The appellee sued the appellant in the county court of Red River county for $1,000 as damages for mental anguish suffered by his wife on account of a delay in the transmission and payment of a telegraph money order for $150 sent by him from Clarksville, Tex., to his wife at Eddy, Tex. Appellant answered by a general demurrer, a general denial, and a special plea setting up the terms and conditions of a written contract for the transmission of the money order. To this the appellee replied by a supplemental petition demurring to the answer and alleging other facts not necessary to be here considered. The appellant's demurrer was overruled, and in a trial before a Jury judgment was rendered in favor of the appellee for the sum of $300. After the rendition of the judgment appellant requested the court to file his findings of fact and conclusions of law. A motion to that effect was made and granted. The case, however, is before us without either a statement of facts or the conclusions of fact and law requested.
It is insisted by the appellant that its general demurrer to the plaintiff's original petition should have been sustained. The following excerpt from its brief contains the substance of the material portions of the petition:
"(1) On the 12th day of July, 1916, plaintiff's mother-in-law suddenly sickened and died near Eddy, Tex., several hundred miles from Clarksville, Tex., where plaintiff and his wife resided. Plaintiff's wife reached her mother's bedside shortly before her death, and upon her death the plaintiff's wife desired to immediately return to Clarksville and bring the remains with her for burial. She was practically among strangers, was unacquainted in the town of Eddy, the nearest railroad station, and had with her only a small sum of money, insufficient to defray the expense necessary to return home with the body of her mother. She therefore, soon after the death, early on July 13th, called her husband at Clarksville over the long-distance telephone and requested him to send her money, which he assured her he would do by telegraph to her at Eddy. At about 9 a. m. that morning, the 13th, the plaintiff went to defendant's telegraph office in Clarksville, and informed defendant's agent in charge of his desire to immediately transmit to his wife by telegraph $150 to Eddy, Tex., and of his desire to have the money paid to his wife immediately, and informed such agent of the death of his wife's mother, of his wife's consequent distress, of the present and pressing need of his wife for money, of the purposes for which it was necessary for her to immediately have such money, and, on being assured by the agent that he could transmit it in a few minutes, the plaintiff paid to and deposited with said agent the sum of $150 in money to be immediately transmitted and paid, without identification, to his wife at Eddy, and paid the charges demanded, and also paid for and sent a telegram to his wife at Eddy informing her of his action, which message he ordered `repeated,' and paid the extra charge therefor.
"The petition then charges gross negligence of defendant in delaying a `long and unreasonable time' the transmission of said money and its payment to his wife, causing her `to suffer great mental anguish to her damage,' etc.
"(3) That the telegram he sent to his wife was promptly transmitted, and she received the same about 9:30 a. m. of July 13th, and was assured thereby that on reaching Eddy the defendant would pay her the $150. She ascertained that she could leave Eddy with the body about 4 o'clock p. m. Her mother died in the country about eight miles from Eddy, and on said 13th of July, 1916, at about noon, plaintiff's wife, with the remains of her mother, left the point in the country where her mother died and went to Eddy, reaching there about 2 o'clock p. m., about two hours before the arrival of the train on which she expected to leave. She was a stranger in Eddy and had no one on whom she could rely for, or from whom she could obtain, financial assistance, and on reaching Eddy she had only a small sum of money, an amount insufficient to pay some small bills necessary to be immediately paid and to pay her own railroad fare and the expense of transporting her mother's remains to Clarksville. That on reaching Eddy, at about 2 o'clock, she called on defendant's agent at Eddy for the money, and was `gruffly and unfeelingly' informed by him that he had no money for her, on account of which she was terribly `shocked, grieved, perplexed, abashed, and humiliated,' and was caused to suffer intense anxiety and mental distress; that she repeatedly and for nearly two hours, and until nearly time for the train to arrive, continued to suffer such anxiety and mental distress up until about 4 o'clock *Page 973 p. m., and until just a few minutes before the arrival of the train defendant's agent insisted there was no money for her and refused to pay her any money. Finally, with the small sum of money she had remaining she purchased transportation for herself and her mother's remains to Bells, Tex., where she expected to meet the plaintiff, and after doing so had in her possession only a few cents. Just a few minutes, however, before the arrival of said train the defendant's agent said to her, `Here is a message from your husband now,' and handed her a paper and told her to go to the bank, which she did, and the bank paid her $150 and she hurried back and took the train."
According to the above averments, the contract of the telegraph company was not to transmit and deliver a message to Mrs. Deaver, but to pay over to her $150. While the company does not in such cases send the money deposited, it receives at one agency and pays out at another. The transaction, however, is so analogous to an undertaking to transmit and deliver money that the liability of the telegraph company will be governed by practically the same rules of law. The message contemplated in this instance was merely one of instruction to the disbursing agent at Eddy. The sending of the message was important only as a means of securing a delivery of the money when demanded by Mrs. Deaver. The appellant bound itself to pay over to Mrs. Deaver an amount of money equal to that deposited at Clarksville by her husband, and in time to enable her to use it in defraying her expenses home on the following day. While the petition alleges a delay in performing that obligation, it admits that this was done. If the appellee is entitled to any damages, it is because the money was not sooner delivered. The only injury claimed as the result of the delay is mental anguish suffered by Mrs. Deaver at the prospect of being left in an embarrassing situation. The object of the appellant was to supply her with funds, and not to quiet her mental anxiety. It thus appears that the anguish she suffered was really unnecessary and resulted from nervous and disquieting apprehensions of a situation that did not occur.
The appellee refers to a number of cases where our courts have permitted a recovery for mental anguish resulting from the failure of telegraph companies to promptly transmit and deliver money order message. We have examined all of those cases, and find that in every instance the purpose for which the money was sent was defeated in whole or in part by the delay or nondelivery of the message. It appears from the averments of this petition that Mrs. Deaver arrived at Eddy at about 2 o'clock p. m., and expected to leave at 4 p. m.; so that not more than two hours elapsed between the time she first called for the money and its delivery. It is for the mental annoyance she suffered during that two hours that she recovered a judgment. We are of the opinion that the facts alleged are not sufficient, and that the general demurrer of the appellant should have been sustained. As stated, it also appears that the court failed, without any sufficient reason appearing in the record, to file his findings of fact and conclusions of law as requested by the appellant. We think for that reason, if for no other, the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded; and it is accordingly so ordered.