200 Mich. 136 | Mich. | 1918
(after stating' the facts). The important questions presented on this record are the admissibility of the telephone conversation and its effect. Upon these questions the authorities are not in harmony. This court has already held that a telephone
Courts must take judicial knowledge of modern discoveries and inventions that have become of general and almost universal use in our commercial life. The telephone is no longer a luxury or even a mere convenience, but is a necessity in the conduct of business, especially in our large cities. We cannot close our eyes to the fact that a very large and considerable portion of the business of the country is transacted over it and by its use, nor that mistakes in connections are infrequent and when they occur the party calling is at once informed of the mistake by the party at the other end of the line. We cannot close our eyes to the fact that business transactions of large moment and private affairs daily depend upon the presumption and inference that, by the use of the telephone, parties have conversed with the actual party called, and that the party answering was, in the absence of a mistaken connection, the person called for and was the person whom he represented himself to be. The business man who installs a telephone in his office invites the public to transact business with him by its use, and he extends such invitation with the knowledge that such presumptions and inferences exist in the business world.
We have stated that the authorities are not in harmony, but we are persuaded that those cases, holding such conversations admissible are by far the better
Mr. Wigmore, in his work on Evidence (Vol. 3, § 2155), written in 1904, says:
“In proving the receipt of a communication by telephone, any one of several distinct, principles of evidence may be involved and give rise to distinct objections, whose validity may rest on different considerations.
“(1) B asserts that certain words (assumed to be receivable as admissions or the like) were uttered to him by A over the telephone; how can B testify that the antiphonal speaker was A? This involves genuinely the principle of authentication; and three situations are to be distinguished:
“(a) It is generally conceded that a person may be recognized and identified by his voice, if the hearer is acquainted with the speaker’s voice. Assuming, then, that B is thus acquainted with A’s voice, and that voices can sometimes be distinguished on the telephone, and that B did in this instance distinguish A’s voice, then B’s belief that A was the speaker is founded on*141 sufficient evidence. This much seems to be generally accepted.
“(b) But if there is no recognition of voice, what can supply sufficient evidence to authenticate the antiphonal speaker? In a given case, no doubt, sundry circumstances (including other admissions, and the like) may suffice. But,' apart from special circumstances, can any rule be laid down? No one has ever contended that if the person first calling up is the very one to be identified, his mere purporting to be A is sufficient, any more than the mere purporting signature of A to a letter would be sufficient. The only case practically presented therefore is that of B’s calling up A and being answered by a person purporting to be A. There is much to be said for the circumstantial trustworthiness of mercantile custom, by which, in average experience, the numbers in the telephone-directory do correspond to the stated names and addresses, and the operators do call up the correct number, and the person called does in fact answer. These circumstances suffice for some reliance in mercantile affairs; and it would seem safe enough to treat them in law as at least sufficient evidence to go to_ the jury, just as testimony based on prices-current is received. This view has received some judicial support.
“(c) An additional element enters where the antiphonal speaker does not purport to be a particular person, but merely some member of the office-staff authorized to make a contract or an admission. Here the question is. whether there is sufficient evidence that he was really a person acting in the opponent’s office and authorized for such transactions, or was a mere intruder, or bystander, or unauthorized clerk. On the principle above suggested (though not with the same force) mercantile experience may well suffice, by which customarily the person who is in fact' summoned to the telephone and proceeds, to conduct the negotiation is prima facie a person authorized to do so, precisely as a pérson receiving money at the cashier’s desk is presumably authorized to do so. Upon this point there is little judicial inclination to take the liberal view.
“In any event, particular additional circumstances may always suffice to complete the gap.”
“We are of the opinion, however, that there was sufficient circumstantial evidence to make a prima facie case of identity and authority.”
The court then proceeds to discuss the question, and, after considering it fully, announces the following rule:
“For these reasons we conclude that when it appeared that plaintiff and defendant each maintained a business office in the same city, that each had a telephone in such office connecting with the same city telephone system, with their respective names and numbers in the regular telephone directory, that plaintiff called on the operator at the central station, in the usual way, for a connection with defendant’s office, that a connection was thereupon made at the central station with some line, apparently in the usual manner, that some one responded at the other end of the line, and, being asked answered that the end was the office of the Western Union Telegraph Company, there was sufficient prima facie proof that the person answering was the agent of the defendant at its said office, employed there by it to receive for it such communications as should come in that manner. All of*143 these conditions were shown to exist upon the trial of this case, either by direct evidence or by fair and reasonable inference, or as matters of judicial knowledge.”
After calling attention to the authorities on the question, the court says:
“The general rule, as gathered from the foregoing decisions, is that where it is shown that the witness called up the other party at his place of business, through the central station with which both were connected, and received a response as in the usual course of business over the telephone, this is sufficient 2?rma facie identification of the speaker at the other end of the line as the party called, or his authorized agent, and that, upon such proof, the ensuing conversation, if otherwise admissible, may be testified to by the witness. It is proper to add that the weight of such evidence depends largely upon the circumstances of each case and is always a question for the trial court or jury.”
The supreme court of Illinois has also considered this question since the publication of Mr. Wigmore’s work on Evidence, in the case of Godair v. National Bank, 225 Ill. 572. In this case a witness who was formerly cashier of the bank was permitted to testify that he called up the Godair Commission Company by telephone and asked for Mr. Godair, but was informed that he was out; later the commission company called up the bank and said the party wanted by the bank was now in, and he thereupon had the conversation in which he inquired if drafts of one Moreland upon the Godair Commission Company would be paid. The party he talked with said they would. The witness did not know Mr. Godair, did not recognize his voice, and could not say with whom he talked. It was held that the testimony was admissible and its weight was for the jury.
Among the cases to the same effect, which have been decided since the publication of Mr. Wigmore’s
In the case of Reed v. Railway Co., 72 Iowa, 166, the court, in considering an objection to a telephone communication, said:
“It is claimed that the testimony as to the communication by telephone should have been excluded, because it was with some unknown person, and ought not to bind the defendant. It appears that the tele-, phone was placed in the yards for the very purpose of communicating with the office. It was the means of communication provided by the defendant; and, in the absence of any testimony showing that some officious intruder had taken up quarters in the office, and assumed to transact the business of the company, it ought to be presumed that the communication was made with one' having authority to give directions as to the matter inquired about. * * *”
In Wolfe v. Railway Co., 97 Mo. 473, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Barclay, said:
“A question arose incidentally at the trial upon the admission in evidence of a conversation held through the telephone between some one at the instrument in plaintiffs’ private office and the witness. It was adr mitted, though the witness did not identify the voice of the speaker as that of either of the plaintiffs' or their clerk. The courts, of justice do not ignore the great improvement in the means of intercommunication which the telephone has made. Its nature, operation and ordinary uses are facts of general scientific knowledge, of which the courts will take judicial notice as part of public contemporary history. When a person places himself in connection with the telephone system through an instrument in his office, he thereby invites communication, in relation to his busi*145 ness, through that channel. Conversations so held are as admissible in evidence as personal interviews by a. customer with an unknown clerk in charge of an ordinary shop would be in relation to the business there carried on. The fact that the voice at the telephone was not identified does not render the conversation inadmissible. The ruling here announced is intended to determine merely the admissibility of such conversations in such circumstances, but not the effect of such evidence after its admission. It may be entitled, in each instance, to much, or little weight in the estimation of the triers of fact, according to their views of its credibility, and of the other testimony in support, or in contradiction of it.”
In the case of Western Union Tel. Co. v. Rowell, 153 Ala. 295, the plaintiff testified to calling the telegraph company by telephone and having a conversation with the person who answered the phone after the connection was made. The evidence elicited by the conversation over the telephone tended to show that the telegraph company was lacking in diligence in the delivery of the message. It was held that the evidence was admissible and its weight was for the jury.
See, also, the following cases: Globe Printing Co. v. Stahl, 23 Mo. App. 451; Rock Island, etc., R. Co. v. Potter, 36 Ill. App. 590; Rogers Grain Co. v. Tanton, 136 Ill. App. 533; Guest v. Railroad Co., 77 Mo. App. 258; Oskamp v. Gadsden, 35 Neb. 7; Kansas City Star Pub. Co. v. Warehouse Co., 123 Mo. App. 13.
In the instant case it is not necessary that we go as far as the rule which has been adopted in some of the cited cases goes; it is sufficient that we hold and we do hold, that where both parties are subscribers to the same telephone exchange and one party, using the telephone directory to ascertain the number of the other party, calls for such other party, and is connected by central with such other party, and a conversation ensues in which the party called re
The testimony shows that bills, of defendant bore the name of Mr. Paige as president of the company. This court has held that agency may be inferred from the fact that circulars and letter-heads of the defendant described one as its. agent. Randall v. J. A. Fay & Egan Co., 158 Mich. 630. See, also, Austrian & Co. v. Springer, 94 Mich. 343. There was no error in receiving the telephone conversation in evidence or in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant.
The judgment is affirmed.