25 S.E.2d 430 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1943
If a telegram is filed containing a proposal to sell flour at $5.20 a barrel, but, by mistake of the telegraph company, the message as delivered incorrectly states the proposal to sell at $5.25 a barrel, the receiver of the message can not recover from the telegraph company compensatory damages on the ground that, if the message had been correctly transmitted and had contained the proposal intended by the sender, the receiver would have accepted the proposal and purchased the flour at $5.20 a barrel, but that when the receiver purchased flour at a later date the market price had advanced and it was forced to pay 15 to 20 cents a barrel more than $5.20.
The defendant demurred to the petition on the ground that no cause of action was set out. The judge sustained the demurrer and the plaintiff excepted.
Assuming that the message contained in the telegram as originally filed with the defendant was an unqualified offer by the flour mill in Oklahoma to sell to the plaintiff 7500 barrels of "Bestwest bulk" flour at $5.20 a barrel, which offer could be accepted or rejected by the plaintiff and if accepted would constitute a complete contract between the sender of the telegram and the plaintiff for the purchase and sale of this flour, under the facts alleged the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover of the defendant as damages caused by its negligence the difference between the price of 7500 barrels of this flour at $5.20 a barrel, the correct offer by the sender of the message, and the increased price paid by the plaintiff for this same amount of flour eight days later; the plaintiff contending that had the offer been correctly transmitted it would have accepted the same and purchased the 7500 barrels of flour at $5.20 a barrel, thus saving to it the difference between that price and the price at which it subsequently bought such flour. Such damages are entirely speculative, and too remote to be recoverable as compensatory damages resulting from the negligence of the telegraph company in the transmission of an unqualified offer to sell, whereby the merchandise was offered to the plaintiff at a price in excess of the price contained in the correct offer. There was no finished contract between the sender of the telegram and the plaintiff but only a proposal to sell on certain terms. It took the acceptance of this proposal *366
by the plaintiff to make a contract. The plaintiff might or it might not have accepted this proposal or offer to sell had the correct price, as stated in the message when it was originally filed with the defendant in Oklahoma, been transmitted. Therefore the "failure of the telegraph company did not cause the breach of a consummate contract," but "it only prevented one that might or might not have been made." Richmond Hosiery Mills v. WesternUnion Telegraph Co.,
It is true that the plaintiff alleged that it would have accepted the offer contained in the telegram as originally filed in which the flour was offered at $5.20 a barrel, and that it refused to accept this offer because the message as delivered to it in Atlanta erroneously offered the flour at $5.25 a barrel. The plaintiff can not now legally contend that it would have accepted this offer if it had been correctly transmitted and had quoted the flour at $5.20 a barrel. The telegram was delivered to the defendant in Oklahoma for transmission to the plaintiff in Atlanta on August 12, 1941, and this allegation of the plaintiff was made in this suit filed February 20, 1942. It is exceedingly speculative, as a basis for damages, to say that if an offer to sell flour at $5.20 had been received, instead of the incorrect offer at $5.25 a barrel, the plaintiff would have accepted it. The plaintiff might or might not have accepted this offer. SeeRichmond Hosiery Mills v. Western Union Telegraph Co., supra, and cit. See also Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Watson,
Besides, it does not appear from the petition that, on the receipt by the plaintiff of the telegram containing the incorrect offer to sell the flour at $5.25 a barrel, the plaintiff made any effort to purchase flour elsewhere at $5.20 a barrel but could not do so, but the plaintiff alleges that it would have accepted the offer at $5.20 a barrel, and that sometime later when it discovered that there had been a mistake by the telegraph company in the price per barrel contained in the telegram the price of flour had advanced to $5.35 a barrel and that it purchased 5000 barrels on August 20, 1941, at that price. From all that appears from the petition the plaintiff might have been able to obtain flour of the same quality from other *367 milling companies on the date it received the message containing the error, the subject matter of the present suit, at $5.20 a barrel. It does not appear that the plaintiff made any effort to ascertain whether it could or could not do so.
The petition did not set out facts authorizing the recovery of the damages alleged and the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer. Judgment affirmed. Sutton and Felton, JJ., concur.