Western Union Telg. Co. v. Price

126 S.W. 1100, 137 Ky. 758, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 622
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 1100 (Western Union Telg. Co. v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telg. Co. v. Price, 126 S.W. 1100, 137 Ky. 758, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 622 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

— Affirming.

This aDpeal is prosecuted from a judgment of the Logan circuit court awarding appellee $955.50 in damages against the appellant company for its alleged failure to deliver to 'her within a reasonable time the following telegram: “Kansas City, Feby. 26, 1908. Mrs. E. S. Price, Russellville, Ky., Mr. Price seriously ill. Will you come? Answer. Mrs. H. L. Bales.” The Mr. Price mentioned in the telegram was the husband of appellee, and at the time [760]*760it was sent lie was in Kansas City at the house of Mrs. Bales, where he becaine seriously ill and died on February 29, 1908. Mrs. Price and her husband were residents of Russellville, a city of 4,000 inhabitants, and had lived there in the same house some 17 years; the residence being within a few squares of the telegraph office. The telegram reached Russellville at 9:50 p. m., on the day it was sent, but it was not delivered to Mrs. Price until 5 or 10 minutes after 8 o ’clock the following morning.

The evidence shows that the company had a night operator and a day operator; the latter going on duty at 7 o’clock in the morning. From 7 o’clock in the morning until 7 o’clock in the evening, it had a messenger boy to deliver messages, but did not have any messenger boy on duty after 7 o’clock in the evening or during the night. If the telegram had been delivered to Mrs. Price at any time before midnight of the day it was received, she could have left Russellville on a train due there at 1:15 a. m.; or, if it had been delivered to her before 6 o’clock the next morning, she could have left on the train due there at 7:17 a. in'.; or, if- it had been delivered to her shortly after 7 o ’clock, she could have left on a train leaving there at 8:35 a. m. By leaving on either of these trains, in due course-of travel she would have reached the bedside of her husband in time to have seen and conversed with him before he became unconscious. As it was, there was no train on which she .could leave Russellville until 7:10 p. m. on the 27th and, going on this train, she did not get to the bedside of her husband until a few hours after he had become unconscious, in which condition he remained until his death.

[761]*761There is evidence that it was the rule and custom of the Russellville office when telegrams were received during the night and after the departure of the messenger boy, addressed to persons who had telephones, to deliver the message, to the addressee by telephone and on the following morning deliver the written message. It was also shown that Mrs. Price was at her residence during the whole of the night of the 26th of February, and that she had in the room in which she slept a Cumberland telephone, and that this telephone was also in use in the office of the telegraph company. The operator testifies that a few minutes after receiving the message he called up the telephone exchange and asked the operator to get' Mrs. Price for him, that he had an important message to deliver to her, and the telephone operator testifies that she rung up Mrs. Price’s residence on two occasions shortly after receiving the request from the telegraph office, but, failing to get an answer from Mrs. Price, no further effort was made to deliver the message over the telephone. Upon this point Mrs. Price testifies that she was in the room in which the telephone was located during the whole of the night and did not go to sleep until after the hour the telephone operator said she endeavored to call her up, and that the telephone bell did not ring.

Although the company was not required to keep a messenger boy on duty during the night or obliged to send the telegram by messenger during the night, it was, under the facts of the case, its duty to make reasonable efforts to forward the message over the telephone within a reasonable time after it was received. When a telegraph company has in its office a telephone that will put it in connection with the addressee of an important telegram, received at an [762]*762hour when its messenger is absent, it should exercise reasonable diligence to deliver it over the telephone or notify the addressee of the fact that it has a telegram at its office; and this, notwithstanding the fact that the company may not he under any duty to have a messenger boy at the time the telegram is received to deliver it or be required to then deliver it in person. The fact that a company may establish reasonable hours of service and he excused during specified hours and at certain places from delivering-in person telegrams will not relieve it of the duty, when its messenger is absent, of delivering an important telegram over the telephone, or at least of 'notifying the addressee that it has an important message for him, if it can communicate this information from its office without incurring any cost. Many important telegrams are received during the night, and at other times when the reasonable rules of the company do not require that they should be delivered at once by messenger; but, if the company has in its office a telephone that will put it without expense in communication with the addressee, it must use due diligence to notify him by telephone of the fact that it has the message, and, if he request it, deliver it to him over the telephone, and the failure to do this is negligence for which a recovery may he had if the case is one that authorizes damages for the failure to transmit and deliver with reasonable promptness a message. These corporations are public servants. They owe a duty to the public to exercise reasonable diligence to transmit and deliver in due time all messages received; and, when this can be done over the telephone at no expense and without leaving the office, there is no reason why they should not be required to do it. It is true that the ordinary method [763]*763of delivering telegrams is by messenger, and that the sendee is entitled to have delivered to him in writing the identical telegram received. But this rule of law will not and should not exonerate the company from using the telephone in cases where its business and the settled rules of law do not demand that it shall be prepared to promptly deliver the written message by hand. It cannot be successfully maintained that a company has exercised reasonable care and diligence to deliver a telegram in the proper absence of its messenger service when it fails to use for the purpose so convenient an instrument as a telephone that will connect without delay or expense its operator with the addressee. We do not mean to hold that the company under ordinary conditions or at all times may use the telephone to deliver messages without the consent of the addressee or sender and in the absence of a contract to that effect, or that it would be negligence to fail to use the telephone when the message in reasonable time could and would be delivered in writing by a messenger; but, under circumstances and conditions like those proven in this case, we hold that it is the duty of the company to make reasonable efforts to notify the addressee over the telephone of the contents of the telegram and properly a question for the jury to say whether or not the company exercised reasonable diligence in the delivery of the message.

Yre might, however, safely pass over the failure of the company to deliver the message on the night it was received, and put our decision upon the ground that it was negligence not to deliver it until after 8 o’clock on the following morning. It is attempted to excuse the failure to deliver the telegram earlier on the morning of the 27th upon the theory that when the

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Related

Evans v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
256 S.W. 81 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 1100, 137 Ky. 758, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telg-co-v-price-kyctapp-1910.