102 So. 376 | Ala. | 1924
Plaintiff Priester's unrepeated telegraphic message to his correspondent in New Orleans was so changed in transmission that his offer to sell a quantity of pecans at fifty cents a pound was translated into an offer to sell at fifteen cents a pound; the result being that he delivered his pecans, and in return received only fifteen cents a pound. Somewhat more in detail the facts are stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
Since telegraph companies have been given over to the Interstate Commerce Commission (8 U.S. Comp. St. § 8563), rights and liabilities arising out of interstate messages depend upon acts of Congress, the contract between the parties, and common-law principles as declared and enforced by the federal courts. So. Ex. Co. v. Byers,
In every case "negligence, whatever epithet we give it, is failure to bestow the care and skill which the situation demands, and hence it is more strictly accurate, perhaps, to call it simply 'negligence.' And this seems to be the tendency of modern authorities. If they mean more than this, and seek to abolish the distinction of degrees of care, skill, and diligence required in the performance of various duties and the fulfillment of various contracts, we think they go too far; since the requirement of different degrees of care in different situations is too firmly settled and fixed in the law to be ignored or changed."
We think it entirely clear that defendant's regulation and contract in accordance therewith had not the effect to absolve it from all care in the transmission of unrepeated messages, or, in every case, from liability in excess of the toll paid by the sender, and hence it may well be said that the failure to exercise that degree of care which the situation — its regulation included — demanded was gross negligence against which it could not contract, and for all the proximate consequences of which defendant was answerable in damages; at any rate, this is the conclusion to which consideration of the federal decisions has brought us. Postal Telegraph Co. v. Nichols, 159 F. 643, 89 C.C.A. 585, 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 870, 14 Ann. Cas. 369.
Our further judgment is that, in the case presented by the record as disclosed in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, the question whether defendant was answerable for the full damages caused by its alleged negligence was a question for decision by the jury. Primrose v. Western Union, supra, affords the main reliance for the proposition that in the case of an unrepeated message there can be no recovery on account of error in transmission in excess of the toll paid by the sender, that the jury were properly so instructed in the case at bar. In that case the court appears to accept and enforce the rule we have attempted to state. Otherwise, there would have been no occasion for any statement except that the mistake in transmission complained of was a verbal mistake, the consequences of which were provided against by the letter and spirit of the contract. But the court stated at length the reasons for its conclusion, in effect, that the mistake was excusable, that there was no evidence of gross negligence; such reasons being that the message was in cipher, and the error in transmission involved the change of one letter only, a change from "a" to "u," *274 the court observing: "In ordinary handwriting, the likeness between these two letters, and the likelihood of mistaking the one for the other, especially when neither the word nor the context has any meaning to the reader, are familiar to all," after which the court said: "The conclusion is irresistible that, if there was negligence on the part of any of defendant's servants, a jury would not have been warranted in finding that it was more than ordinary negligence," and this further: "It is difficult to see anything unreasonable, or against public policy, in a stipulation that, if the handwriting of a message, delivered to the company for transmission, is obscure, so as to be read with difficulty, or is in cipher, so that the reader has not the usual assistance of the context in ascertaining particular words, the company will not be responsible for its miscarriage, and that none of its agents shall, by attempting to transmit such a message, make the company responsible." Here we have a very different case. The import of the message plainly appeared on its face. There was no room for misunderstanding. And it was correctly transmitted to defendant's office in New Orleans; but in sending it to another station in the same city it was so changed as to cause loss to plaintiff. Though it be assumed that the facts in their totality were without dispute, as was probably the case, it was for the jury to draw the proper inference as to the degree of care exercised by defendant, and whether it was so reprehensible — gross — as to render defendant liable for the full amount of plaintiff's loss, its contract regulation notwithstanding, which is to say that plaintiff's case as stated in counts 6 and 7 should have been submitted to the jury.
Certiorari awarded; judgment reversed; cause remanded to the Court of Appeals for further proceedings in accordance herewith.
All the Justices concur.
Application overruled.