MacHen v. Western Union Tel. Co.
MacHen v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action was brought for dam *258 ages for negligent and wilful misconduct in failing to deliver a telegram announcing the death of plaintiff’s father. The message: was delivered to' defendant company at Honea Path, S. C., on August 14th, at about 4 P. M., and was transmitted to Laurens through one or more relay offices, reaching Laurens at about 5.30' P. M. The plaintiff resided in the town of Laurens and had been conducting a milling business there for three years. When the message was delivered to the messenger boy, he carried it to Ben Della Hotel, in said town, and left it with the proprietor, who- receipted for it, and pigeon-holed it, thinking it was addressed to a Mr. Meacham, a traveling salesman, who> usually stopped at said hotel. Plaintiff received the message five days later. About 9 o’clock P. M., on August 14th, plaintiff, .having learned of the death of his father from another source, immediately started by private conveyance for his father’s home at Princeton, about eighteen miles distant from Laurens. On his way it was necessary to cross Rabun Creek, and on reaching that stream he found he could not cross, it having been swollen by heavy rains late that evening. He was thus compelled to camp' on the bank of the creek until midnight, when he attempted to' cross, but on reaching the bridge and finding the water dangerous beyond, he camped on the bridge the balance of the night exposed to' the weather. He reached his father’s home the next morning" in time to attend the funeral. The jury rendered a verdict for $225, and defendant appeals.
*260
In the cases of Griffin v. Ry., Young v. Tel. Co. and Bolin v. Ry., supra, Mr. Justice Gary, writing the opinions, expressed as a reason for the decision, that acts of negligence and acts of wilful tort commingled, as permitted under the act of 1898, constitute elements of damage in a single cause of action. As already stated, this view was not essential to the decision of these cases, as the decision in each case safely rested on the principle that a motion for a nonsuit as to' the entire cause could not prevail if there was testimony either as to negligence or wilfulness. On the other hand, in the case of Stembridge v. Ry., 65 S. C., 444, 43 S. E., 968, a motion was made for a nonsuit on SO much of the complaint as alleged a wilful tort, and, in responding to- an exception made to the Circuit Court’s refusal of motion, this Court said: “There is no doubt that the complaint stated two causes of action, one for negligence and the other for wilful tort, the former depending upon inadvertence and the latter upon wilfulness, and, therefore, if there was no evidence whatever tending to show wantonness or wilfulness, a nonsuit as to that cause of action should have been granted.” In that case, Mr. Justice Gary concurred in the result only, because of his view of the act of 1898, as expressed in Griffin v. Ry., Young v. Tel. Co. and Bowen v. Ry., supra. In Proctor v. Ry., 64 S. C., 491, 42 S. C., 427, this Court refused to' allow the complaint alleging a wilful tort to be amended so as to allege a cause of action based on mere negligence, on the ground that the Code does not authorize an insertion of a new cause of action by way of amendment. In construing the act of 1898, the Court said: “The statute also permits a jumbling together in one statement of all acts of negligence and other wrongs, which include acts of wilful wrong, but the statute does not expressly or by implication undertake to declare that the action based upon mere negligence is not wholly distinct from an action based upon a wilful tort.” The decision in that case cannot well be supported, if the *263 proposed amendment did not allege a new and distinct cause of action, and was only a part of a single cause of action, under the act of 1898. Following the case of Proctor v. Ry., this Court, in Steadman v. Ry., 66 S. C., 542, 544, said: “The effect of the act of 1898 is to require that when the same act is described as negligent and wilful, the pleading shall be treated and considered as if these two inconsistent statements had been made separately in setting out two distinct causes of action.” Numerous, decisions, beginning with Pickens v. Ry., 54 S. C., 498, 32 S. E., 567, have emphasized the difference between a cause of action based upon inadvertence or mere negligence and a cause of action based upon a wilful tort. They are so inconsistent, in nature, in the measure of damages applicable, and in the defenses available, as to be incapable of being blended into a single cause of action.
When the statute says the plaintiff shall be “entitled to submit his whole case to the jury,” etc., it means that such case as he has made out by his evidence shall be submitted to the jury, whether it be a case for actual damages based upon negligence, or a case for punitive damages based upon a wilful tort. If no evidence has been submitted on the case based upon wilfulness, then the whole case necessarily consists of the cause of action based upon mere negligence. Even if the proper construction of the statute has not been settled by authority, and is still a matter of doubt, then, on grounds of expediency and the proper administration of justice, there is- good reason for holding that nonsuit may be granted as to the cause of action based upon a wilful tort when there is no evidence to sustain it.
Now, with reference to the specific question in this case. In the case of Stembridge v. So. Ry., supra, the Court stated that when the evidence lies close to the dividing line between negligence which is gross and misconduct which is wanton and wilful, it is generally best for the trial Court to leave it to the jury to draw the proper inference, and that a nonsuit would be proper as to a cause of action only *264 when it is clear that no possible view of the testimony would warrant the jury in drawing an inference supporting such cause of action. In the case of Young v. Tel. Co., supra, the Court held that testimony as to a delay of fourteen hours in the delivery of a telegram showing necessity of prompt delivery, coupled with testimony tending to show that no effort was made to deliver the message within that time, made it proper to submit the case to the jury to determine whether there was reckless disregard of plaintiff’s rights. Likewise it may be said in this case that the long delay in delivering the death message in question, coupled with the absence of evidence showing any real effort to deliver the message, required submission to the jury as to the matter of punitive damages. The operator at Laurens testified that he received the message, addressed and sealed an envelope, in which he placed it, and delivered same to his messenger boy for delivery, that the message was taken to the Ben Della Hotel and left there by the messenger with the proprietor. The messenger boy was not examined, and no witness testified that any search or inquiry had been made for J. S. Machen, who had for years been residing and doing a public milling business in the town of Laurens. This was some evidence of misconduct so gross as to pass beyond mere negligence into a reckless and wanton disregard of defendant’s duty to plaintiff. It, therefore, follows that the exceptions must be overruled.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
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