Appellee instituted this suit in the District Court of Dallam County to recover damages for the negligent failure to seasonably deliver the following telegram: "12/2/1906. To Claude Hudson, Dalhart, Texas. Grandpa died yesterday; come at once, Dublin; heart failure. R. H. Etheridge, Wilson, Texas." The wife of appellee was the daughter of the grandpa named in the message and R. H. Etheridge was a son.
The evidence warrants the conclusion that the deceased, J. H. Etheridge, died about 5 p.m. on the evening of December 1, 1906; that the message given was delivered to appellant's agent for transmission at the town of Dublin, Texas, about 7:30 or 8 o'clock a. m. December 2d; that the telegram was not delivered to appellee, who was well known in the town of Dalhart, until about 6 p. m. on December 2d — too late to enable appellee's wife to leave Dalhart for Dublin on a passenger train scheduled to leave for Fort Worth about 1:30 p. m. Appellee's wife took the earliest train leaving Dalhart thereafter, about 4 o'clock a. m. of December 3d, arriving at Dublin about 2:30 o'clock on the afternoon of the 4th day of December, 1906, from which place she proceeded overland some fifteen miles to Wilson, but too late to attend her father's funeral. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in appellee's favor for the sum of five hundred dollars.
We think the evidence authorized the finding in appellee's favor on the issue of negligence, but error is assigned to the action of the court in overruling objections to the following question and answer of Mrs. Dora Hudson, wife of Claude Hudson, while testifying, viz.: "Q. Making the same kind of connections as you made, if you had gotten off on the evening train would you have gotten there in time to attend your father's funeral? A. Yes." To which question and answer the defendant objected for the reasons, among others, "that the answer of the witness was manifestly her opinion, not based upon any state of facts, and in the very nature of things was but a supposition of hers," etc.
The answer of the witness above quoted is evidently a conclusion, and constitutes substantially the only evidence of a possibility that Mrs. Dora Hudson could have arrived at the place of her father's burial in time had the telegram been delivered, as it ought to have been done, early enough in the forenoon of December 2d to have enabled her to take the southbound train leaving Dalhart about 1:30 p. m. of that day; and the majority have concluded that if the answer was admissible at all, under the circumstances and in the absence of the facts upon which the witness based her conclusion, which they are inclined to doubt, it at least is insufficient to support a verdict in appellee's favor, which is made the basis of a subsequent assignment.
Mrs. Hudson, after stating that she took the train at Dalhart about 4 a. m., December 3d, testified that: "I went as straight from Dalhart to Dublin as I could go, and went over the Ft. Worth Denver Railroad from Dalhart to Ft. Worth and over the Santa Fe and Houston Texas Central from Ft. Worth to Dublin. . . . When I reached Dublin on the evening of December 4th, at about 2:30 o'clock, *Page 240 I got a buggy and team and went out to my brother R. H. Etheridge's, and got there about six o'clock in the evening. My father was buried at Carrolton, about four or five miles away from where my brother lived at Wilson; I went to his grave after I got to my brother's."
R. H. Etheridge, after stating that his father had died on the evening of December 1st, and that he had prepared the telegram in question for transmission, testified that: "J. H. Etheridge was buried at Carrolton, Hamilton County, Texas, on the evening of the third day of December, 1906. The burial was deferred from the second to the third day of the month awaiting the arrival of Mrs. Dora Hudson, wife of Claude Hudson and daughter of said J. H. Etheridge. . . . Mrs. Dora Hudson, in response to the telegram, arrived at Dublin over the Texas Central about 1 o'clock, and arrived at my house late in the evening of the same day, which was on the fourth of December, 1906, and the day after the funeral of said J. H. Etheridge." On cross-examination he stated that his father was in his seventieth year and had been ill for about two years; that he died very suddenly, his disease being, as diagnosed by the attending physician, "dropsy of the heart," and further testified: "I can not state of my own knowledge the time of the arrival of Dora Hudson at Dublin, and can only say from her statement to me about the matter. I was not at Dublin to meet her, but had parties there to meet her until Sunday night. . . . I did not receive a message from Claude Hudson at any time concerning the death of my father. We waited to bury my father as long as the circumstances would permit, and not having heard from my sister, did not know that she was coming at all."
No witness testified to the time of the usual arrival at Fort Worth, Texas, of the Fort Worth Denver passenger train which daily left Dalhart at 1:30 p. m., nor did any witness testify to the time of arrival or departure of trains at Fort Worth for Dublin, or that continuous passage by train from Dalhart to Dublin was possible. In the absence of such facts we do not see how it can be said, save from the mere conclusion of the witness, that she could have arrived in Dublin in time to have attended her father's funeral. If her answer be accepted as a statement of a fact and not a conclusion, it is predicated upon the assumption that she would have made the same kind of connections she did after leaving Dalhart. As we have seen, she testified that she "went as straight from Dalhart to Dublin" as she could go, and was actually occupied in making the trip some thirty-six hours. As we have also seen, the uncontradicted testimony of R. H. Etheridge was that the burial was delayed "as long as the circumstances would permit," and that it occurred some twenty-six hours after 1:30 p. m. of December 2d — the earliest time appellee's wife in any event could have left Dalhart, and some ten hours less than was actually consumed by Mrs. Hudson in her trip. A necessary element in appellee's right of recovery required that he establish his allegation that appellant's negligence was the proximate cause of the injury for which he sought to recover — that is, that had there been no negligence as alleged in the transmission of the telegram appellee's wife would have been able to attend her father's funeral. The burden was upon appellee to so establish, and the majority think that the least that can be said of the *Page 241 evidence we have given is that it is altogether too inconclusive to overcome the burden and support the verdict.
The judgment will accordingly be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.