Poteet v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Poteet v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Opinion of the Court
.The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an appeal from an o-rder of nonsuit in an action to- recover damages for mental anguish *493 of the plaintiff Lottie P’oteet, caused by the alleged tort of the defendant in “wilfully, wantonly, recklessly and negligently” failing to deliver a telegram. The complaint thus sets forth the telegram and Mrs. Poteet’s connection with it: “That on July 17th, 1904, Lottie Poteet, then sojourning in the city of Union, S. C., lost her infant child, and in the first agony of her grief, and desirous of the presence of her husband, the above mentioned R. W.- P'oteet, father of said infant, she, the said Lottie Poteet, procured a friend to authorize the defendant company at its office in Union, S. C., to send a message to her husband, the said R. W. Poteet, a "copy of which is as- follows:
“Union, S. C., July 17.
“Mr. R. W. Poteet, 1910 Assembly St., Columbia, S. C. Come on first train. Your baby is dead. W. R. Sox.”
The mental anguish for which damages are demanded is thus stated: “The plaintiff Lottie P’oteet was: deprived of the assistance and comfort of her husband, and she was in that time of great mental anguish and worry, in a city of strangers, and had to: leave the tender duties of the shipment of the body of her dead infant to stranger’s hands.” The plaintiff R. W. Poteet joins in the action merely as the husband of Lottie Poteet and claims nothing in his own right.
The general distinction between contract and tort in this respect is thus well stated by Mr. Justice Jones., in Hughes v. Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 516, 527: “In actions for damages for 'breach of contract, it is usual ¡to say that compensatory damages may be recovered for such consequences as are within the contemplation of the parties to the contract at the time of contracting, but in an action in tort it is- usual and proper to1 say that 'compensatory damages may be recovered for such consequences as naturally and proximately result from the negligence of performing a duty imposed- by law.” In cases of this character the suit is usually for the tort committed in breach of the -public duty owed to the plaintiff, but the duty -springs out of the contract and depends on. it, for manifestly the defendant owes no public -duty concerning a particular telegram except to those for whom or in whose behalf or interest it has undertaken to transmit it. All others are of the outside public, and damages which they incidentally suffer cannot by any stretch be regarded the natural and proximate result of failure to transmit a particular telegraphic message. The contract fixes, the relation, and he who sues for tort based on contract must show privity with the party to be charged by connecting himself with the *496 contract as a party or a known beneficiary. Hellams v. Tel. C., 70 S. C., 83, 49 S. E., 12; Jones v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 540, 50 S. E., 198; Rogers v. Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 290; Hughes v. Tel. Co., supra. In further support of this view, it may be remarked that as. to the ’subject matter of a telegram it is too well established for discussion, before there can be a recovery the telegraph company must have notice that the particular result alleged as the basis of the claim was to. be apprehended from- delay in transmission. Arial v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 418, 50 S. E., 6; Hays v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 16, 48 S. E., 608; Smith v. Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 116. The same principle makes it necessary toi recovery that there should be notice to' the company of the beneficial interest of the particular person who claims compensation for suffering'.
The provision of the Constitution that telegraph companies shall be common carriers does not affect the principle now under discussion, and cannot avail the plaintiff. Common carriers of freight, it is true, as- a general rule, are liable to the real owner, though such owner may not be party or privy to' the contract of carriage; but from- the nature of the business, telegraph companies as common- carriers of messages stand on a different footing' from common carriers of goods. The damage in one case is for the less of a tangible article of property having definite market -value, in the other it is for failure to1 transmit the expression of an idea, intangible and presumably without value except as- related to- particular persons. Ordinarily the loss of freight can bring damage only to- the owner; failure to- deliver a telegram may bring anguish to scores of persons of whom the telegraph company has never heard. Before delivery to- the company a message has- n-0‘ value, and the company in accepting it undertakes for a consideration to' make it of value by transmitting- it; but its undertaking and obligation to give it value by transmission are only to; those for whose benefit it has knowingly undertaken the service, and its legal duty is limited to> such persons. As we have seen, the company *497 had no notice of Mrs. Poteet’s interest in this telegram and assumed no duty to her, and is, therefore, not liable to her.
The plaintiff, however, insists that the defendant is liable for negligence in failing to notify Sox, the sender, of the non-delivery of the telegram. Even if we go1 so far as to *498 assume that -the messenger should have returned the mes- ' sage to the office or that he did so! return it before business was stopped for Sunday, and that the defendant owed a duty to> give the notice which it neglected, this negligence could not support the action, for the suffering of which the plaintiff complains arose from her husband’s failure to- receive notice in time to come to her in her distress on Sunday, and there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that notice of the nondelivery of the message would have enabled her or any one in her behalf -to give him. notice of her trouble in time for him to come by the use of other means of communication. On the contrary, it seems clear that even if notice of nondelivery had been promptly given, and another telegram1 sent ' to Poteet, On reaching Columbia it would- have been in the same condition as the first, for P-oteet did not' g-et home so-‘.that he could receive it there until after the Sunday closing of the Columbia office.
•It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Telegeaph Companies. — A message addressed to P., “Come at once. Your baby is dead,” signed S., does not give notice to the company that the wife of P. has any beneficial interest in the message. That the carrier’s agent after sending this message had a conversation with S. when sending another message to P., from which he learned that the wife of P. had an interest in the message, does not give it such notice at time of transmitting first message. 3. Ibid. — Tort—Mental Anguish. — A telegraph company is not liable in tort to every one suffering by failure to deliver a message, but only to those for whom or in whose behalf or interest it has undertaken to transmit it. 3. Ibid. — Mental Anguish. — That a telegram was promptly carried to home of addressee on Sunday, who was away; that messenger left no notice, went out of city after returning message to office; that addressee was notified of attempt to deliver by his neighbors and immediately sought the messenger, and upon going to home of superintendent, he went with him to office and delivered the message after office hours; that no notice was given to sender of failure to deliver, there being no evidence that sender could have communicated with addressee in time in any other ways; do not show that suffering caused to wife' by not having her husband with her in strange city at time of preparation of body of their dead infant for carriage home was caused by wanton and wilful failure of carrier to deliver message.