Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Stewart
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Stewart
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff’s wife died in an infirmary in Birmingham at 2:55 p. m. on the 17th of the month. Shortly after S o’clock plaintiff sent the following telegram to his aunt in Blount Springs, 30 miles away: “Mary died this p. m. Please come at once.” The aunt lived about 1% miles from defendant’s office outside of the free delivery zone,, but at S p. m. defendant told plaintiff over the telephone that the telegram had been delivered. A train passed Blount Springs going to Biripingham at 5:55 p. m., one at night,, one about 9 a. m., and several during the day. The telegram was not actually delivered until about 8 o’clock of the 18th. There was no evidence that the aunt made any effort to go to Birmingham, after receiving the telegram, or that she would have gone had the.telegram been delivered on the day it was sent.
The complaint originally- claimed damages for mental pain and inconvenience, but by a statement of defendant’s counsel in open court during the trial and by a charge of the court following that statement the claim for mental pain was eliminated. It was shown by the testimony of plaintiff that by reason of the fact that his aunt did not come the *503 funeral was delayed one day; that the body was then placed on the train, carried through Blount Springs to Decatur and buried; that no further effort was made to communicate with the aunt; that the failure of the aunt to come did not delay the preparation for the funeral; and that the delay was “just because he wanted his aunt there and wanted some money out of her.”
While it may well be doubted whether a recovery can be had for inconvenience in a case such as this, where all arrangements for the funeral were made, independent of the sendee of the telegram, and the delay was voluntary on the part of the sender except for the psychological restraint caused by a desire to have the sendee present, out of all the maze of telegraph decisions in’ this and other states it can he said with certainty that damages for inconvenience and harassment are not the proximate result of tiie failure to deliver a telegram in a case where, even if the company had performed its duty, there can be no legal certainty that the loss would not still have occurred. 37 Cyc. p. 1758, and authorities under note 56.
The rulings of the court were not in accord with the foregoing views, and for that reason the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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- Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Stewart.
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