 487.

The first of these cases decides only that a passenger who with his wife and two small children were negligently disembarked by a railway at a point four miles from his destination, on a rainy night, might recover for the inconvenience of having to walk that distance, he being unable to secure a conveyance. In Ward v. Smith the damages recovered were for pecuniary loss. Jones v. Steamship Cortes was a case of wilful wrong and fraud. In Williams v. Vanderbilt, which was an action of tort for breach of duty, the defendant had agreed to transport the plaintiff from New York to San Franscisco via Nicaragua. The defendant’s vessel sailing from the Isthmus to San Francisco was lost at sea, and he negligently omitted to supply transportation over that part of the journey. The result was that the plaintiff was exposed to disease peculiar to the Isthmus, which he contracted and was eventually compelled to return to New York. It was held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover for loss of time occasioned by, and expenses of his sickness, the court saying: “ If one of plaintiff’s limbs had been broken through the carelessness of the agents or servants of the [755]*755defendant, it is settled that he could have recovered the expenses of the sickness occasioned thereby and for the consequent loss of time, and also compensation for the bodily pain and suffering caused by such breaking of the limb. The principle on which a recovery, in such case, is allowed for bodily pain and suffering, loss of time and expenses, sustains the recovery in this case, for the plaintiff’s loss of time and loss of health and his expenses during his sickness.”

It is upon the suggestions of the text-writers, supported by authorities which have been given a strained construction, and upon a misapplication of the rule that damages for a breach of contract are commensurate with the injury contemplated by the parties, that some courts in recent years have decided that mental pain and anguish, disconnected from physical injury, furnish a substantive cause of action for which recovery may be had.

The principle of limitation applied by the courts in cases involving pecuniary loss, for the necessary protection of defendants against ruin by the infliction of speculative and remote damages, has been, perverted and accepted as the standard of measurement of damages-in a class of cases in which the sole injury sustained is confessedly incapable of compensation, and in which any damages awarded. must from, the nature of things be purely speculative and uncertain.

In 1881, in the case of So Relle v. Western Union Tel. Co., 55 Tex. 308, the supreme court of Texas, relying upon the authority of two previous decisions in that state (Hays v. Railroad Co., 46 Texas, 279, and Railroad Co. v. Randall, 50 Ib.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miranda v. Said
836 N.W.2d 8 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2013)
First National Bank v. Langley
314 So. 2d 324 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1975)
Lyons v. Zale Jewelry Co.
150 So. 2d 154 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1963)
Gulf, Mobile & N. R. R. Co. v. Thornberry
188 So. 545 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
Doherty v. Mississippi Power Co.
173 So. 287 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1937)
López v. American Railroad
50 P.R. 1 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1936)
López v. American Railroad Co. of Porto Rico
50 P.R. Dec. 1 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1936)
Mississippi Power Co. v. Byrd
133 So. 193 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1931)
J. J. Newman Lumber Co. v. Norris
94 So. 881 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1922)
Perkins v. Wilcox
242 S.W. 974 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1922)
Bonelli v. Branciere
90 So. 245 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1921)
Herrick v. Evening Express Publishing Co.
113 A. 16 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1921)
Grenada Bank v. Lester
89 So. 2 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1921)
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. State ex rel. Hardy
83 So. 610 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1919)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Teague
77 So. 302 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1918)
Illinois Cent. R. v. Hawkins
74 So. 775 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1917)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Koonce
72 So. 893 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1916)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Ragsdale
71 So. 818 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1916)
Corcoran v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.
142 P. 29 (Washington Supreme Court, 1914)
Hall v. Jackson
24 Colo. App. 225 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Miss. 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-rogers-miss-1891.