Allen v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

39 S.E.2d 257, 209 S.C. 157, 167 A.L.R. 1392, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 3, 1946
Docket15870
StatusPublished

This text of 39 S.E.2d 257 (Allen v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 39 S.E.2d 257, 209 S.C. 157, 167 A.L.R. 1392, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 15 (S.C. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Associate Justice Oxner

delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court.

This is an action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained through error in the transmission of a cablegram addressed to respondent. The trial resulted in a verdict for respondent in the sum of $500.00. The sole question for determination is whether the Court below erred in refusing appellant’s motion for a directed verdict upon the ground that there was no proof showing that respondent was damaged as a result of appellant’s breach of duty in failing to correctly transmit the message mentioned.

Charles R. Allen, the respondent, is an importer and distributor of food products with his principal place of business in the city of Charleston, South Carolina. During 1943, he did a very large business in canned pineapple which he purchased from Cuba and resold to wholesalers in the United States. During that year he imported from Cuba about 80,000 cases of canned pineapple which was approximately 10% of the total Cuban pineapple handled on the American market. At that time, owing to war conditions, no pineapple was being imported from Hawaii and the Philippines, the only other sources of supply.

On October 2, 1943, respondent received a cablegram from the brokerage firm of Tous Astorqui, of Havana, Cuba, offering him 2,000 cases of a certain grade of canned pineapple known as “Tens Topping” at $8.75 per case. Respondent, who was the only witness in the case, testified that upon receipt of this message he conferred with the men in his office, communicated by telephone with the largest buy *160 ers, and during the day sold 2,000 cases of this grade of pineapple to Sexton & Company, a Chicago firm, at $10.50 per case. Rater in the day he cabled Tous Astorqui an acceptance of the offer made by that firm.

About a week later, respondent received by mail from Tous Astorqui a written contract covering the purchase which he had made, in which the price was stated to be $9.75 per case. He immediately telephoned the' seller and called attention to the discrepancy between the price stated in the cablegram and that contained in the contract and it then developed that the message as delivered to appellant in Havana quoted the price of this pineapple at $9.75 per case, or a dollar a case above that quoted in the cablegram as delivered to respondent.’ Respondent stated that at this time the supply of pineapple on the market was less than usual, that “the important thing was to-get the merchandise”, and that being unable to purchase this pineapple elsewhere for less than $9.75 per case, he paid that price for the 2,000 cases which he had bought.

Respondent further testified that several days prior to the receipt of the telegram mentioned, he had purchased canned pineapple at $8.75 per case; that the ceiling price at which he could sell under the Government regulations was $11.25 per case; that he did not undertake to secure the ceiling price, but always followed the policy of selling at a “mark up” of ten to twelve per cent.; that in selling the 2,000 cases to the Chicago firm on October 2nd, he thought he was re-offering the pineapple at approximately a twelve per cent, “mark up”; that he definitely would not have sold this pineapple at $10.50 per case if he had known that it was costing him $9.75 per case; that in addition to the invoice price at which he purchased, he had to pay insurance, duty, and other charges; that after paying these charges on the 2,000 cases bought and sold on October 2nd, he only realized a profit, without making any allowance for overhead, of $170-.00 on the entire transaction, which was considerably less than that always received; and that the price at which he *161 sold the Chicago firm was not the best he could have se-' cured, but he “tried to stand within the ten to twelve profit range”.

There was offered in evidence a “daily sales book” in which respondent kept a daily record of sales and purchases. Some of the entries in this record, as well as certain oral testimony of respondent which appellant claims was stricken out by the trial Judge, will be later referred to.

Appellant’s counsel state that “no out-of-pocket loss resulted from the transaction”. But it is now well estabished that loss of profits, when not too uncertain or speculative and where “the circumstances or the terms of the message were such as to impart notice that such loss might result from the telegraph company’s default”, may be recovered “if the loss was the proximate consequence of the company’s negligent act, and was, or should have been, contemplated as probable or likely to follow the negligence”. 52 Am. Jur., page 162, section 133. As observed by Mr. Justice Woods in Bowie v. Telegraph Co., 78 S. C., 424, 59 S. E., 65, “the parties are entitled to all legitimate benefits of the contract, including profits”.

In Hays v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 70 S. C., 16, 48 S. E., 608, 67 L. R. A., 481, 106 Am. St. Reports 731, the plaintiffs, dealers in horses and mules, received a telegram in which mules of a certain size were erroneously quoted at $107.50 each when the correct quotation was $117.50. Plaintiffs testified that on the faith of the telegram, they were induced to buy twenty-four mules of the size, stated for which they had to pay $117.50, when but for the mistake in the telegram, they would not have purchased mules of this size, but could, and would, have purchased smaller mules at a price about $10.00 lower, which would have answered the same purpose in the conduct of their business and which could have been resold for as much as the larger mules. The Court there said: “Whether we regard the effect on the plaintiffs as a loss of profit, or the fruitless *162 expenditure of money on the' faith of the telegram, the result is the same. The difference in the price paid and the price stated in the telegram as delivered was, under the facts of this case, the true measure of damages”. The Court upheld a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $240.00.

In Bowie v. Western Union Telegraph Co., supra. (78 S. C., 424, 59 S. E., 65), there was delivered to the plaintiff, a wholesale grocer and commission merchant, a telegram offering flour for sale at $4.30 a barrel. In reliance upon the message, plaintiff purchased from the sender of the telegram 300 barrels. On the faith of his trade, plaintiff immediately resold the flour at $4.40, which represented a profit of ten cents per barrel on the price stated in the telegram as delivered. When the flour arrived, the plaintiff found that the seller had drawn a draft, with the bill of lading attached, in which the price was computed at $4.60 a barrel, instead of $4.30 as stated in the telegram received. It then appeared that the price quoted in the telegram was changed in transmission from $4.60 to $4.30. The plaintiff paid the draft and delivered the flour on his contracts of sale. There was no evidence that the plaintiff could have obtained for delivery on his contracts flour at a price less than the sum called for by the draft which he was obliged to pay in order to obtain the flour. The plaintiff claimed that he had been misled and damaged $90.00 by reason of the defendant’s negligence in changing the offer in transmission.

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Related

Bowie v. Western Union Tel. Co.
59 S.E. 65 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
Sons v. Western Union Tel. Co.
71 S.E. 783 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1911)
Hays v. Western Union Tel. Co.
48 S.E. 608 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1904)
Hind v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
278 F. 730 (Ninth Circuit, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.E.2d 257, 209 S.C. 157, 167 A.L.R. 1392, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-western-union-telegraph-co-sc-1946.