Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Carter
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Carter
Opinion of the Court
This suit was brought by appel-lee, plaintiff below, against the Western Union Telegraph Company and the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, to recover damages for mental anguish suffered on account of their failure to deliver to him a telegram announcing the death of his father and stating the time of burial whereby he was prevented from attending the funeral. Recovery was sought against the Telegraph Company chiefly on the alleged ground that it had contracted to locaté and deliver said message to him, appellee. The Telegraph Company, after a plea of contributory negligence, mainly relied upon the theory that it had exempted itself from liability for default occurring on its connecting line by a stipulation indorsed on said message as follows: “This company is hereby made the agent of the sender, without liability, to forward any message over the lines of any other company, when necessary to reach its destination.” There was a jury trial, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee against the Telegraph Company, but in favor of the Telephone Company, from which appellant alone has appealed.
The facts show that on the morning of the 20th of June, 1910, the father of appel-lee died at his home near Madisonville, and that his stepmother caused to be filed with appellant at its office in Madisonville about 3 o’clock on said day the following telegram for transmission: “John Carter, Buckholts, Texas. Your father died this morning. Will be buried tomorrow. Answer.” It was shown that appellant’s agent, when said telegram was tendered it, informed Mr. Heaton, the agent of the sender, that it had no office at Buckholts, but that Buckholts was on a telephone line, and that it might become necessary, if appellee lived in the country, to pay a messenger fee to said Phone Company to deliver same; whereupon the agent of appellant was referred to a merchant, a friend of Mrs. Carter’s, who guaranteed the payment of any such extra messenger fee. It appears that appellee lived in the country some eight miles from Buckholts, which was his post office address; that the message was promptly sent and received at Cameron, the end of appellant’s line, where it was without delay delivered to the Telephone Company; but that said last-named company failed to deliver same to appellee. If this message had been delivered by the latter company during said day, he could have reached Madisonville in time to have attended the funeral of his father.
It is said in Jones on Telegraph & Telephone Companies, at section 446, that “by the analogy to the principle governing the liability of common carriers of goods, the general rule is that a telegraph company is not bound by law to accept and transmit messages beyond the terminus of its own line. In the absence of any agreement, either expressly or clearly implied, for transmission beyond its own line, the common-law duty of an independent company is performed when it safely transmits the message over its own line and delivers it promptly and correctly to the connecting line, and it is not therefore liable for any errors or delays occurring on the other line. If, in such case, the message is to be delivered by the initial line to a connecting line for further transmission, the former is considered as a forwarding agent and is not liable for the defaults of the subsequent line or lines.” “Nor is its status changed merely by reason of the fact that, when a message is to be sent over a connecting line, the initial company receives from the sender all charges for transmitting the message for the entire route.” Same author, § 448.
Reversed and rendered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Carter.
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- Published