113 Ga. 1017 | Ga. | 1901
In November, 1898, Waxelbaum & Company, a firm ■doing business in Macon, Ga., telegraphed to Kennard & Company, ■of Chicago, to ascertain the price of eggs. In reply they received the following telegram: “ Telegram received market higher advancing fifteen and half lowest to-day quick telegram.” It seems to be conceded that the original message as delivered for transmission to the Western Union Telegraph Company (the plaintiff in error) by Kennard & Company in Chicago read “sixteen and half,” instead ■of “ fifteen and half,” and that an error was made by some employee ■of the telegraph company in the transmission of the message. On the faith of the telegram as received by them, Waxelbaum & Company ordered a large shipment of eggs from Kennard & Company, .■and when they came' discovered for the first time that the price was sixteen and a half cents per dozen. They took the eggs, how
Judgment reversed.