1. The demurrers to defendant’s second and third pleas were properly sustained. The second professes to he a plea in bar, but really, it is one in mitigation of damages. It does not go to all, but to a part of the damages claimed, and should have been so pleaded. If plaintiff was, under any circumstances, under any legal obligation to defendant to attempt to partially recoup his loss in consequence of defendant’s failure to comply with its contract in sending the message, it is not averred in said plea that plaintiff knew or was informed that he could thus protect himself. But, plaintiff was not bound to anticipate that defendant would not comply with its contract and he owed defendant no such duty as that averred in the 2d plea, arising out of such supposed obligation. Nor did plaintiff owe the defendant the duty, as averred in the third plea, to exercise diligence to ascertain by inquiry from defendant or otherwise, that the Birmingham Exchange Company, the sendee of the message, had received his telegram corrctly and had purchased the cotton as instructed by him. This he might have done for his own satisfaction, but not as a duty he owed defendant. — W. U. Tel. Co. v. Crawford, 110 Ala. 460, 467; Daughtery v. A. U. Tel. Co., 89 Ala. 191; W. U. T. Co. v. Stephens, 16 S. W. Rep. 1095; 25 Am. & Eng. Encyc. Law, 809.
2. It may be stated generally as a correct rule, that a telegraph company, in accepting a message for transmission, is under obligation by its contract with the sender of the message, to transmit it correctly and without delay, and for a failure to do so, is liable to the sender for the damages, of which its negligence was the proximate cause. It is also well settled, that such a company is not, like a common carrier, an insurer against all accidents.- — 25 Am. & Eng. .Encyc. of Law, 778, and authorities cited; Thompson on Law of Electricity, § 139.
The demurrer to the 4th plea was properly sustained.
3. Issue was joined in the case on the plea of the general issue, and on the 5th and 6th pleas; the 5th setting up that the contract sued on Avas founded on a gambling consideration, and the 6th, that the contract sought to be made by the plaintiff with the Birmingham Exchange
The defendant afterwards moved the court for a new trial, which was overruled. The cause is here on bill of exceptions reserved on the trial of that motion. It is based on the ground that the attorneys for the defendant were absent by alleged unavoidable delay in consequence of being engaged in the trial of two causes in Birmingham, one in the Federal and the other in the city court in that city, and on the ground that plaintiff ought not to be allowed to recover, on account of the gaming transaction in which he was engaged in sending his messages.
In the first place, we may dispose of the latter question by stating, that the messages sent by plaintiff to his correspondent in Birmingham, over defendant’s line, do not conclusively reveal an intention on the part of plaintiff to deal in what are termed “futures.” Such contracts, as the authorities generally concur in holding, are valid, though the vendor neither has the goods in hand, nor has contracted for the purchase of them, and has no expectation of acquiring them otherwise than by their purchase at some date before the day of delivery. But if it is apparent that no purchase and delivery were intended, but that the transaction should be closed up on the basis of the market value of the goods at the date of delivery, the losing party paying the other the difference, it is a gambling transaction, it is contrary to public-policy and void at common law, in the absence of a statute even denouncing it as such. — Hawley v. Bibb, 69 Ala. 52; Lee v. Boyd, 86 Ala. 283. The demurrers to the 5th and 6th pleas were withdrawn, and issue taken on them. It may be, in a suit of this character, they were subject to demurrer; but this question is not before us, and we, therefore, do not decide it.
It is not shown that defendant’s counsel attempted to have either of their cases in the city or Federal Court laid over, in order that one of them might go to the Decatur court to try this cause, which had been previously set by their consent on the 3d of November. Reasons are ' stated why one of the counsel engaged in the city court case was needed to try that cause, and another to try the cause in the Federal court, but no facts are shown why it was necessary that the third one should remain in Bir
Affirmed.