Court Opinion

ID: 6627230
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:35:12.124707+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:51.650128
License: Public Domain

JOHNSON, J.
This is an action against a telegraph company for the recovery of the penalty prescribed by section 3330, Revised Statutes 1909, for the neglect or refusal to transmit a dispatch accepted for transmission in the regular course of business.
In the evening of March 5,1909, plaintiff delivered a night message to defendant at one of its offices in St. Louis for transmission to her brother at Chillicothe, Missouri. There is no controversy-over the facts that plaintiff paid the usual charge demanded for such ser*282vices'; that'defendant accepted the dispatch; that at should have been delivered the next morning, to the addressee who was living in Chillicothe and well knpwn there; that it was not delivered but was dost in transmission and that the neglect was inexcusable.
The dispatch wás written on one of-defendant’s blanks for night messages which, among others, contained the following stipulation: “The company will not be liable for damages or statutory penalties in any case where the claim is not presented in writing within thirty' days after the message is filed with the company for transmission.” The only attempt made by plaintiff to' comply with this stipulation was in procuring her bróther to write defendant the following letter; dated four days after the date of the delivery of the message for transmission: .
“On Friday just before 8 p. m., March 5, ’09, my sister wired me from St. Louis Union Depot as follows.' 25c. prepaid. ‘A. M. Johnston, No. 214 S. Locust St., Chillicothe, Mo. Will arrive in Chillicothe tomorrow night at 9 o’clock. Ida.’ This message has never arrived up to this time and although being a night message, failed to arrive on the next day, and thereby subjected the sender to great inconvenience, etc. Hoping you may look the matter up and that I may hear from you,
Respt., A. M. Johnston.”
Suit was not brought until after the expiration' of more than thirty days from the filing of the message.' On these facts the court (a jury was waived) rendered' judgment for plaintiff' in accordance with the statute. The question for our determination is whether or not the action must fail on the ground of non-compliance. by plaintiff with the provisions of the■ stipulation of the contract quoted.
*283The courts of this state as well as those of other .jurisdictions recognize the validity of such stipulations where the- time fixed for presenting the claim 'is not unreasonably short. “The object and purpose •of the stipulation is that the company may have notice ■of the claim made against it, "and intelligently settle with the plaintiff, or prepare its defense while the facts are known and evidence of them obtainable.”' [Telegraph Co. v. Courtney, 82 S. W. 484.]
“The language of the stipulation is not that notice' •of negligence shall be given nor even that notice of 'the claim shall be given but that the company will not be liable in any case ‘where the claim is not presented in sixty days. ’ It will be observed that not notice but' the presentment of the claim is required. ’ ’ [Telegraph Co. v. Moxley, 98 S. W. 112.]
This court in Montgomery v. Telegraph Co., 50 Mo. App. 593, quoted with approval the following ex•cerpt from Thompson on the Law of Electricity:
“It may be stated, as a general principle, that a •stipulation in a telegraph message blank that the company will not be liable for damages unless the claim therefor is presented within a certain' time after the •delivery of the message to the company for transmission, is reasonable, provided the time limited is not toó ■short to enable the sender, in the exercise of ordinary •diligence, to ascertain the fact of the mistake, delay, non-delivery or other default, and the amount of damages thereby occasioned, ánd to present his claim therefor.”
And we held that sixty days is such reasonable time. Other cases in this state recognizing the validity of such stipulations are: Barrett v. Telegraph Co., 42 Mo. App. 542; Kendall v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 56 Mo. App. 192; Massengale v. Telegraph. Co., 17 Mo. App. 257; Thorp v. Telegraph Co., 118 Mo. App. 398.
*284Following these authorities and others cited in the briefs of counsel, we hold the stipulation in question is valid and that thirty days was not a period too short for the presentation of plaintiff’s claim. And though we treat the stipulation as one in the nature of a forfeiture and construe it most strictly against the company (Barrett v. Telegraph Co., supra), still we must say that plaintiff failed to comply with its requirement. The letter her brother wrote contained no demand either for actual damages or for the statutory penalty. It was nothing more than a courteous complaint of poor service and there was in it no intimation even of an intention to present a claim in the future. It was just such a letter as one would write who had been inconvenienced and annoyed by ill treatment and who wished the company to know about it and to explain it.
It is well said by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Eddington v. Telegraph Co., 115 Mo. App. l. c. 98: “A statute, such as the one here authorizing a recovery without any proof of actual damages, injury or pecuniary loss, is harsh indeed, when applied to those cases which fall properly within its provisions. It is highly penal and must be strictly construed and applied only to such cases as come clearly within its provisions and manifest spirit and intent. [Dudley v. W. U. T. Co., 54 Mo. App. 391; Connell v. Telegraph Co., 108 Mo. 459, 18 S. W. 883.] ”
The defendant was entitled to be informed that plaintiff proposed to demand its punishment for its remissness especially in a case where ihe plaintiff was merely “inconvenienced” and suffered only the most trifling pecuniary damage. We find no merit in the point that defendant waived compliance with the stipulation in question.
The judgment is reversed.
All concur.