42 Del. 138 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1942
The plaintiffs declared in tort to recover damages for the failure of the defendant to transmit and deliver within a reasonable time a telegraph message.
' The declaration, reduced to its material facts, alleged: that the defendant maintained a telegraph office in Martins-ville, Virginia; that on May 22, 1941, George W. Clemens, one of the plaintiffs, delivered to the defendant’s agent at its office in Martinsville the sum of twenty dollars and a mes
To the declaration the defendant demurred. Five reasons were assigned. They need not be stated because the parties agree that the question raised by the demurrer, and to be decided by the Court, is whether the declaration discloses a cause of action to recover the special damage alleged.
The plaintiffs contend, contra, that in an action as for a tort they are not to be restricted to such damages as were reasonably within the contemplation of the parties, but are entitled to recover all damages which are the natural and probable consequences of the wrong; hence, the contents of the telegram have no bearing on the issue.
The question is whether the rule for the limitation of recoverable damages announced in Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, 156 Eng. Reprint 145, should be applied in an action of tort. By the rule there stated damages for breach of contract are confined to such as “may fairly and reasonably be considered as arising naturally, that is, according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time, they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it.” The rule was accepted and applied by this Court in an action ex contractu. Hajoca Corporation v. Security Trust Co., 2 Terry (41 Del.) 514, 25 A. 2d 378. In Wise v. Western Union Tel. Co., 7 W. W. Harr. (37 Del.) 209, 181 A. 302, an action of tort for a wilful wrong, reference was made to the rule but its application was held to be unnecessary or improper. The question can be approached without embarrassment resulting from prior decisions.
A telegraph company is somewhat akin to a ' common carrier in that they are both carriers. The carrier
The case presented is an instance of the right of choice given to a plaintiff to sue ex contractu for breach of contract, or ex delicto for breach of duty. The plaintiffs have elected to sue in tort, and clearly for the reason that it was conceived that the liability was more far reaching.
All torts of negligence may be viewed indifferently either in the light of positive or omissive wrongs. The ordinary separation of the field of legal accountability into contract and tort is, at best, artificial. From one point of view the law of negligence is governed by the law of pure tort; from another viewpoint it is controlled by principles ripened in the field of contract. The fact that the law of. negligence in one aspect lies in the region of contract, and in another aspect is the field of pure tort, has brought about a diversity of opinion as regards the extent of liability in the respective fields.
In breach of contract, under the rule of Hadley v. Baxendale, the liability is for those results which a reasonable prescient person would anticipate as the likely consequences of his failure to abide by the terms of his contract under the circumstances known at the time it was made. In the field of pure tort the liability is more extensive, and the wrongdoer is generally held to be liable for all the injurious results which flow from the wrongful act by ordinary and natural sequence. But many years ago, it was said by a great English Judge that, while one is expected to anticipate and guard against all reasonable consequences, he is not bound to foresee and provide against that which no reasonable man would expect to happen. Greenland v. Chaplin, 5 Exch. 248.
A rule of damages of such breadth as to include all the consequences which might be shown to have resulted from the failure or omission to perform a stipulated duty or service would constitute a serious obstruction to and interference with commerce and the common business of life; and the effect often would be to impose a liability wholly out of relation with the nature of the act or service, and the compensation paid and received. The great weight of authority
Cases involving actions against telegraph companies for damages resulting from breach of duty are multitudinous. In the note to Kagy v. Western Union Tel. Co., 117 Am. St. Rep., supra, it is said, perhaps too broadly, that the American courts, without exception have adopted the rule in Hadley v. Baxendale in determining the elements of damages recoverable against telegraph companies, and the rule is now general in this country that the damages must be such as were reasonably in the contemplation of the par- • ties. In. 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 1059, it is also broadly said: “While actions against telegraph companies are not necessarily or usually ex contractu, but ex delicto for a breach of a public duty, the cause of action is so far dependent upon the original contract of sending as to make the rule just stated (Hadley v. Baxendale) controlling, and it has been universally applied in this class of actions without regard to whether the particular action is ex contractu or ex delicto.”
Without violence to principle, the contract conception of liability may be regarded as sound in a suit against
Whether the defendant company had informing knowledge of the nature of the subject matter of the message either from the language of the message itself or extraneously is, obviously, of the greatest importance if the special damage sought to be recovered is to be brought within its contemplation.
In Kerr Steamship Co., Inc., v. Radio Corporation, supra, it was succinctly said that “notice of the business, if it is to lay the basis for special damages, must be sufficiently informing to be notice of the risk.” In 3 Shearman & Redfield, Negligence, 6th Ed., §754, the authors say: “Although, in the absence of prevailing authority to the contrary, it would seem just to say that a telegram may always be presumed to be of importance, and that the law ought not to sanction negligence on the part of a telegraph company, in proportion as a message may appear to be unimportant; yet it is now settled in a majority of the courts that only the cost of the message can be recovered for the failure to transmit a message promptly and correctly, unless the telegrapher had notice, from the message itself, or from information furnished with it, that its non-delivery would probably be attended with other damages. The principle thus applied is precisely the same as that established as to common carriers of merchandise, that such damages as could not have been anticipated by a prudent business man, as a natural and probable consequence of the breach, are not to be recovered; and, therefore, pecuniary contingencies which depend on the prompt and accurate transmission of the message must, in some way, be brought to the notice of the telegrapher sufficiently to put him on his guard, in order to make them a ground for recovery.” Mr. Street (1 Foundations of Legal Liability, 450), in summation, says this: “Hence, applying the principle above stated concerning the recovery of spe
See also 62 C. J. 232; 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 1061; 117 Am. St. Rep. 289.
We are not unmindful of the truth of the observations of Chief Judge Cardozo in the Kerr Steamship case, supra, that an air of unreality is imparted to the doctrine of notice for the reason that the employers of telegraph companies are not expected to give thought to the sense of the messages. But the learned Judge proceeded to say that the doctrine has prevailed for such a length of time as to be tantamount to a rule of property; that telegraph companies have regulated their rates upon the basis of the continuance of the doctrine; and have omitted precautions that might have been thought necessary to adopt if the hazard of the business was to be indefinitely increased.
Some courts take the view that as speedy communication is the boasted merit of the telegraph, and as the method is far more expensive than that by mail, it is to be presumed that the telegraph would not be resorted to at all if time were not of the essence; and that it is not necessary that the company have notice of the circumstances which call for prompt delivery. This view overlooks the fact that in the bustle of this modern age, and, perhaps, due in part to extensive advertisement by the telegraph companies themselves, many persons resort to the telegraph in the most trivial matters and upon occasions not calling for a greater expedition than that furnished by the public post.
The question of proximate cause and proximate consequence is one usually for the jury, as it is generally a mixed question of law and fact. But where reasonable men will not differ as to the inference to be drawn from undisputed facts, it is the duty of the court to determine the question as a matter of law. Stucker v. American Stores Corp., supra.
It is not alleged that the plaintiff sending the telegram gave to the defendant’s agent any notice whatsoever of the importance of the message or of the probability of damage resulting from the failure to deliver it promptly; and as the plaintiffs may be supposed to have stated their case as strongly as their proofs would permit, it is to be tak
The declaration discloses that there was unreasonable delay in the delivery of the telegram. This is admitted by the demurrer. A cause of action is shown for the recovery of the general damage, the expense of sending the telegram. The demurrer is overruled in so far as it is applicable to the