The suggestion that the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained because of its failure to aver a definite loss in estate to the plaintiff is based upon the presence in the last clause of the complaint of the allegation that “the amount paid plaintiff for the transmission of said message, as aforesaid, to wit, twenty-five cents, was lost to the plaintiff.” ' It is urged that this averment shows that the plaintiff could not have suffered a loss by the payment of an amount to himself. If the complaint is read as a whole, it cannot fairly be given the meaning sought to be imputed to it. The amount mentioned in the above-quoted clause as having been lost to the plaintiff is identified as the amount paid “as aforesaid.” The only payment previously mentioned in the complaint is of the “hire and reward,” plainly stated to have been paid by the plaintiff. A mere clerical mistake in one part of a pleading, such as the use of one word for another, where, on reading it as an entirety, there is and can be no doubt as to what word the pleader intended to use, will not be allowed to fix upon the pleading a meaning plainly not intended.—4 Ency. of PI. & Pr. 746, 747; 31 Cyc. 77. A mere reference to the former part of the complaint is enough to show that it was by a clerical mistake that the word “plaintiff,” where it first appears in the above-quoted clause, was inserted when the word “defendant” was intended. The complaint, read as a whole, clearly avers that the amount named was paid by and lost to the plaintiff. The demurrer was properly overruled.
*239D. A. Bobbins, the sender of tbe message, who is a brother of the plaintiff, testified, without objection, that his mother was dead; that he and the plaintiff were reared by their grandmother, whose death was announced in the telegram; the witness stating that he and the plaintiff called her “mother.” In this connection, the witness -was asked how old he was when his mother died. The defendant’s objection to the question having been overruled, the witness answered that he was nine years old. The defendant excepted to the action of the court in overruling its motion to exclude the answer to the question. It may be conceded that the matter deposed to was irrelevant and immaterial. But it is not perceived how its admission in evidence could have prejudiced the defendant. The evidence, admitted without objection, showed that the plaintiff and the sender of the message were brothers; that their mother died when the plaintiff was about six years old; and that the two brothers were brought up by their grandmother. With these facts in evidence without objection, it is inconceivable that the defendant could have suffered any injury by the admission of'proof that the plaintiff’s brother was his senior by three years. The fact so allowed to be proved could not have been of benefit to the plaintiff, or have had any unfavorable bearing upon any position sought to be maintained by the defendant in the trial. A judgment is not to be reversed because of the admission of immaterial evidence that could not have harmed the party objecting.—Southern Railway Co. v. Cunningham, 152 Ala. 147, 44 South. 658; Fowler v. State, 155 Ala. 21, 45 South. 913; Snedecor v. Pope, 143 Ala. 275, 39 South. 318.
The counsel for the appellant insist that the general affirmative charge requested by the defendant should have been given, because the proof failed to show that *240D.. A. Robbins, in sending the message, was acting for or as the agent of the plaintiff. This contention is based upon the statement of D. A. Robbins that he sent the message at the request of a brother-in-law of the deceased. That statement was only part of the' evidence on the subject. The same witness had already testified that a few days before the telegram was sent the plaintiff wrote him a letter, telling where he was, and asking that if his grandmother got any worse to let him know; and the plaintiff testified that when he got to Nauvoo he wrote to his brother and told him where he was boarding, and asked his brother to telegraph him if their grandmother got worse. There was evidence to support an inference that D. A. Robbins, in sending the message, was acting in pursuance of a request of.the plaintiff and as his agent, though he was informed of his grandmother’s death by another, and, in sending the telegram, acted also on the latter’s suggestion or request. The fact that another person also asked the sender to send the message would not stand in the way of the conclusion that he acted for the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff in repaying the cost of the message was discharging a debt for an expense incurred at his instance. We understand the ruling in the case of Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Northcutt, 158 Ala. 539, 49 South. 553, 132 Am. St. Rep. 38, upon which the counsel for the appellant rely in this connection, to be merely to the effect that one person, in sending a telegram, is not to be regarded as acting as the agent for another, in the absence of an agreement- or understanding between them to that effect; in other words, that the sender of the telegram is not to be regarded as acting as the agent for another in sending it, merely because such other person undersood that that was the case, if the sender was not a party to such agreement *241or understanding. In the case at bar, there was evidence tending to show that the telegram was- sent in pursuance of an agreement or understanding between the sender and the plaintiff that, in the contingency provided for, the telegram was'to be sent to the latter.
It is argued in behalf of the appellant that the second, third, fourth, and eighth charges refused to it should have been given, because of the alleged absence of any evidence tending to show that the plaintiff could or would have attended the funeral of his grandmother, even if the message had been promptly delivered. It may be admitted that the plaintiff could not sustain the claim that, by the failure to deliver the message with reasonable promptness, he was deprived of the privilege of attending his grandmother’s funeral, in the absence of evidence tending to show that he could and would have availed himself of the opportunity to do so, if he had received the information in due time. There was a ruling in the case of Western Union Telegraph Co. v. McMorris, 158 Ala. 563, 48 South. 349, 132 Am. St. Rep. 46, to the effect that a jury would not be authoifized to find that a failure to deliver a telegram had an alleged result, in the absence of evidence to support such a conclusion ; and in that case the court held that the requisite evidence was lacking.
The question then is, Is there a similar deficiency of evidence in the case at bar?. There was evidence tending to show the following facts: About .three weeks before the death of plaintiff’s grandmother, plaintiff left the place near Littleton, in Jefferson county, where he and his grandmother had lived up to that time. The grandmother had been in poor health for' some time. She had a. cancer, and it was recognized as inevitable that she would die of the disease. The plaintiff located at or near-Nauvoo, in Walker county, and got employ*242ment there. As soon as he did so, he wrote to his brother, who lived near the grandmother, giving information of his location and of the name of the person with whom he was boarding, and asking that a telegram, be sent him if his grandmother got worse — that he be notified if anything went wrong — which letter was received by the brother several days before the grandmother died. The brother sent the telegram from Littleton to the plaintiff at Nauvoo at about 2:30 in the afternoon of the day of the grandmother’s death. Several hours later in the same day the plaintiff was in Nauvoo and, in company with the person in whose care the message was sent who was known to the telegraph operator, visited the depot in which the telegraph office was located; that being an off day in the work in which the plaintiff was employed.' Several days later he made a trip to his old home to see his grandmother, and then for the first time learned of her death and of the sending of the telegram, which he had not received. On his return to Nauvoo, he got the telegram when he called at the office for it.
Judicial notice will be taken of the facts that Nauvoo and Littleton are in adjoining counties; that there is a direct railroad connection between them; and that it is but a short trip from the one place to the other. In the light of the above-mentioned facts, it does not seem that a finding by the jury that the plaintiff would have made the trip before his grandmother’s burial two days later, if he had received notice of her death on the day it occurred, could fairly be said to be unsupported by evidence. It would not be a strained or unwarranted inference that plaintiff’s prearrangement for prompt notice, if his grandmother got worse, or if anything went wrong, was made with the purpose of enabling him, in such event, to return promptly to his old home. Nor could it *243fairly-be regarded as a conclusion, unsupported by evidence, that a person situated as the evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was — a man of mature, years, engaged in presumably gainful employment, and apparently able to take such a trip when he chose to do so,, as he did but a few days later, in the absence of news as to his grandmother’s condition — could have made the necessary arrangements to get back to his former home promptly, upon getting; information that there was occasion for him to do so, though the evidence did not affirmatively show that at the time he would have received the telegram, if it had been seasonably delivered, he had in his pocket, or at ready command, the necessary small amount required to be expended for that purpose. The appellant’s contention in this connection cannot be sustained. Under the evidence in the case, it was a question for the jury whether the loss to the plaintiff of the opportunity of attending his grandmother’s funeral, which would have been afforded him by the timely receipt of the message, and conseqent mental distress, proximately resulted from the failure to malte due delivery of the message.—Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Crumpton, 138 Ala. 632, 36 S. W. 517.
In view of the evidence in the case tending to show that the person in whose care the message was sent, and at whose house the plaintiff was boarding, lived within the free delivery limits at Nauvoo, that he and the location of his residence were generally well known there,, and that the plaintiff could readily have been found at Nauvoo shortly after the message was received there, if any real effort had been made to locate him, it cannot be said that there was not room, for an inference from the evidence that the failure to deliver the message was attributable to gross carelessness on the part of some *244employee of the defendant, or a wanton indifference to the rights of another in a matter which on its face called for prompt service. If so, the court would not have been justified in instructing the jury that no punitive consideration could be allowed by the jury to enter into their assessment of damages, in the event of a finding in favor of the plaintiff.—Western Union Tel. Co. v. Seed, 115 Ala. 670, 22 South. 474; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Crowley, 158 Ala. 583, 48 South. 381; Wilkinson v. Searcy, 76 Ala. 176; Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Nolan, 134 Ala. 329, 32 South. 715. The defendant’s request of charges 5 and 9, which were refused, was in disregard of the phase of the evidence just mentioned. The assignments of error based on that action of the court cannot be sustained.
By written charges, given at the instance of the defendant, the jury were plainly instructed that the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that, by the exercise of reasonable diligence on the part of the defendant’s agents or servants, the message could have been delivered to the plaintiff, within the free delivery limits at Nauvoo, in time to enable him to attend his grandmother’s funeral. Substantially the same proposition was asserted in charge 6, refused to the defendant. It is not perceived how the defendant could have been prejudiced by the refusal to give that charge under tlm circumstances. Besides, that charge was abstract in assuming that there was evidence that the source of information consulted by the defendant’s agent was reputable. There was no evidence on that subject. It is not made to appear that the court was in' error in refusing to give that charge.
It is enough to say, in justification of the action of the court in refusing to give charge 7, requested by the *245■defendant, that it was so framed as to be calculated to mislead the jury to the conclusion that any degree of confusion and uncertainty on their part as to whether the plaintiff, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have been found within the free delivery area in time to enable him to avail himself of the information contained in the message would suffice to require a verdict for the defendant, though the evidence was such as reasonably to satisfy them on that question.
A careful examination of the record has brought the court to the conclusion that it does not disclose error to the prejudice of the appellant.
Affirmed.