Cumberland Telg. &Telp. Co. v. Quigley

*791Opinion op the Court by

Judge Lassing —

Affirming.

Between 8 and 9 o’clock on the morning of Friday, July 12, 1907, Richard Quigley deposited with the agent of the appellant company, the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company, at Glasgow, Ky., $25, to be transmitted and delivered to his daughter, Eddie Curd, in Louisville, Ky., for the purpose of having the body of the infant child of appellee, who-had died at the home of Eddie Curd, her sister, in Louisville, Ky., prepared for burial, and shipped to their home in Barren county. All of the necessary charges were paid by the appellee, including the messenger fee for notifying Eddie Curd that the money had been telegraphed, and for her to call at the office of the appellant company in Louisville and get it. The money was not delivered to Eddie Curd until about noon on Saturday, and because of its delay in transmission, appellee alleged that he was caused to lose time and expend money, and suffer great mental pain and anguish and humiliation, and he sued to recover of appellant damages therefor. This litigation resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee for $200, and from the judgment predicated on that verdict this appeal is prosecuted.

The facts, as alleged in the pleadings, and as gathered from the proof, are as follows: Appellee’s daughter, a girl some 11 or 12 years old, while on a visit with her mother to her married sister, Eddie Curd, who lived in the city of Louisville, was taken sick and died. This was on Thursday, July 11th, about noon. Mrs. Curd telegraphed her father, who' lived some four miles from Glasgow, notifying birrv of the death of his daughter, and also sent a special *792delivery letter to a friend living in Glasgow, with the instruction that he communicate with her father and apprise him of the fact that his daughter was dead. In both the telegram and the letter she notified her father to forward to her the money necessary to prepare the corpse for burial and shipment, as she was without funds herself. The telegram was received early Friday morning. Appellee at once went to Glasgow where, upon his arrival, he also received the special delivery letter. With the letter and the telegram he called upon the agent of appellant company in charge of its office in Glasgow, and notified him of the contents of the letter and of his purpose and desire to send the money at once to his daughter. Upon being assured that the money could and would be promptly forwarded, and that it would not take over 30 or 40 minutes to complete the transaction, he paid to the agent the $25, together with all the necessary charges for telegraphing and transmitting the money, together with the messenger fee to notify his daughter that the money had been sent. This was about 9 o’clock in the morning. Appellee returned to his home, and relying upon the assurances of the agent of appellant company that the money would be promptly transmitted to his daughter, he at once made arrangements for the necessary vehicle to meet the corpse at the 6 o’clock train in Glasgow, upon which train his daughter would have had ample time to ship the corpse had the money been' promptly delivered, as he expected it to be. The corpse was not upon the train, and appellee, being at a loss to know what was the matter, or what he should do, called upon the agent of the company with whom he had the conversation that morning, and learned that the money had not yet been delivered to his daughter, *793but was assured that it would be delivered early Saturday morning, in time for the shipment of the corpse of his child on the morning train, which would stop at Cave City, some three or four miles away from appellee’s home. Accordingly appellee went home, and again made preparations for meeting the corpse at Cave City. When the train arrived he was again disappointed, as the corpse was not on it. He then called up his daughter in Louisville, over the appellant company’s line, and learned that the money had just then — about 11:30 a. m. — been paid to her. She did not have time, after receiving this money on Saturday at 11:30 a. m., to have the body prepared for shipment, secure the necessary permit, etc., to have it shipped on the 3 o’clock train, and hence was compelled to wait until Sunday morning, when the body was shipped to Cave City, arriving there at 11 o’clock Sunday, and was buried about 4 o’clock on the evening of the same day. At this time the body was badly discolored, and in an advanced state of decomposition.

Counsel for appellant offer quite a number of reasons why the judgment should be reversed. Their first complaint is that the petition was fatally defective, and that the demurrer should have been sustained thereto. In substance, it alleges that, by reason of the negligent act of appellant in failing to transmit the money, the plaintiff was caused to suffer great mental pain and anguish, by reason of the delay in the shipment of the corpse, loss of time, and expenditure of money. We are of opinion that these allegations constituted a cause of action, and, if true, appellant should be held answerable therefor.

Appellant’s next complaint is that it was not liable, because of the intervention of a new agency, in *794the presence of Eddie Curd and the railroad company, and that it is uncertain, even though the money had been promptly delivered by appellant, whether or not Eddie Curd would have promptly, or sooner than she did, prepared the corpse for shipment, or that the railroad company, after receiving same, would have promptly shipped and delivered it to its destination in Barren county, and therefore, under the rule announced in the cases of Taliferro v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 54 S. W. 825, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1290, Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 90 Ky. 265, 13 S. W. 880, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 265, and Smith v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 84 Ky. 664, 8 Ky. Law Rep. 672, 2 S. W. 483, there can be no recovery. In the Taliferro Case no recovery was allowed “because,” said the court, “his telegram was only an inquiry. It may be that if his telegram had been received in the confusion of the household, an answer might not have been sent, or if sent, by some miscarriage, without fault of appellee, it might never have reached appellant. Legal damages are such as directly and naturally result from the wrongful act complained of.” In the Chapman Case Chapman sued for loss occasioned by not being able to attend his father before death, alleging that, had the telegram been delivered, he would have visited his father, and his father would have made him a present of a note which he held against him. The recovery in this case was denied, because the claim on which the damage was founded was entirely too remote, it being uncertain whether his father would have given him the note or not, and that there was nothing in the telegram to put the company upon notice of the purpose for which Chapman wanted to see his father before death. In tbe *795case of Smith v. Western Union Telegraph Company appellant sought to recover damages because of the failure to deliver to him a message notifying him of the condition of the stock market, alleging that, had he received the message, he would have telegraphed certain instructions to his broker, and thereby saved himself several thousand dollars. Here again the damages were held to be too remote and speculative, and that the failure to deliver the telegram in the ordinary course of events could not be charged to have been the cause of pecuniary loss. It will be observed that in none of these cases was the company notified of the particular importance attached to the telegram, which was later made the basis of the claim for damages. But not so in the case at bar. The company knew that appellee’s daughter had written to him that she was unable to ship the corpse because of the lack of funds, that it would take $25, and that it was to meet this very emergency that the money was sent. It is common knowledge that in warm weather a corpse cannot be kept long before decomposition becomes advanced. Hence appellant’s agent and servants must have known that any delay on their part in the transmission of this money and the carrying out of their contract with appellee would delay the interment of his daughter, and it is but natural and human that he would suffer mental worry and anguish by having the burial of his child delayed until its body was in an advanced state of decomposition.

Appellee desired to give his daughter a decent and timely burial. With this end in view he sought the services of appellant, and appellant contracted with him to send the money necessary to enable him to have his daughter properly prepared for burial and *796promptly shipped. Had it carried out its contract, and delivered this money within a reasonable time, there is no question but what the body would have been promptly shipped, and the wish and desire of the father gratified. It failed, however, to carry out its contract, and scant excuse is offered in the record for its not having done so. An attempt is made to shift the responsibility for the delay in delivering the money to Eddie Curd, appellee’s daughter, but the decided weight of the testimony and the circumstances surrounding the transaction are altogether in favor of the finding of the jury that the responsibility for this delay in the delivery of the money rested with appellant, hence, if by its negligence appellant added to the weight of sorrow then borne by appellee because of the loss of his child, it should be made answerable therefor; for, as said by this court in the case of Western Union Telegraph Company v Caldwell, 126 Ky.-, 102 S. W. 31 Ky. Law Rep. 497, appellant will not be permitted to escape responsibility for its acts upon the theory that what appellee ’s agent might have done was too remote to entitle him to compensation.

It is further insisted that, as the child was already dead, the mere delay in its shipment and interment affords no ground of complaint for appellee. To this we cannot agree. The delay in the delivery of the money and consequent shipment of the body denied to appellee the right to give his child a prompt burial; denied to him the right to look upon its features as they were in life, for, while it is true that before interment the casket was opened, it is equally true that at that time the body had become so discolored, and decomposition was so far advanced, that the father saw instead of the features of his child, a *797badly discolored and decomposed corpse. If this condition was brought about by the negligence of appellant, and in consequence thereof appellee suffered mental anguish, humiliation, and pain, appellant company should likewise be held answerable therefor.

Appellant also complains that the court erred in instructing the jury that appellee might recover for loss of time and money expended, which were due to the negligence of appellant. The petition charged that there was a loss of time and expenditure of money in going to the trains for the purpose of meeting the corpse. If there was, and the delay in the shipment of the corpse was occasioned by the failure of appellant to carry out its contract promptly, then it should be held answerable therefor, and the court properly submitted this question to the jury.

Appellant also complains that the court erred in instructing the jury, but the record shows that the instructions were, of anything, more favorable to appellant than they were to appellee.

Appellant also charges that, because of misconduct on the part of counsel for appellee in addressing the jury, the case should be reversed. The language complained of is as follows: “I will tell you how you can- know that the defendant did not notify Eddie Curd, and why you should believe her in preference to Clyde Harris. Eddie Curd went out and tried to mortgage her only furniture to get the money with which to buy a coffin and ship the corpse, and you know she would not have done this if she had been notified by the defendant.” At the time these remarks were made counsel for appellant objected, and the court thereupon directed the jury that they must bear the evidence in mind, and if counsel went outside of the evidence in his speech, they must disregard it. *798It was error for counsel to make a statement of fact which, was not supported by the evidence in the case, and, upon his doing so, the trial court should have excluded it, and reprimanded him for having done so, and directed the jury to disregard the statement, but we are of opinion that the admonition of the court had this effect before an intelligent jury, and that appellant’s case was not prejudiced thereby.

To the complaint that the verdict is excessive we-may say that larger verdicts have repeatedly been upheld in cases not more meritorious and under circumstances less aggravating.

On the whole case it is apparent that appellant had a fair trial, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.