This was a civil action by the feme plaintiff to recover damages for mental anguish suffered by her, caused by the assurance on the part of the defendant that a telegraphic message sent for her benefit, had been delivered, when in fact it had not been delivered; and also by the negligent failure of the defendant to promptly deliver said telegram.
The infant child of the plaintiffs had died early on the *531morning of May 24, 1897, and about 10 o’clock on tbe same day, O. L. Landie, busband of tbe feme plaintiff, by an agreement with lier and for lier benefit, delivered tbe message hereinafter set forth to tbe defendant company for transmission to T. L. Iinntley, a kinsman of tbe feme plaintiff. The said Landie paid tbe defendant its charges for transmission to Chesterfield, and at tbe time of tbe delivery notified the company that it was a very important matter, relating to tbe burial of tbe child; tbe said company assured Landie that tbe same would be forwarded immediately, and in order to be certain of its delivery, tbe said Landie went back to tbe office of tbe company about 12 o’clock on tbe same day, and was assured by it that tbe message bad been delivered to its destination ; that be thereupon informed bis wife, tbe feme plaintiff, and she acting and relying upon said representations of the defendant, prepared tbe body of her infant and started with it to Wadesboro on tbe morning of May 25th, reaching that point about 7 o’clock a. in., expecting to be met there in accordance with said telegram; that tbe said message was not delivered on May 24th, as assured by tbe company, but not until the following day, too -late for any one to meet tbe feme plaintiff; that on account of tbe non-delivery, she bad to remain for several hours at tbe depot in Wadesboro, alone with tbe dead body of her infant, and then make arrangements to carry tbe same across tbe country to Chesterfield, by which she suffered great mental anguish, as she alleges.
Tbe feme plaintiff, in order to maintain her action, proposed to show that tbe message was sent by an agreement with and for her benefit, and that she was tbe undisclosed principal, which tbe Court refused to permit.
To this ruling tbe plaintiff excepted, submitted to a non-suit, and appealed.
Tbe telegram was as follows:
*532“Charlotte, N. C., May 24, 1891.
“To T. L. Iluntley, Chesterfield, S. C.
“Frank dead; meet depot Wadesboro, 8 a. m. Bury him in Chesterfield. Grave three feet. O. L. LaNdie.”
The only point presented to this Court by the distinguished counsel, who frankly admitted that it was covered by the case of Cashion v. Telegraph Co., 123 N. C., 267, was that of an undisclosed principal. It is due to them to say that the Cash-ion case had not been decided when the appeal was taken.
We see no reason to reverse our ruling in that case, and therefore hold that the plaintiff is not debarred from a recovery because her name was not signed to the telegram, and the defendant was not then notified that it was sent by her direction or for her benefit. The facts as presented to us in this appeal are stronger than those in the Cashion case, and therefore bring this case more clearly within the rule. Even if the male plaintiff had not notified the defendant of the urgency of the message, its importance clearly appeared upon its face; and the negligence of the defendant in failing to deliver it was aggravated by its negligent assurance that it had been delivered. We have decided this question upon what we believe to be true legal principles; but let us gauge it for a moment by the rule of common sense. The male plaintiff left his wife alone at home with the dead body of their child, and went to the telegraph office to send a message to a relative to prepare the grave and meet the body. Suppose we had found him doing what the defendant says he should have done: cooly and deliberately informing the defendant that he was the agent of one M. E. Landie; that he sent the telegram by her direction and for her benefit; and that “she £had then in contemplation’ heavy damages for great mental anguish which would probably result from a failure to promptly deliver the telegram. *533Would it not have tended to raise in tbe minds of the jury a suspicion of speculation ? While it might have come within the rule of Hadley v. Baxendale, would it be within the ordinary rule of human conduct? Would we expect such care and deliberation on the part of a father or a mother under such circumstances, and would it be reasonable in us to require it ? The telegraph is not intended solely for lawyers, nor for those skilled in business or experienced in litigation. It is intended for the general public, and must meet their reasonable convenience. Moreover, the defendant as a common carrier, owed to the plaintiff a public duty which it should have performed with reasonable care and diligence. It can not be relieved from liability for the proximate results of its own negligence if it existed, by unreasonable regulations or technical objections.
For error in the intimation of His Honor, the judgment of non-suit must be set aside, and a new trial ordered.
New trial.