Mitchiner v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Mitchiner v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought action against defendant company for damages for mental anguish resulting from the alleged negligence and wantonness in failing to promptly deliver a telegram, and recovered judgment for $200, from which defendant now! appeals. The second, *524 third and sixth exceptions relate to the admissibility of testimony, and will be first considered.
*525
After careful consideration, we think there was error in refusing a new trial. Plaintiff’s wife and baby, living in Abbeville, S. C., were on the eve of visiting her brother, S. E. Bell, at Lumpkins, Ga. S'. E. Bell, on April 2d, 1903, caused the following- message to be delivered through another person, to defendant’s agent at Richland, Ga., for transmission to plaintiff at Abbeville, S. C.: “Do not come to-morrow, smallpox at Lumpkins, will write.” The sender of the message, Bell, was at Lumpkins, Ga., but the operator there being away, he telephoned the message to Mr. Humbert, at Richland, Ga., to the best of his recollection at 6.30 P. M. Humbert, however, was not the agent of defendant, and the only testimony as to the time of the delivery of the message to defendant’s agent for transmission was at 7.35 o’clock, as shown by the testimony of the operator at Rich-land and by his entry on the message blank. This telegram reached the Abbeville office at 9.30 A. M., April 3d, and was delivered, according to plaintiff’s testimony, at 10.20 A. M., and according to testimony of defendant’s witness, *527 at 9.35 A. M. The difference in the standards of time prevailing at Richland, Ga., and Abbeville, S. C., was. one hour, and the office at Abbeville, under regulation, was closed at 8.30 P. M.; so that if the message was delivered at Rich-land, Ga., at 7.35 o’clock, it was too late for transmission to the Abbeville office by 8.30 P. M., April 2d. Between Richland, Ga., and Abbeville, S. C., on the line employed, there were two relay stations: one at Americus, Ga., and the other at Atlanta, Ga. The message was properly transmitted from. Richland to Americus; but as the Abbeville office is opened each day at 8 o’clock A. M., no explanation was given why the message did not reach Abbeville until 9.30 A. M., except the closing of the Abbeville office at 8.301 on April 2d. In the meantime, plaintiff’s wife and child left Abbe-ville for Lumpkins on the 3.15 A. M. train, April 3d, reaching Lumpkins that afternoon, where they were quarantined on account of smallpox, and kept there several weeks at her brother’s home. Finding that he could not do so without charge, plaintiff, after receiving the message, made no attempt to use the telegraph lines so as to stop his wife and child before they reached Lumpkins.
The complaint alleges that, owing to the failure of the defendant to promptly deliver said telegram', plaintiff’s wife and baby went to Lumpkins, Ga., were quarantined on account of said smallpox, were kept there for four or five weeks, were constantly exposed to the danger of smallpox, to his great mental anguish and distress. It is manifest that the failure to deliver the message at an earlier moment after office hours on the morning of April 3d than the time it was delivered, whether at 9.30 or 10.20, could not have been the proximate cause of his mental suffering, as his. wife and child were already on their way to Lumpkins, and he made no effort to stop' them, so that what happened was the result of their voluntary visit to Lumpkins. So the delay, if any, in delivering the message after it reached the Abbeville office may be eliminated from' the case, as in no' sense was it *528 the cause of plaintiff’s, alleged injury. Then there was no. evidence of negligence in not delivering- the message on the night of April 2d, before plaintiff’s wife took the train. As the message, according- to the testimony, was not received by defendant at the Richland office until after the Abbeville office had closed, and there was no. evidence that the closing of the office at such hour was. unreasonable, it was not possible to infer negligence on the part of the defendant, unless it took the message on a contract to deliver in time to prevent plaintiff’s wife and child from leaving Abbeville that night; but, although plaintiff alleged such a contract, there was not a particle of testimony to- show such fact.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is. reversed, and the case remanded for a new' trial.
Reference
- Cited By
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- Syllabus
- 1. Evidence — Witness—Contradiction.—Operator of telegraph company may be contradicted as to statement as to the delay of a message, and the cause thereof, and it is neither immaterial nor hearsay. 2. Ibid. — Admission of question seeking statement of telegraph operator over wire after delivery of message to witness of the time telegram was received at particular point, witness not remembering the conversation, is harmless error. 3. Ibid. — Quarantine—When the question is as to the existence of a quarantine then actually enforced and not the authority therefor, a witness may state the fact. 4. Negligence — Burden oe Prooe — Pleadings—Denial.—Under a general denial defendant may show that inj ury was caused alone by negligence of plaintiff, such defense is not an affirmative one, to be supported by the preponderance of the evidence, but burden remains with plaintiff to establish his case by preponderance of evidence. 5. New Trial granted because there was no evidence to show that any negligence of defendant was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s mental anguish.