131 Ga. 31 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the facts.)
This court has held that where one requests another to make an offer for the sale of an article, and the offer is made by telegraph, and the telegram as delivered to the addressee is materially different from the telegram delivered for transmission, the sender is bound by the terms of the proposal as contained in the telegram delivered to the addressee, and may recover from the telegraph company any damages which he has sustained in fulfilling a contract resulting from an acceptance of such proposal. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Shotter, 71 Ga. 760; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Flint River Lumber Co., 114 Ga. 576 (40 S. E. 815, 88 Am. St. R. 36). Nothing is said in either of these cases tending to deny the liability of a telegraph company in a tort action for a breach of duty to either the sender or the sendee of a message. It is not infrequently the case that a party has an election of remedies. An apposite illustration may be given in the ease of a shipper of goods against a carrier for their loss. The shipper may at his election sue the carrier in assumpsit for the breach of the contract of carriage, or he may sue in tort for the breach of public duty in failing to carry his goods. It does not, follow, because in the transmission of the message the telegraph company may be the agent of the sender, that it'is relieved of its public duty to transmit the message with due care and promptness. These decisions do not limit the telegraph company’s liability to damages caused solely by breach of contract. It may be contended on the authority of these eases that when the plaintiffs bought the cotton of Ware and Leland, the sender of the message could not repudiate the terms of the message as actually delivered to the plaintiffs, and that the contract for the purchase of the cotton was binding on the sender, and if.any one is hurt by the mistake in the telegram it is the sender. The addressee in the case at bar was also the agent of the sender, and acted on a message erroneously transmitted by the telegraph company. The plaintiffs are bound by their contract with Ware and Leland, and Ware and Leland have the right to hold the plaintiffs to its terms. If the sender of the
The case of Brooke v. Western Union Tel. Co., 119 Ga. 694 (46 S. E. 826), is not altogether similar to the present case on its facts. The decision was not participated in by the entire court; and in so far as it denies* a right of action ex delicto to an addressee of a telegram against a telegraph company for damages proximately caused by an error in transmission, it is disapproved.
The measure of damages was not argued, and we forbear discussion for that reason. We think the petition stated a cause of action, and that the court erred in dismissing it on demurrer.
Judgment reversed.