Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

4 Daly 527
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Daly 527 (Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 4 Daly 527 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Daly, Ch. J.

—The statute makes it obligatory upon any telegraph company doing business in this State to receive dispatches from other telegraph lines' or associations, which are from or for any individual, upon the payment to said company •of its usual charges, and it requires the company to transmit the dispatch with impartiality and good faith, exempting it, however, from any obligation to receive or transmit dispatches •from or for any company owning a line of telegraph parallel "with, or doing business in competition with, the line over which the dispatch is required to be sent (3 Edmund’s N. Y. Statutes at Large, p. 722, § 11).

The defendants insist that they were under no obligation to receive and transmit the dispatches sent to them by the plaintiffs, upon the ground that the plaintiffs are the owners of a line coming within the meaning of this last provision of the statute. The plaintiffs are owners of parallel and competing lines with the telegraph line of the defendants between Virginia city, Nevada, and the city of New York, and Cleveland, Ohio, and the city of New York—these two western cities being the points from which the plaintiffs transmitted the messages which the defendants refused to receive from them at New York for transmission to Europe. The defendants claim, also, that the plaintiffs are the owners of a competing line from New York to Boston ; but this the plaintiffs deny, and I shall, therefore, treat this as disproved.

The defendants are the owners of a line from the city of New York to Duxbury, in Massachusetts, and the owners in part and lessees in part of lines from the said city to Plaister •Cove, in Nova Scotia, from which places said lines connect [531]*531with certain foreign companies, making a chain of telegraphic connection between this country and Europe. They admit that -over these lines they receive dispatches for Europe, which they deliver, at their termini, to the connecting European lines. With the lines which the defendants operate between the city of New York and their termini in Massachusetts, and at Plaister Cove, Nova Scotia, the plaintiffs have no parallel or competing lines, And it is over these lines that the plaintiffs required the dispatches to be sent, which the defendants refused to receive.

The defendants insist that, because the plaintiffs are owners of lines parallel to and competing with their lines, as far as the city of New York, that they, the defendants, are not obliged to take the messages which the plaintiffs send to them in New York, and transmit them over the lines which the defendants operate from New York to Plaister Cove, in Nova Scotia, or to JDuxbury. They claim that they are excused from so doing by the statute, which, they insist, means a line competing with them on any part of the route over which a message is sent. One of the messages sent by the plaintiffs was transmitted by the plaintiffs from Nevada to New York, its ultimate destination being Montenegro, in Europe, and the ground taken by the defendants is, that as the plaintiffs were a competing line in the transmission of this message from Nevada to New York, the defendants were, by the statute, excused from taking it at New York, and sending it over their line on the way to its destination. No such construction as this is warranted by the statute. There is no difficulty in the interpretation of its meaning. It says, “ the line over which the dispatch is required to be sent,” and in this case that line was either the one extending from New York to Duxbury, or the one from New York to Plaister Cove—routes operated exclusively by the defendants. So far as respects the defendants, it was not the sender of the dispatch, but the plaintiffs, by whom it had been transmitted to New York, that required the defendants to transmit it further, and the route over which the plaintiffs required it to be sent was one where they had no parallel or competing lines. As a telegraph company, they had the right, by statute, to require the defendants to réceive and transmit a dispatch, unless they were themselves the owners of parallel or compet[532]*532ing lines on the route over which'they required it to be sent, and this was not the case.

The groupd thus disposed of, at least so far as this motion is concerned, was taken upon the argument; but it was not the ground upon which the defendants refused to receive the-dispatches when presented to. them. They refused to receive any messages from the plaintiffs for transmission along their line, unless the plaintiffs would produce in each case a power of attorney from the sender of each message, authorizing the defendants to receive and transmit it./This was imposing what was practically impossible in the due and speedy transmission by the plaintiffs of a telegraphic dispatch which was to go to-Europe; for to carry out such a regulation as this, the dispatch, when received at New York, would have to be kept there until the plaintiffs could in each case receive the power of attorney by mail. If the defendants could do this, they could wholly defeat the statute, which' has declared that they must receive and transmit a dispatch from another telegraph company, which is from or to an individual, unless in the case specially excepted; for the defendants being the owners of" competing lines over a large breadth of this continent, no other company could transmit a message from New York for Europe, by routes also used by the defendants, without a delay in each case at New York, which would compel the company to abandon the business, and leave the whole of it to the defendants. It is not necessary to consider how the public might be affected by thus cutting off all competition in the transmission of European messages, so far as their transit in the United States is involved. It is sufficient that a statute of this State has made it obligatory upon any company doing business here, to receive and transmit dispatches from and of other companies, and that the condition which the defendants wish to add to this statutory regulation would render it wholly nugatory.

The defendants state in their affidavit that before the 9th of August, 1871, the day when they refused to receive the messages, they had adopted a regulation which was then in force. It is in these words: Whenever messages which have come over the line of any other telegraph company are offered by such company for transmission, the person presenting the [533]*533message must be required to paste it or write it on one of the Ho. 2 blanks of this company, under the printed conditions, and sign his name for the company he represents under the line, ‘ Send the following message subject to the above terms, which are agreed to.’” This, it would seem from the dispatches which are annexed to the complaint, the plaintiffs ■substantially complied with, for each dispatch is signed, in the manner provided for, by the managing agent of the plaintiffs •as their representative.

The defendants aver, on information and belief, that they refused these dispatches because they had not written upon them the names of the places from which each dispatch was ..sent, which statement the plaintiffs, upon information and belief, deny; and as the • defendants have not, after this denial, which is quite as good as the defendants’ assertion, furnished any positive evidence of what occurred at the time when the two messages were presented and refused, this statement will be treated as not established.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Elwood v. . the Western Union Telegraph Co.
45 N.Y. 549 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
De Rutte v. New York, Albany & Buffalo Electric Magnetic Telegraph Co.
1 Daly 547 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1866)
State v. Hartford & New Haven Railroad
29 Conn. 538 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1861)
Vincent v. Chicago & Alton Railroad
49 Ill. 33 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Daly 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-pacific-telegraph-co-v-western-union-telegraph-co-nyctcompl-1873.