Court Opinion

ID: 6546879
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:20:17.418862+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:59.523762
License: Public Domain

McCulloch, J. During the yellow fever -epidemic- of 1905 the plaintiff sent a telegraphic message from Foreman, Arkansas, to his wife at Montgomery, Louisiana, requesting her to procure a health certificate and come at once to Washington, Arkansas. The message was not delivered, and he sued the telegraph company for damages by reason of the alleged negligence. Fie claims certain expenses ■ incurred in going to his wife and mental anguish suffered by reason of his wife being detained in the infected district until the quarantine regulations of this State prevented her from coming here. The-blank upon which the message -was written contained the usual stipulation, that “the company will not be liable for damages or statutory penalties in any case where the claim is not presented within sixty days after the message is filed with the company for transmission.” The only claim presented by plaintiff to the company within the time specified was contained in a letter addressed to the superintendent of the company which, after reciting the circumstances, is as follows: “I have consulted three law firms; each one says I have a good cause against your company, and I simply \yrite this letter as means of avoiding a law suit. I have never been in court except as a spectator; am thirty-seven years of age, and have been an itinerant Methodist preacher thirteen years. All in the world I want is loss I have sustained in actual money. My1 family just got home, and had to stay in detention camp eight days with guard, and I paid all expenses. I write you this letter for a twofold purpose: to notify you I have sustained at least $75.00,. beside all mental worry and inconvenience both to myself,, my wife and two children; and also to comply with requirements on back of telegraph slips. I do not care to go into court, and my lawyers have not authorized me to write this letter, but have stated to me that I have a good case against your company for damages.” The court, by peremptory instruction, refused to allow a recovery for amount of money alleged to have been expended by plaintiff, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $250 damages for mental-anguish. The claim presented to the company was not sufficient, under the contract, to cover the element of damages for mental anguish. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Moxley, 80 Ark. 554. The writer did not agree to the conclusion reached by a majority of the judges in the case cited above, but it is settled now as the law and must be adhered to. The law there announced is undoubtedly decisive of the present case. In the opinion Mr. Justice Riddicic stated clearly that mere notice given to the company of the negligence of its employees, with the circumstances thereof, is not sufficient compliance with the stipulation of the contract, and that there can be no recovery of damages not claimed in the notice. The plaintiff in his notice to the company expressly limited the amount claimed to compensation for loss “sustained in actual money.” His right to recover must therefore be limited to that element of damages. Reversed and remanded for new trial.