Opinion
No. 7604.
June 25, 1918. Rehearing Denied October 10, 1918.
Appeal from District Court, Galveston County; Clay S. Briggs, Judge.
Action by Joseph V. Streeter, a minor, by his next friend, Joseph W. Streeter, against the Western Union Telegraph Company. Judgment, on trial without jury, for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Affirmed.
Hume Hume, of Houston, and Albert T. Benedict, of New York City, for appellant. James B. Charles J. Stubbs, of Galveston, for appellee.
Joseph V. Streeter, a minor over 19 years of age, by his father, Joseph W. Streeter, as next friend, sued the Western Union Telegraph Company for damages for mental suffering alleged to have been caused by its negligent delay in the delivery to him of a telegram from his brother-in-law, Robert Hoke, announcing the death of plaintiff's mother, in these words:
"Madisonville, Texas, Nov. 12:05 A. M. 23.
"Mr. Joe Streeter, 1927 Ave. G. Gal. Texas. Mother dead. Come home at once.
"Robert Hoke. 12:25 A."
"12:25 A" means the message was received at the telegraph company's office in Galveston 25 minutes after midnight of the same night, or 20 minutes after being filed at Madisonville for transmission. The year was 1915. The father and son were then living together in Galveston, and the message was delivered at 6:45 a. m. on the same day, November 23, 1915, over 6 hours after its receipt at the company's Galveston office, to the father, who at once apprised his son of its contents; but it was then too late for them to reach Madisonville in time to be present at the funeral, which the proof showed both of them could and would have done, if they had received the telegram even as late as 5 o'clock that morning. The court, trying the case without a jury, rendered judgment in plaintiff's favor against the telegraph company for $1,000, from which it appeals.
No contention is made, nor could one successfully be, under the facts developed, that the delay in delivering the message after its receipt in Galveston did not constitute negligence upon its part, nor proximately cause the amount of damage recovered for, but the appellant company, from different approaches and through several assignments, insists that there was no evidence showing or bringing home notice to it that the appellee, Joseph V. Streeter, the son, had any interest in the message, or that mental anguish to, or the discharge of any duty toward, him was within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract of transmission was made; that the undisputed evidence showed the contract to have been made for the exclusive benefit and solely in the interest of "Mr. Joe Streeter," the appellee's father; that the message was accepted by it for transmission to him alone, without notice of any interest of his son therein; and that in fact the latter had no such interest, the father being the real and only addressee.
While these views are most persuasively presented, we are unable to accept them, concluding rather that the trial court was right in finding the message to have been intended for the son, and in holding appellant liable in damages to him for its failure to promptly so deliver it. After carefully searching the record, we find nothing in the testimony tending to indicate that the company's agent, who received the message for transmission, either knew or had any reason to think it was not intended for the son. The words "Mother dead" would convey the impression that it was either the mother of the sender or of the receiver, and would be sufficient to put the telegraph company upon inquiry. Surely no reasonable inference would arise that it meant the father's mother, and the mere fact that the boy, 2 months more than 19 years of age, was referred to in the written telegram as "Mr. Streeter," standing alone, would not, in our opinion, justify a different conclusion. As stated, we have found nothing else. Both father and son were named Joe Streeter; the former's full name being Joseph W., and the latter's Joseph V. Both had lived up there until about 1 1/2 months before the date of the telegram, and were known in Madison county as Joe Streeter; the father being generally addressed "Mr. Streeter," and the son as "Joe," while sometimes this was changed to "old Joe" and "young Joe," respectively. The sender, Robert Hoke, son-in-law of old Joe and brother-in-law of young Joe, testified without dispute that he intended the message for the young man. He had written and signed it himself in the same language as delivered upon a piece of ordinary paper, and it got into the hands of Dr. Berry, who took the original to Madisonville and filed it with Mr. Smith, the company's agent there; Dr. Berry's testimony as to what occurred being:
"At the time I delivered the message to Mr. Smith, the telegraph operator, I told him that I had a message from Robert Hoke to be sent to Mr. Streeter at Galveston, announcing the death of Mrs. Streeter, and that it would be a very great accommodation to get it sent that night. When I found the agent, he was in bed at home; that was right at midnight, * * * and it wasn't far from midnight when he sent the message. I think I told him who the message was addressed to. We read it together in the office after we got down there. I think I had read it over when the boys gave it to me, and at least they told me who it was to, and who it was from, and Mr. Smith and I looked it over in the office, and then we sent it over the wire."
It will be noted there is nothing in this statement inconsistent with the theory that the face of the message indicated the son as the addressee. Dr. Berry, who was not acting for the father, as appellant contends, but is, we think, to be regarded as the agent of the sender, Hoke, did not really add a material fact to the terms of the message itself, except that Mrs. Streeter was the one, the mother, who it announced was dead. He did not tell the agent the message was to be sent to Mr. Streeter at Galveston, announcing the death of Mrs. Streeter, his wife, as appellant would now read into the meaning of his testimony. So that, as we view it, the telegraph company thus, through the sender's agent, not only had no extraneous notice that the son was not the intended beneficiary of the contract of transmission, but rather information confirmatory of at least a possible inference from its terms that he was in fact the real party at interest. Telegraph Co. v. Goodson, 202 S.W. 766; Herring v. Telegraph Co., 108 Tex. 77, 185 S.W. 293; Telegraph Co. v. Jones, 81 Tex. 271, 16 S.W. 1006; Telegraph Co. v. Moore, 76 Tex. 66, 12 S.W. 949, 18 Am.St.Rep. 25; Telegraph Co. v. Shaw, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 277, 90 S.W. 58; Telegraph Co. v. Daniels, 152 S.W. 1116. And right here, we think, runs the line of differentiation between the controlling facts of this case and those of the line of cases cited and relied upon by appellant, along them S.W. Tel. Tel. Co. v. Gotcher, 93 Tex. 114, 53 S.W. 686; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Kerr, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 280, 23 S.W. 565; Pacific Express Co. v. Redman, 60 S.W. 677; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Potts, 120 Tenn. 37, 113 S.W. 789, 19 L.R.A. (N. S.) 479, 127 Am.St.Rep. 991. In each of those cases it plainly appeared that the telegraph company neither had knowledge that the person seeking recovery was a beneficiary, nor was apprised of any circumstances charging it with notice of any such fact.
In the case at bar, however, the telegraph company was chargeable with notice upon the face of the message that it was intended for a Mr. Joe Streeter, which description, while in itself fitting either father or son, when considered together with the further words, "Mother dead," was also reasonably sufficient, we think, under the authorities first above cited, to indicate the son as the intended addressee, and that he had a serious interest in its prompt delivery. In such circumstances, the telegraph company was under the duty of exercising ordinary care to make delivery to him, which the undisputed proof shows it did not do. See, also, for statement of the same principle, Herring v. Telegraph Co., 108 Tex. 77, 185 S.W. 293; Telegraph Co. v. Adams, 75 Tex. 531, 12 S.W. 857, 6 L.R.A. 844, 16 Am.St.Rep. 920. Neither do we think the father's having considered the telegram intended for his own information also, or that in fact it may have been, made any difference.
The sixth assignment complains of the admission of Robert Hoke's testimony that he had sent the telegram here involved to the appellee, Joseph V. Streeter, over objection that it was immaterial, irrelevant, hearsay, and not competent to charge appellant with knowledge of any such intent upon Hoke's part; since the trial was before the court without a jury, there being other competent evidence upon which the judgment could be based, even if this testimony was incompetent, it will be presumed the court did not consider it. Skinner v. Sullivan Co., 134 S.W. at page 429.
The conclusions stated require the overruling of all assignments and an affirmance of the trial court's judgment, which order has been entered.
Affirmed.