This suit was brought by appellee against appellant for damages for the breach *266of two contracts for the transmission and delivery, within a reasonable time, of two telegrams, one to a sister and the other to a brother of appellee.
Appellee lived.in the country about five miles from Altoona, a station on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. Her sister, Annie Harris, to whom one of the telegrams was sent, lived on the same railroad at Alabama City, 18 miles from Altoona, and between the two places there were two passenger trains going each way daily, one in the morning and the other in the afternoon. Billy Jones, the brother, to whom the other telegram was sent, lived about three miles from Ensley on rural free delivery mail route 1. Alabama City is a cotton mill town, which is a suburb of Gadsden, and which appears not to be of sufficient commercial importance for the appellant to maintain a telegraph office there. Telegrams over the lines of the Western Union Telegarph Company to Alabama City are sent to Gadsden, and telephoned from Gadsden over to the agent of appellant at Alabama City. Ensley is a suburb of Birmingham, and is easily accessible by rail from Altoona.
On the night of October 28th the mother of appellee died- at her residence, and as appellee desired her said sister and brother, who were also children of the mother, to be informed of theif mother’s death, in order that they might be present with her at the funeral, she telephoned on the night of the 28th to a friend of hers in Altoona, directing him to send telegrams to her brother and sister, informing them of their mother’s death, and requesting them to come to her funeral. It appears that appellant keeps no night office at Altoona, and on the next morning, at 7:20 a. m. appellant’s agent appeared at the office of appellant in Altoona, and deliv*267ered for transmission and delivery two telegrams as follows:
“Altoona, Ala. 10-29-07. Billy Jones, Ensley, Route 1. Come if possible. Mother died at eight last night. Emma Shell.”
“Altoona, Ala. 10-29-07. Annie Harris, Alabama City, Ala. Come if possible. Mother died last night. Emma Snell. Time filed 7:20 a. m. O. K. H-S-3 p: m.”
The words “Time filed 7:20 a. m.” on the Annie Harris telegram meant that the message was received for transmission at 7:20 a. m. at Altoona, and the words “O. K. H-3-3 p. m.” referred to the time when that message was received by the agent at Alabama City, as the agent at that place testified that he received it at that hour on that day. At the time the message was delivered for transmission, the agent of the appellant was informed that Billy Jones lived near Ensley on rural free delivery mail route 1, and, when the messages were delivered for transmission, to use the language of the witness who signed the telegrams for appellee: “I told the agent, Mr. Brown, I wanted him to send the telegrams, and, if there was any extra charges, I wanted to pay them as I had been requested so. to do. He said, ‘All right,’ and went to working on the wire. The charge for each message was 25 cents.”
1. As Alabama City is only 18 miles from Altoona, it is evident that in the ordinary course of business the telegram to Annie Harris should have reached that place at a much earlier hour of the day than 3 p. m. Why it did not sooner reach there the evidence fails to disclose. When it did reach Alabama City, the agent of appellant, who testified that he did not know where Annie Harris lived, first consulted the pay roll of the Dwight Cotton Mill, which seems to have contained the names of about 1,000 employes. Not finding the *268name on the pay roll, he went to the commissary of the Dwight Cotton Mill, and made inquiries about her at that place, and learned there nothing of her or of her place of residence. He then went to the postoffice, and made inquiries there, with the same result. This was the extent of his efforts to locate the woman, and on the next dáy he mailed her the customary notification card that a telegram was at his office for her. The evidence shows, without conflict, that Ainnie Harris had been a resident of Alabama City for nine or ten years; that she had a husband and children; and that one of her children was a grown man, who was at that time employed by, and working for, the Dwight Cotton Mill Avith his name on the pay roll. A messenger, using some primitive method of conveyance, leaving Altoona at 7,:20 a. m. could have reached Alabama City, with the exercise of ordinary diligence, prior to 8 p. m., and, if his day’s wage had depended upon the delivery of the message to Annie Harris at her residence in Alaama City on that day, we are inclined to think that he would have exercised more diligence than is shown to have been exercised by the agent of appellant in his efforts to deliver the telegram to her after its receipt by him. Certainly it was a question for the jury to say, under all the eAddence, whether, taking into consideration the importance of the. message, the agent of appellant, in and about the delivery of the telegram, exercised that reasonable care and diligence Avliich a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised under similar circumstances. By reason of the delay in the delivery of the message, Annie Harris was not informed of her mother’s death until after the funeral, and, not knowing of her death, did not attend the funeral.—E. Tenn. Va. & Ga. R. R. Co. v. Bayliss, 74 Ala. 150.
2. The law requires a plaintiff in his complaint to state in plain language the facts upon which he relies *269for his cause of action. In considering the complaint, the words used, unless they possess some peculiar technical meaning, will he given their ordinary import, and strictly technical objections, not going to the merits of the cause of action, will be disregarded. The law is reasonable, and all that it requires of a. complaint is that it shall state in plain and simple language a legal cause of action, and inform the defendant as to what is claimed.
The third count of the complaint, after setting out the above telegram to Billy Jones, contains the following averment: “That plaintiff paid the defendant charges for sending the said message from Altoona, Ala., to said Billy Jones at Ensley, Ala., route 1; that defendant broke said contract, in that it negligently failed to transmit and deliver said message to said Billy Jones at the address given in said message.” Appellant demurred to said count upon the following grounds: “Said count shows that the undertaking of defendant was to transmit and deliver from Altoona, Ala., to route 1, at Ensley, Ala., and said count fails to show that said message was not promptly transmitted to route 1, Ensley, Ala.” As a matter of pleading, the complaint met every requirement of the law. The appellant undertook to transmit and deliver, by the acceptance of said message, within a reasonable time, the said message to Billy Jones, route 1, Ensley, Ala. Whether, if the proof had shown that the appellant had promptly transmitted the message to Ensley and there promptly delivered it to the United States mails addressed to Billy Jones, route 1, Ensley, Ala., the appellant would thereby have shown that it exercised in and about the delivery of the message to Billy Jones that diligence which the law required of it, is not presented by the pleading or the evidence in the case.
*270The fact that Billy Jones did not reside in Ensley, hut resided on route 1, near Ensley, might have furnished appellant with the right to refuse to accept messages to be delivered to him at that point, but it did not afford it an excuse for violating the express terms of a contract.—Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Henderson, 89 Ala. 520, 7 South. 419, 18 Am. St. Rep. 148.
There is nothing in the contention of appellant that the court erred in refusing to allow it to give in evidence the fact, if it was a fact, that Annie Harris did not live within the free delivery limits of Alabama City. While the record discloses the fact that the telegrams were sent upon the blanks of appellant, it fails to show' that there were any stipulations in the forms used in sending the messages with reference to free delivery limits. In addition to this, the evidence shows that, when.the telegrams were delivered to appellant, it was informed as to the importance of the messages, and that appellee was willing to pay all extra charges necessary to their reasonably prompt delivery.—Western Union Tel. Co. v. Henderson, 89 Ala. 510, 7 South. 419, 18 Am. St. Rep. 148.
4. There is nothing in the record tending to show what, if anything, the appellant did to deliver to Billy Jones the telegram addressed to him. It seems to have reached him about six days after it Avas sent to him from Altoona. When it was received at Ensley the record does not inform us. Neither are we in formed as to when it Avas finally mailed to him. All that we know about the delivery of this telegram is that it was handed to him by his wife at his home on the Monday succeeding his mother’s burial; that he had never heard of the telegram prior to that time; and that it indicated that it had been in the mails. It is therefore evident that the jury Avere authorized to infer that appellant *271was negligent in the matter of the delivery of said telegram to him.
5. Appellee’s mother was buried two miles from Altoona on Wednesday afternoon succeeding her death,, and, as appellee’s sister and brother knew nothing of the funeral, appellee was denied the comfort of their presence when her mother was a corpse at her house, and when she was buried. As both the sister and the brother were so situated that, at little expense, they could have attended the funeral of their mother, if they had received the messages announcing her death within a reasonable time after their'delivery for transmission to appellant, the jury were'authorized to infer that they would have done so, and there is nothing in the record indicating that they would or could not have done so.. It follows, therefore, that the jury were authorized to infer from the evidence that appellee was denied the comfort of their presence at the time above stated.—Western Union Tel. Co. v. Crmupton, 138 Ala. 632, 36 South. 517; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Crowley, 158 Ala. 583, 48 South. 381.
6. There is no conflict among the authorities that mental suffering constitutes an element of recoverable damages for the breach by a telegraph company of a contract to transmit, within a reasonable time, a message from a sister or brother to- a sister or brother announcing the death of the mother, and when by reason of such breach, the sister or brother, to whom the telegram is sent, is thereby prevented from attending the funeral and the sender of the telegram is thereby denied the consolation of such brother or sister’s presence-at the funeral.—Western Union Tel. Co. v. Crumpton, supra.
7. The oral charge of a court must be construed as: a whole, and a judgment will not be reversed because a. *272separate part of a charge standing alone and unexplained is erroneous, if the charge, construed as a whole, contains a correct statement of the law as applied to the facts of the case.
While a few of the expressions of the court in its oral charge to the jury in this case, taken separately may have been subject to hypercriticism, the oral charge, as a whole, was a correct statement of the law as applied to the facts of the case.—Decatur Co. v. Mehaffey, 128 Ala. 242, 29 South. 646.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.