Fererro v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

9 App. D.C. 455 | D.C. | 1896

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

1. Although an earnest effort has been made to sustain the judgment upon the proposition that the receiver of a *467telegraphic message, sent him by one who was not his agent for the purpose, can have no right of action against the carrier of that message for its negligent alteration in the course of transmission, we do not think that could have been the ground upon which the learned trial justice sustained the demurrer.

While it seems to be the prevailing rule in England that the carrier of the message is under no legal obligation to one to whom it has been directed by another, although altered before delivery and acted upon by him to his injury, and that in a case like this the receiver is without remedy, that doctrine has rarely, if ever, met with the approval of the courts of this country.

With apparent unanimity, the courts of our States have upheld the right of the receiver of a telegraphic message to maintain an action on the case, as for a tort committed, whenever he shall have sustained actual damage, without his own fault, by reason of the negligent alteration of the message in the process of its transmission. Gray on Telegraphs, Secs. 71, 73; Bigelow, L. C. Torts, 621 et seq; 2 Sedg. Meas. Damages, Sec. 878; 25 Am. & Eng. Encyc. L. 825, See also a few of the numerous cases: N. Y. Tel. Co. v. Dryburg. 35 Pa. St. 298; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Dubois, 128 Ill. 248; May v. W. U. Tel. Co., 112 Mass. 90; G. C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Levy, 59 Tex. 563; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Adams, 75 Tex. 531; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Allen, 66 Miss. 549; Young v. Tel. Co., 107 N. C. 370.

As will be seen on examination of their decisions, the American courts have not all agreed upon a common reason for the rule so generally adopted. The majority, apparently, have rested it upon the idea that the telegraphic agency is engaged in the exercise of a public franchise, having relation to the commerce of and between the States, and in consequence owes to the sender of the message a double duty, one by reason of the contract, the other by virtue of the general obligation to perform the assumed undertaking; and to the person addressed a single duty, by *468virtue of the same general obligation. Others take the ground that the person addressed may be the beneficiary of the contract made upon its delivery to the transmitter, and that his right of action does not depend upon whether the sender had been constituted his agent for the purpose, but upon the question, who was to be served in the transaction, and who has been damaged. Others, again, assign for reason that the act of the telegraph company in altering the message is. the misrepresentation of a fact which, if reasonably resulting in injury to the receiver, entitles him to an action for his damages.

There may be difficulty, as has been suggested by writers on the subject, in reconciling the several grounds of the doctrine of the American courts with some general and familiar principles that obtain both in the law of contracts and of torts; but that doctrine unquestionably subserves the ends of justice,' thereby furnishing another example, in recent history, of the enlightened spirit of the administration of the common law, wherein is demonstrated both its inclination and capacity to keep pace, in the development of its remedies, with the material progress of the age in the invention and employment of new agencies that work revolutions in pre-existing methods of business. Nor, may we add, have we been able to see any real violation of established principles in a rule of law that meets the necessities of an urgent situation by furnishing a remedy against one who, undertaking, though for another, to deliver a message to a third person, having a right, and who may be reasonably expected to act thereon, so changes the same, by wrongful or negligent act, as to cause that person, when proceeding with the caution of an ordinary business man, to take action in a material matter to his injury and damage.

2. That brings us to the second point of the appellee’s contention, namely, that the message was obseure and unintelligible and therefore could not reasonably convey to the defendant, any information of its commercial importance or *469pecuniary value. If this point be well taken, and the rule applied thereto that the measure of damages for negligent transmission, in actions either of contract or of tort, must be limited to the loss that must naturally and directly result, under the circumstances as they appeared to the defendant, the only liability would be the cost of transmission, and that, not having been paid 'by or for the account of the plaintiff, he could have no right of action.

Where a message is in cipher, or in language evidently intended to be unintelligible to the telegraph company and its operators, the rule by which we must be guided is, that consequential damages are to be excluded from consideration, and the recovery limited to the sum paid for the message. Primrose v. W. U. Tel. Co., 154 U. S. 1, 33. It is true that in the foregoing ease, the contract, which was in evidence, contained a stipulation to the effect that the defendant would not be liable “ in any case ” “ for errors in cipher or obscure messages,” and this was held to be a reasonable restriction. The decision, however, was not based on that ground alone, as will be seen in the opinion of Mr. Justice Gray, who reviewed the cases generally on the question of the measure of damages, irrespective of contract limitations, in cases where the dispatches were in cipher or otherwise unintelligible.

The rule in respect of cipher dispatches has been applied, too, to others which, as delivered, were “unintelligible jargon ” (Hart v. U. S. Cable Co., 86 N. Y. 633); or conveyed no possible suggestion of pecuniary value (Baldwin v. U. S. Tel. Co., 45 N. Y. 744, 749); or were so obscure as to require explanation in important particulars (U. S. Tel. Co. v. Gildersleve, 29 Md. 232). In this case, however, the court took occasion to say: “ While it was proved that the dispatch in question (sell fifty gold) would be understood among brokers to mean fifty thousand dollars of gold, it was not shown, nor was it put to the jury to find, that the appellant’s agents so understood it, or whether they understood it at all.”

*470Conceding the firm establishment of the rule aforesaid, the inquiry remains whether the dispatch in this case comes clearly within its application. Certainly it does not carry the information of its precise meaning and purpose to any one but the person to whom it was directed; but, at the same time, it does convey the idea that a sale of property was in contemplation for delivery and upon prompt acceptance. In the light of all that well-informed people must be presumed to know in respect of the nature, purpose and volume of business that is conducted by means of the telegraph, we cannot say that this dispatch must be regarded as within the said rule, unless, perhaps, in a strictly qualified sense.

It is well known to all persons, as well as the telegraph managers themselves, that innumerable transactions of the greatest importance, relating to bargains, sales and investments of every kind and character known to commerce, are constantly begun and consummated by telegraphic communication between widely separated persons and markets.

It is equally well known also that all reasonable brevity of expression is generally cultivated in telegraphic communications, and that abbreviations and symbols, in accordance with the well known customs of trade, are constantly used without danger of misunderstanding on the part of those familiar with the usages and nomenclature of merchants, brokers and exchanges.

This enormous business has grown up in and rests upon the general belief in the capacity of the telegraph’s operators, and the legal duty of its owners, to transmit, with reasonable ■ celerity and accuracy, all messages accepted for that purpose. Failure of these expectations would tend to diminish the volume of the business, and hence prove detrimental to the telegraph companies themselves through the reduction of their receipts.

In view of these considerations, we think that a different rule ought to be established for cases where the face of the message clearly shows that a business transaction is con*471templated, and that negligence in its transmission may reasonably be attended with pecuniary loss.

This doctrine, we think, is consonant with reason and conducive to justice, besides having the support of weighty authority. U. S. Tel. Co. v. Wenger, 55 Pa. St. 262; Tel. Co. v. Griswold, 37 Ohio St. 301; Blanchard v. W. U. Tel. Co., 68 Ga. 299, 310; Pepper v. Tel. Co., 87 Tenn. 554, 558; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Sheffield, 71 Tex. 570; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Adams, 75 Tex. 531; Squire v. W. U. Tel. Co., 98 Mass. 232; True v. Int. Tel. Co., 60 Me. 9, 22; Tyler v. W. U. Tel. Co., 60 Ill. 421; Postal Tel. Co. v. Lathrop, 131 Ill. 575, 586; Bierhaus v. W. U. Tel. Co., 8 Ind. App. 246, 252; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Lowery, 32 Neb. 734; Rittenhouse v. Ind. Line Tel. Co., 44 N. Y. 263, 265. In the last case cited, the dispatch as delivered read: “If we have any old Southern sell same before board. Buy five Hudson at board. Quote price.” Referring to the contention for exemption from liability founded on its obscurity, Earl, J., said: “If the defendant’s agents did not understand the importance and import of the message, they could have enquired of the plaintiff, and hence, for all the purposes of this action, it must be treated as fully understanding the message, and the consequences which would result from its erroneous transmission.”

The idea expressed is (and it seems reasonable), that if a message be sufficiently plain to inform defendant that negligence in its transmission and delivery would probably be attended with pecuniary loss, the defendant is thereby put upon inquiry, and if it fails to prosecute the same to the attainment of full and exact information the fault is its own, and it should not be permitted to shield itself behind the excuse of ignorance.

Although this point has never been directly passed upon by the Supreme Court of the United States, we think the views above expressed have indirect support in one of its decisions. W. U. Tel. Co. v. Hall, 124 U. S. 444. That case came before the court on a certificate of division of opinion *472between the judges in the circuit court. The dispatch, which was delayed in delivery, read thus: “ Buy ten thousand if you think it safe.” The judges found and certified as facts, that “ ten thousand had reference to barrels of petroleum; and the defendant had no information other than that contained in the dispatch; that between the time when the dispatch ought to have been delivered and the time of its actual delivery, oil rose from $1.17 to $1.35 per barrel, and that if it had been delivered the agent to whom it was addressed would have made the purchase at $1.17, though he thought it was safe to buy at $1.35 per barrel. It was further certified that the evidence did not disclose whether the price of oil had advanced or receded since the day of the delivery of the dispatch. Six questions were certified, of which the court answered but one, the fourth. That was, whether the damages should be limited to the recovery of the cost of the dispatch, or should include the difference in value of the oil at the time it would have been purchased had the message been properly and promptly delivered, and the value at the time of actual delivery.

The court held that the difference in value could not be recovered, because it did not appear that if the oil had been bought upon a prompt delivery of the message, it would have been sold at the advanced price of next day. There was no order to sell, and it is not certain that a resale was contemplated, or would have been made on the next day at the advanced rate. There was nothing to show that subsequent to that date he could have sold at a profit. As was said by Mr. Justice Matthews: “No transaction was in fact made, and there being neither a purchase nor a sale, there was no actual difference between the sums paid and the sums received in consequence of it, which could be set down in a profit and loss account. All that can be said to have been lost was the opportunity of buying on November 9, and of making a profit by selling on the 10th, the sale on that day being purely contingent, without anything in the *473case to show that it was even, probable or intended, much less that it would certainly have taken place.” (p. 454.)

The fifth question was, whether the message was so obscure that defendant should not be held to know that it pertained to a transaction involving loss or damage if the message should not be properly and promptly forwarded. This question was not directly responded to, but it would seem to be included in the answer to the preceding one; because the construction of the message was the first necessary step in the case and had its want of intelligibility been considered a bar to the plaintiff’s claim of loss, he would have fallen there.

The question of the purport of the dispatch is one for the court, of course, in the first instance. If in cipher, or language conveying no reasonable suggestion of its importance or value, the court would necessarily charge the jury that no more than nominal damages could be recovered, because none other could appear, in a legal sense, to have been within the contemplation of the parties in the event of a breach of the duty of transmission. But if the dispatch, as in this case, shows upon its face that it may relate to a matter of value, and that negligence in its transmission may lead to possible pecuniary loss, the court should then, with a proper charge, leave it to the jury to find whether, under all the conditions under which the business is carried on and the surrounding circumstances of the particular case, the defendant either in fact knew, or was reasonably put upon inquiry that, prosecuted with ordinary diligence would have caused it to know, the particular purpose of the message, or to apprehend, as a reasonable consequence of culpable negligence, the accrual of the particular damage claimed as the natural and direct result of that negligence.

3. The last objection to the declaration is founded on the allegations of damages. These are in two specifications; one for the loss of the purchase at the supposed price, including the profits contracted for in the resale of the potatoes, *474and the other for the injury to the plaintiff’s business through the loss of valuable trade and patronage consequent upon the loss of his purchase and the failure to supply his customers.

It follows from what has been said herein above in the discussion of the intelligibility of the dispatch, that the plaintiff ought to recover the actual pecuniary damage that he may have sustained through the failure to obtain the potatoes at the price which he had reason to suppose they had been offered to him.

As he had, in apparent good faith, ordered the potatoes for resale to his customers, and had contracted therefor at a certain and advanced price, there was no such element of uncertainty in the matter as barred the recovery in the case of W. U. Tel. Co. v. Hall, 124 U. S. 144. His loss was of certain ascertainment and apparently the natural and direct result of defendant’s negligence in misquoting the price. His case, therefore, to that extent, seems clearly within the rule laid down in the above case and others. Primrose v. W. U. Tel. Co., 154 U. S. 1, 29. But there are some other facts alleged in the declaration, the effect of which must reduce the claim of damage under this specification within narrower compass. If plaintiff had accepted the potatoes when tendered, at the true price of the offer made him, namely, 55 cents per bushel, his actual loss would have been 10 cents per bushel, and that must be the limit of his recovery.

He cannot recover the profits that he would have made from the resales that he had contracted for, because that loss was the result of his own conduct. Had he accepted the potatoes, as he had the opportunity to do, he'would have realized the profits of the resales, less ten cents per bushel difference in the price of purchase, and for that he would still have had his remedy against the defendant. No excuse is given for his refusal to receive the potatoes other than the flimsy one of his disappointment in the price, and it is difficult to conceive how, under any circumstances, *475defendant could have had any responsible agency therein. In such a case it is a just and reasonable rule that demands the exercise of ordinary care by the party injured to prevent greater injury and increase of damages. True v. Int. Tel. Co., 60 Me. 9, 23; Daugherty v. Am. U. T. Co., 75 Ala. 168, 171; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Mill, 57 Tex. 283, 292; Parsons v. Sutton, 66 N. Y. 92, 98; Marr v. W. U. Tel. Co., 85 Tenn. 529: Scott v. B.& N. O. S. S. Co., 106 Mass. 469, 471; 1 Sedg. Meas. Damages, Sec. 205.

It is contended on plaintiff’s behalf that this being an action in tort, a much more liberal rule for the assessment of damages must obtain than if it were an action for the breach of the contract, as was the case in the Hall and Primrose cases, supra.

Without undertaking to determine the distinctions that apply in the measure of damages in actions of contract on the one hand, and of tort on the other (for it is not called for in this case), we may say that the line of demarcation, plain enough in some instances, is not always of easy ascertainment. Where the tort consists merely of negligence in the performance of a duty, the rule ordinarily is, “that in order to warrant a finding that negligence, or an act not amounting to wanton wrong, is the proximate cause of an injury, it must appear that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the negligent or -wrongful act, and that it ought to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances.” Milwaukee etc., R. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469; Scheffer v. Railroad Co., 105 U. S. 249.

This is, substantially, the oft quoted rule of Hadley v. Baxehdale, in cases of breach of contract that has been so generally adopted by the courts of this country, including the Supreme Court of the United States. Primrose v. W. U. Tel. Co., 154 U. S. 29.

Wherever, then, the action sounds in tort for negligence in the performance of a duty, unattended by circumstances showing evil intent, oppression or wanton disregard of *476another’s rights, and is, as in this case, founded on a contract which raised the duty, though that contract was made with another person, the measure of damages must be regarded as practically the same as if the action were for the breach of the contract under the same circumstances.

Take this case, for example: if the damage had accrued to the senders of the dispatch, instead of to the receiver, it would be unreasonable, as well as most unjust, to say that-their consequential damages must be measured by a stricter rule than applies in the case of the injured receiver, simply because their right of action may be for the breach of the contract while his sounds in tort.

In respect of the second specification of damages, namely, for the loss of business, customers, etc., the court was clearly right in considering all such items as speculative and entirely too remote for consideration.

There may be cases where a breach of contract might be attended with such circumstances of malice and oppression as reasonably to make that contract but an element of the tort or wrong committed, and thus extend the scope of consequential damages in an action appropriate for the purpose. Rich v. N. Y. C. RR., 87 N. Y. 382.

There are cases also of contract where, from their nature, a loss of custom is peculiarly within the contemplation of the parties as a probable result of the breach, as for instance, where one has sold a business with a stipulation not to reengage in the same line within certain limits, and the like. Helphenstine v. Downey, 7 App. D. C. 343; Railroad Co. v. Car Co., 5 App. D. C. 524, 543.

And so, too, there may be cases of tort where by the nature of the duty that ought to have been performed, or of the wrong done, a loss of business would be the natural and proximate result. In such cases, and especially where the act is accompanied with circumstances of aggravation, the law will not always scrutinize with strictness the connection between the wrongful act and the injurious conse*477quences in fixing the limit of responsibility. And when necessary, such injuries may be remedied by what are called exemplary damages which punish the wrongdoer, while, at the same time, compensating the injured party on a liberal scale.

It is plain, however, that in ordinary cases like the one at bar, loss of custom, business, credit, etc., involving, as they must do, the intervention and independent action of third persons, must necessarily be regarded as entirely too remote to be taken into consideration. Any other rule would be unreasonable and fruitful of oppression.

But even if this were not the proper rule to apply in this class of cases, plaintiff could have no right to such damages in this case, because of the conclusion, before announced, that he was under an obligation, on his own part, to prevent any increase of the damages if reasonably within his power; for it is clear that if he had accepted the potatoes he could have supplied his customers and prevented any possible injury to his trade.

For the reasons given, the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings; and it is so ordered. Reversed and remanded.