98 A. 341 | Conn. | 1916
The assignments of error present two questions of law: whether the action is barred by General Statutes, § 1119, as amended by chapter 149 of the Public Acts of 1903, p. 114, and whether plaintiff, being the receiver of the telegram and not the sender, is entitled to sue the defendant for injuries due to its negligence in failing to correctly transmit the order for one barrel of lobsters.
Chapter 149 of the Public Acts of 1903 provides that "no action to recover damages for injury to the person, or for an injury to personal property caused by negligence, shall be brought but within one year from the date of the injury or neglect complained of." As pointed out in Miner v. McNamara,
The defendant's claim, that it is not in any event liable to the receiver of a telegram for damages caused by its negligence in failing to correctly transmit the order, is based on the theory that a telegraph company is the agent of the sender of the message, and not of the receiver; or, as some of the cases hold, the agent of that party who first selects the telegraph as a means of completing a proposed contract.
No doubt the telegraph company is the agent of the sender to the extent of its actual authority, to wit, to transmit and deliver the message in the form in which it is received for transmission. But some of the cases relied on by the defendant go further and hold that the receiver of the message, not being the party who first selected that means of communication, has a right to rely upon the apparent authority of the telegraph company to submit a proposed contract in the form in which it is actually delivered, so that when the receiver accepts and fills an erroneously transmitted order for merchandise, the sender is bound to a contract which he never proposed. The result is that the receiver must first enforce the contract or recover damages for its nonperformance, and then the sender may recover from *38
the telegraph company for the loss caused by its negligence.Sherrerd v. Western Union Tel. Co.,
Confining our decision to the case actually presented, we hold that when a telegraph company accepts for transmission an order for merchandise which on its face *39 calls upon the receiver to accept or reject a proposed contract, it owes to the receiver as well as to the sender the duty of exercising reasonable care to deliver it in the form in which it was accepted for transmission.
The responsibility to the receiver may be based either upon the duty, owed to every member of the public directly interested, to exercise reasonable care in conducting a business so largely affected with a public interest, or upon the obligation arising from the general invitation to the public to rely upon the telegraph as a means of communication. Bigelow on Torts (8th Ed.) p. 130; 3 Sedgwick on Damages (9th Ed.) § 878;Herron v. Western Union Tel. Co.,
The defendant also claims that as the telegram was delivered to, and acted upon by, the plaintiff, in the State of Maine, the legal effect of that transaction is to be determined by the law of Maine. We need not, however, decide whether the plaintiff might have enforced against Schoenberger and Sons in the courts of Connecticut a contract to take and pay for ten barrels of lobsters. Even if that were conceded, it would still be quite clear that the plaintiff could also enforce against the defendant in the Connecticut courts the obligation which was incurred in Connecticut by the defendant's acceptance for transmission of a message which, on its face, called upon the plaintiff to accept or reject a proposed contract.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.