November 16, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff, Mrs. Mary C. Martin, recovered a verdict of five hundred dollars for mental anguish due to the defendant's delay in delivering the following telegram:
"Nashville, Tenn., 17.
"Mrs. J. Hamilton Martin, Greenville, S.C.:
"Your husband died in Nashville City Hospital tonight. Wire me what to do with the body.
"C.H. Goodlet."
These were the uncontested facts appearing from the evidence:
The message was sent from Nashville, Tenn., on 17th October, 1905, and not delivered until called for at the Greenville office on 25th October. In consequence of this delay, Mrs. Martin was not apprised of her husband's death until the receipt of a letter on 25th October. In the meantime the authorities of the hospital where Martin died, *Page 434 having received no instructions from relatives as to the disposition of his body, turned it over to the State Anatomical Board, as required by the laws of Tennessee. The plaintiff, immediately on receiving information of her husband's death, had the body sent to Greenville, but it was found on arrival to be in such a ghastly condition that she was denied the privilege of seeing it. The plaintiff's residence was not in the city of Greenville, but in Monoghan, a suburb about three miles from the defendant's office. The defendant's agent made considerable inquiry in the effort to find Mrs. Martin and deliver the telegram, and being unsuccessful, by service messages, attempted to get a more definite address from the sender. The defendant's free delivery limit was one mile in every direction from the county courthouse, but the defendant often delivered messages in the suburb of Monoghan, where plaintiff lived. The defendant's agent had in the office a directory which gave the name and street address of Mrs. Martin and her husband; the name of the husband in the directory being given as Jacob H. Martin and the wife's as Mary C. Martin. The telegram was addressed to Mrs. J. Hamilton Martin. Defendant's manager, Brenicke, was uncertain whether he looked in the directory to find the name and place of residence; he thought one of the clerks had examined the directory, but was not sure.
A motion for nonsuit was granted as to the cause of action, based on wilfulness, but refused as to the issue of negligence.
Exceptions one, two, three and four raise the point that evidence should not have been admitted of the condition of the body, as the defendant had no notice that nondelivery of the telegram would result in its being turned over to an anatomical board at Nashville, The complaint alleged the body was so treated because of a failure to deliver the telegram, and no motion was made to strike out the allegation. It was, therefore, not reversible *Page 435 error to admit the testimony. Milhous v. Ry. Co., 72 S.C. 442,52 S.E., 41; Mauldin v. Ry. Co., 73 S.C. 9,52 S.E., 677; Harbert v. Ry. Co., 78 S.C. 551, 59 S.E., 641. If the testimony that many bodies were turned over to the anatomical board had any effect on the issue, it was favorable to the defendant, because it showed there was no peculiar indignity offered to the body of Martin, but only a disposition of it in accordance with a general practice required by the statute of Tennessee.
There was no error in excluding evidence of the defendant's custom or practice when it ascertained that an addressee lived outside of the free delivery limits, on the ground that the custom cannot avail unless it is with the knowledge of the parties to be affected. The rule is that such knowledge must be shown either by evidence of personal knowledge or by evidence that the custom is so notorious, general and well-established that knowledge of it will be presumed. Heyward v. Searson, 1 Speer, 249, 29 Am. Eng. Enc., 391.
The statement of the plaintiff that her husband was well known in the city of Greenville, and sold medicines to druggists there, was not objectionable as an expression of opinion, for the testimony was as to facts, not opinions.
The defendant introduced a letter from the hospital superintendent stating that Martin had died from the excessive use of liquor and morphine. This statement, if true, tended to show the wife's respect for her husband, and her grief at being deprived of the privilege of treating his body with tender consideration was less than she alleged it to be; and, therefore, her testimony in reply that he was not addicted to the use of whiskey and morphine was competent.
It is next contended the evidence of the mail carrier, Huff, that he knew where plaintiff lived, should have been excluded. The defendant offered evidence of inquiries *Page 436 made for plaintiff's address at the postoffice. This evidence of the mail carrier was competent as tending to show that, if still greater diligence had been used by inquiring of him, the address would have been discovered. But the admission or rejection of all testimony of this kind is quite immaterial, because if it be once conceded that, although the plaintiff lived without the free delivery limits of the defendant company, yet the issue of diligence in ascertaining her address is involved, then it will hardly be contended it was not negligence to fail to discover the plaintiff's address in the city directory, where it was plainly set down. Indeed the evidence was by no means clear that the directory on which the manager usually depended was referred to all.
This brings up the main question of the appeal, made by the exceptions to the charge and to the refusal to grant a nonsuit as to the cause of action for negligence, namely, whether the defendant was required to exercise any care at all to ascertain the residence or place of business of an addressee of a telegram, when such residence or place of business is without its free delivery limits, but within a reasonable distance beyond the limits. The defendant had printed on the message form used for this telegram the following undertaking on its part: "Messages will be delivered free within the established free delivery limits of the terminal office. For delivery at a greater distance, a special charge will be made to cover the cost of such delivery." The meaning clearly was that if it turned out the addressee lived beyond the free delivery limit and within a reasonable distance, the telegraph company would nevertheless undertake to deliver the message on payment of the extra charge. It has been held that if from lack of knowledge or other cause the company failed to exact in advance the extra charge for delivery outside the free delivery limits, it must, upon ascertaining the fact of residence beyond such limits, give an opportunity to pay the extra charge. Campbell v. Tel. Co., 74 S.C. 300, 54 S.E., 571; *Page 437 Lyles v. Tel. Co., 77 S.E., 174, 57 S.E., 725. By the stipulation above quoted the company contracts not only with reference to the free delivery limits but also with respect to a reasonable distance beyond. The duty to use due diligence to perform its contract with reference to delivery within a reasonable distance beyond free delivery limits is as definite and clear as the duty to use due diligence to perform its contract within the limits. The duty in the latter case is to ascertain the residence or place of business and promptly deliver the telegram; in the former to ascertain the residence or place of business, if within a reasonable distance beyond the limits, and ask for the extra compensation for delivery.
This case illustrates the reasonableness of our construction of the stipulations placed by the defendant in its contract, and the justice of the rule of duty which we think grows out of the contract. The plaintiff lived in the suburb, Monoghan Mills, not only within a reasonable distance beyond the free delivery limits, but where the defendant had often delivered telegrams. Her name as well as her husband's was in the directory of the city of Greenville, and no intelligent person on examining the directory could fail to discover her name and place of residence, except through negligence. The directory seems to have been the first reliance of the defendant's agent for ascertaining the residence or place of addressees of telegrams, and yet the examination of the directory was so carelessly made that this important telegram remained undelivered. There was certainly evidence to go to the jury on the issue of negligence; and the following instruction of the Circuit Judge was a correct statement of the law: "It is, however, the duty of a telegraph company when a telegram is received to exercise reasonable care and diligence to ascertain the residence of the addressee or person to whom it is sent, and if he resides within its free delivery limits, to deliver it free of charge, for that is what it agrees to do; and if such person lives beyond its free delivery limits, the company should either *Page 438 deliver it, if within a reasonable distance from its office and take the risk of being able to collect the extra charge for delivery beyond the limits, or notify the sender of the message by what is called a service message, that the addressee lives beyond its free delivery limits and require either payment or guarantee of payment as it may choose, of the extra cost or expense of delivery beyond such limits."
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.