Howard v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

Opinion of tiib court by

JUDGE SETTLE

Affirming.

This case is before ns the second time. Tt was reversed upon the'fqrmer appeal because of error upon the part of flie lower court in dismissing Ihe action as a result of appellee’s refusal to make his petition more specific. See Howard v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 76 S. W., 387, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 828. Upon the trial that followed the return of the case 1o the lower court, that court at the conclusion of appellants testimony gave the jury a peremptory instruction to find for the appellee, and they returned'a verdict as .instructed. We are asked by appellant to review the rulings of the lower court as to the giving of the peremptory instruction, and in refusing him a new trial.

*629The appellant brought the action to recover damages of the appellee for mental suffering caused him by the alleged negligent failure of its agents to transmit and deliver within a reasonable time the following telegraphic message: “To John Howard, Pineville, Ivy.: Lark shot dangerously bad. Come at once. L. Jackson.” The appellant, lives at Pineville, this State, and the “Lark” referred to in the telegram was his son, Larkin Howard, who was shot at Hurley, W. Ya., on the afternoon of October -1, 1902. The message was telephoned from that place, a distance of twelve miles, to Devon, W. Ya., where it was received by appellee’s agent in charge of its telegraph office at that place about 5 o’clock p. ,m., October 4th, and was by him later forwarded to appellee’s office at Pineville, Ky., where it was received at 11:45 p. m. of the same day, but, was not delivered to appellant until 8:05 a. m., Sunday, October 5th. It was averred in the petition that by reason of the negligence of appellee’s Devon agent in delaying the sending of the message, and' that of its Pineville agent in delivering it, appellant was prevented from reaching his son’s bedside before his death, which occurred at 1:30 a. m., October 6, 1902.

It appears from the evidence that appellee was about seven hours in transmitting the message from Devon to Pineville, and that about sixteen hours intervened between the time of its receiving the message at Devon and its delivery to appellant. This delay seems to us unreasonable and inexcusable. But conceding the negligence of appellee on this point, if, as a matter of fact, the message had been transmitted and delivered in reasonable time, and it was nevertheless out of appellant’s power to have reached his son’s bedside before his death, he was not entitled to recover; and it was because the lower court was of opinion that there was no evidence conducing to prove that appellant, if the message had been *630promptly transmitted and delivered ,could, in the usual course of travel, have reached his son before his. death, that the peremptory instruction was given the jury to find for appellee.

It was held by the court of appeals of Texas in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hendricks, 63 S. W., 341, that where a message was sent to a father, informing him of the illness of his son, and he could not have reached the son before he died if the message had been promptly delivered, a delay in delivering the message would not warrant a recovery of damages for the failure to reach the son before his death. This doctrine was recognized by this court in Western Union 'Telegraph Oo. v. Parsons, 72 R. W., 800, though it could not be applied to the facts of that case.

It is conceded that appellant’s son died at the house of Lee Jackson, in Hurley, AY. Va., at 1:30 o’clock a. m., October 6, 1902. The evidence introduced as to how .and when appellant might have reached his son consisted mainly of his own testimony, according io which there were two routes from Pineville — one over the Louisville & Nashville Railroad to Winchester; thence over the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway to Ashland; thence over an electric line to Kenova, W. Va.; thence over the Norfolk & Western Railroad to Devon, from which point a dummy line runs a distance of twelve miles to Hurley. The other route is by the Louisville. & Nashville Railroad from Pineville io Norton, Va.; thence to Bluefield; thence over the Norfolk & AArestern Railroad io Devon. It' was stated by appellant that if the message announcing the wounding of his son had been promptly transmitted and delivered to him on the evening of October 4, 1902, he could have taken a train by way of AAUnchester that left Pineville at 10 p. m. the same day, or gone by way of Norton by taking a train that left Pineville at 7:50 a. m., October oth, upon *631either of which he thought he could have reached Hurley before his son’s death. All that appellant testified as to the Winchester route was mere hearsay, for he admitted that he had never been over that route, but said that,- had connection been made with the different railroads indicated, at Winchester and Ashland, by this route the train would not have arrived at Kenova at 4 p. m. Sunday, October oth, which place was still 100 miles from Devon; and he was unable to say whether a train ran from Kenova to Devon on Sunday, or, if so, when it left Kenova or arrived at Devon. No timetables were introduced by appellant to show the time of the running of the trains on either route, nor did he introduce any of the employes of any of the railroads to prove these facts. We do not think there was any competent testimony conducing to prove that appellant, by the Winchester or ■Kenova route, could have reached his son before the latter’s death. Besides, it is apparent that, for some cause satisfactory to himself, he was unwilling to take the Winchester route, though he could have done so on Sunday, October 5tb, at 10 p. m., instead of doing which he went Sunday afternoon as far as Middlesboro to obtain a pass over the Norton route, which he secured, and on the morning of the 6th (Monday) started from there by way of Norton to go to his son, but he got no further than Norton as he there received a telegram informing him of his son’s death, whereupon he at once returned to Pineville.

Appellant further testified that if the message from Jackson, announcing the condition of his son had been promptly delivered, he believed he could have taken the Louisville & Nashville train at 7:50 a. m. on Sunday, October 5th, and by the Norton route have reached his son in time to see him alive. This conclusion was not. based upon his knowledge of the running of the trains on that route as of the date of his son’s death, but from knowledge derived by going over that *632route iu Doc-ember, 1902, two months afterwards. He did not, however, testify that the time schedule was then as it was at-the lime of his son’s death. All that he know was that if the trains on the Norton and Bluefield route ran on October 5, 1902, as they did in December following, by taking the 7:50 train on the morning of Sunday, October 5th, he could, if close connection had boon made at Norton and Blue-field, have reached Devon at 12:13 Sunday night,, and from that place he could have gone upon another line of railroad in an hour’s time to Hurley, which would have enabled him to reach the latter place at 1:13, just seventeen minutes before his son’s death. It does not appear from appellant’s testimony, or from that of any other witness, how far Lee Jackson, at whose house the son died, lived from the depot at Hurley; whether he was a resident of the town, or lived some distance in the country; consequently the evidence does not show whether appellant, if he had arrived at Hurley at 1:13, could have gotien to his son in the seventeen minutes of time intervening between the arrival of the train and his death. The burden was upon appellant to prove not only that appellee was guilty of negligence in transmitting or delivering the telegram, hut, in addition, that such negligence was the proximate cause of his failure to reach the bedside of his son before the latter’s death. We are of opinion that the lower court wa^ authorized to conclude that there was no evidence conducing to prove that appellant: could .have reached his son before his death if the telegram had been promptly delivered. Consequently there was no error in the ■giving of the peremptory instruction.

It is contended by counsel for appellee that the peremptory instruction was also authorized upon the ground that a contract for- the transmission of an interstate telegram is governed by the law of the State where it is made, and that the *633telegram in this case was sent from West Virginia under a contract made in that State, which was in part performed in that State, and under the laws of that State a recovery of damages for mental suffering unaccompanied by physical injury is not allowed. This defense was specifically pleaded in the third paragraph of the answer, to which a demurrer was sustained by the lower court. In some of the States the courts have held as contended by appellee, but the weight of authority supports the contrary- view. “Where contracts are made in one place, to be performed at another, they are to be governed by the law of the place of performance, as to validity, nature, obligation, and interpretation. But the ¡remedy upon it will be governed by the law of the State in which the remedy is sought. . . . Where a contract is •made in one State, and intended to have effect in another, it must conform to the laws of the latter State.” Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 3, p. 561; Goddin v. Shipley, 7 B. Mon., 575; Tyler v. Trabue, 8 B. Mon., 306; Stevens v. Gregg, 89 Ky., 461, 11 R., 686, 12 S. W., 775; Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 90 Ky., 268, 12 R., 265, 13 S. W., 880. In Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 27, p. 1079 (2d Ed.), we find the. following under the head off ‘Conflict of Laws:” “The fact that damages for mental anguish alone are not recoverable under the laws of the State from which the message was sent will not preclude a recovery of such damages in the State to which the message was directed, where the •laws of the latter State permit such recovery. Likewise a recovery for such damages may be had in the State whence the message was sent, although they may not be recoverable under the laws.of the State where the message was to be delivered. But when the law of the place whence the message was sent and that of the place of delivery both refuse to recognize such damages, they can not be recovered, although the action may have been brought in a jurisdiction *634wind) recognizes the right to recover them.” In Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Eubank & Russell, 100 Ky., 591, 18 R., 995, 38 S. W., 1068, 30 L. R. A., 711, 66 Am. St. Rep., 361, it was said by this court: “The general rule is that the law of the place where the contract is to be performed governs, subject, of course, to the rule that a contract which is void by the law of the place where made is void everywhere.” The most recent decisions of this court upon the doctrine in question are to be found in C., C. & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Druien, 118 Ky., 237, 80 S. W., 778, 66 L. R. A., 275, 26 Ky. Law Rep., 103, and Adams Express Co. v. Walker, 119 Ky., —, 83 S. W., 106, 26 Ky. Law Rep., 1025. In the former case it was held that where the contract is performed in the State where it is made, the law of that State governs in so far as it is to be performed outside of this State, but the law of - this State governs in so far as it is to be performed in this State. In the latter case it was held that an interstate contract of carriage to be partially performed in Kentucky, and partially performed in the State where made, is governed by the law of the State where made ■and partially performed, to the extent of its performance outside of this State, and governed by the laws of Kentucky so far as its performance in the latter State is concerned. If the negligence or breach occur wholly in the State where the contract is made and partially performed, it is governed by the laws of that State, but, if the negligence or non-performance occur in Kentucky, it is governed by the laws of this State. We see no reason why the doctrine announced in the several cases supra should not apply to the1 case at bar. The contract, though made in West Virginia, was to be consummated in Kentucky, and' the negligence complained of occurred mainly in the latter State. We are therefore of opinion that the demurrer to the third paragraph of appellee’s answer was properly sustained.

*635For reasons herein indicated, the judgment is affirmed.

Judge Nunn dissents.