Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Olivarri , 104 Tex. 203 ( 1911 )


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  • We have concluded that the Court of Civil Appeals, whose two opinions will be found in 110 S.W. 930, and 126 S.W. 688, correctly decided the questions now presented to this court and that the judgment should be affirmed. Our discussion will be confined to the one question on which we granted the writ of error.

    The action was by Olivarri to recover damages for suffering which resulted to his wife, Lita, from the failure of defendant to deliver to him a telegraphic message which was in the Spanish language, and, as translated, is as follows:

    "San Antonio, 3/25, 1907.

    "To E.G. Olivarri, "Matamoras, Tamaulipas.

    "They were twin boys. Lita doing nicely. They probably will not live. (Signed) F. Olivarri."

    The message was sent at Mrs. Olivarri's request, and was *Page 205 intended to inform her husband, who was traveling in Mexico, of her sickness and of the births and probable deaths of the babies, in order that he might return and give to her the consolation and comfort of his presence, aid and attention to the necessities of the situation. The message was never delivered, the babies died and were buried in his absence, and the consequent disappointment and distress of the wife and mother constituted the basis of the judgment under review.

    The question which impressed us as open to debate was whether or not the message was sufficient to notify the defendant that "Lita" was a beneficiary of it; that its purpose was to summon her husband, and of the damage which she might suffer if, through failure to get the message promptly, he did not come. We have concluded that the decisions require an affirmative answer and justly so.

    Most often the action has been by either the sender or the addressee of the message, and usually their relation to it and the duty assumed by the company to them most readily suggests that it is for the benefit of one or both of them; but there is no fundamental reason why another may not also be a beneficiary, entitled to the performance of the duty resting on the company, and to redress for a violation of that duty, provided there be enough to notify the company of his interest and of the damage he will likely suffer if the duty be not performed.

    In the case of Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Cooper, 71 Tex. 507 [71 Tex. 507], the beneficiary, for whose suffering damages were allowed, was neither the sender nor addressee of the telegram, her name merely appearing in it as the sick person for whom the services of the doctor summoned were needed; and in other cases the names of several appeared in the message or were made known to the agents receiving it as persons who might be damaged by neglect of duty. The rule on the subject, firmly established by the decisions, is that the company's servants must take notice of relations existing between persons whose names appear, it being their duty, if not fully informed, to make inquiry. From this doctrine the easy deduction is that there is enough in such use of names to suggest that any one of those mentioned may be one of the persons most vitally concerned in the conveying of the intelligence, and the beneficiary for whom the sender acts, where nothing to the contrary appears. But, although there be a right of action arising to such a person from failure of duty on the part of the company, damages claimed as a result thereof may be of a character in no way foreseeable as a proximate result thereof, and of such there can be, of course, no recovery. In the Cooper case the message plainly indicated that the addressee of the message was summoned because of the sickness of "Josephine" and for her benefit. In the present case there is no express summons at all, and the question is, was there enough to indicate that the purpose of the telegram was to induce, and that it would probably result in, the husband's return. Notice of the relation of husband and wife between "Lita" and the addressee of the message being chargeable to the company under the decisions, what did the language used naturally suggest? We think the answer to that question solves the one on which this case depends. Anyone reading it would understand *Page 206 that "Lita" had borne twins; that she was doing well, but they were likely to die. No one ought to doubt, we think, that with normal relations existing between husband and wife, such as must be presumed, she would want him at home and he would want to return home in such a crisis, and that nothing more than the simple information thus given alike to him and to the company was necessary to call him back. It is not too much to require that the company should foresee that the natural and probable effect of intelligence of such facts upon a husband's action would be as potent and as decisive as an express summons; and this brings the case within the decisions.

    The relations existing and the character of the intelligence conveyed distinguish this case from Western Union Tel. Co. v. Luck, 91 Tex. 178, and Western Union Tel. Co. v. Wilson,97 Tex. 22, relied on by counsel for plaintiff in error.

    Affirmed.