Baldwin v. United States Telegraph Co.

54 Barb. 505, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 247
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 Barb. 505 (Baldwin v. United States Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. United States Telegraph Co., 54 Barb. 505, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 247 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

[512]*512By the Court,

Potter, J.

The questions to be decided,here do not call for an adjudication upon the merits, or upon the rule of damages, if the plaintiffs’ pleading shall be sustained; but the.questions are strictly such as shall test the pleadings we have specified in the -statement of the case; and, ' ' .

First. As to the sixth answer of the defendants. In testing .this as a pleading, we may take into consideration that it is made the duty of the defendants by statute (Sess. Laws of 1855, ch. 559) to transmit the plaintiffs’ message, which they received from “ The United States Branch Telegraph Company,” and which was given to the latter company by the plaintiffs, at Ogdensburgh, on ¡November 16, 1864. Whether the injury complained of arose from that implied contract which the law imposes upon every one who undertakes for another, or by .virtue of the special contract which the defendants set up in the sixth answer, the defendants were in duty bound to send it, and in transmitting it were bound to exercise a degree of care and skill, and a reasonable dispatch in performing the duty or obligation they so, undertook, and for which, by legal implication, they received from the plaintiffs all the consideration they demanded for the performance of such undertaking.. This is to be implied from the undisputed facts that about the sum of two dollars was paid by the plaintiffs •at the time, in advance, to secure the undertaking, and that the defendants actually undertook its performance for some consideration, as is also to be implied from the fact of receiving such message from their connecting line, the United States Branch Telegraph Company, and from the duty, required by the statute. If, however, the undertaking of the defendants is put upon their alleged contract, set up in this sixth answer, it is found that /it contains a pledge or promise, on their part, of good faith and due diligence in the performance of their duty. This answer sets up a defense that the agreement made by the plain[513]*513tiffs with the United States Branch Company was the contract between the parties. Then, so far as this answer is concerned, this agreement is the contract by which the defendants entered upon its performance. By this agreement the defendants exempt themselves from liability on account of delays, errors or remissness on the part of connecting lines.

Uo act, however, or omission, or delay, error or remissness off any connecting line, is complained of by the plaintiffs. The complaint is against the defendants’ own line. This part of the contract, therefore, and the exemption stated, does not apply to their defense. The remaining part of this alleged contract is the ground of their defense, to wit, “that they only guaranty entire correctness when messages are repeated back from the place to which they are sent; for which repetition a small charge will be made.”

Assuming that the duty imposed by statute demanded of the defendants that they should transmit this message, and that they have received their due share of the compensation paid by the plaintiffs for the performance of the duty, it follows, logically, that there is a promise on their part, implied, at least, from their duty td the plaintiffs, and from their receipt of the consideration, that they will perform it; and this promise, being made for the benefit of the plaintiffs, enures to them to the same effect as a promise made directly to them, and they can maintain an action for its breach. Under the provisions of the statute making it the duty of connecting lines to receive and transmit messages received from other lines, connected with the fact that the defendants did receive the plaintiffs’ message, it is to be implied in law, and the courts may assume it to be true, that arrangements have been made between the connecting lines, so that the compensation agreed upon and received at the office which receives the message, is the full compensation for all the lines over which it is [514]*514sent; and that, as between themselves, the proportion of consideration received or to be received by each line is understood and regulated between themselves; and this creates an undertaking or engagement on the part of each company with the sender of the message, that it shall be transmitted over their line, and delivered according to the contract made at the office at which the message Was received; and it is also implied in law that each separate line so connecting and acting in concert has constituted the other—that is, the line which receives the message— its agent for making contracts over the lines of both.

Assuming the truth of this sixth answer, what, then, is the contract between the parties which we are now considering ?

It was to send this message for a consideration then-agreed upon between the parties, without a request to have the message repeated back, which repetition, if requested, would have called for a still larger compensation, and which larger compensation would have secured to the plaintiffs the guarantee of the defendants, of the entire correctness.

The contract, then, was that the defendants would not be liable -for delay, error or remissness. These being the only particulars specified in the terms and conditions óf the special contract, they cannot claim exemption or release from any which by their contract they were bound to perform, other than such as are expressly specified. They cannot, in law, receive the consideration and be bound in duty, and then neglect or refuse to perform the duty at all. 'The complaint charges, not any delay, error or remissness, but that the message was never transmitted at all by the defendants to Bouseville, nor delivered to the said Eric Darling, who it is charged was then, and for a long time afterwards, at the place where the message was directed by the plaintiffs. This is denied by the sixth answer, which for this purpose stands alone." An [515]*515entire neglect and refusal to perform this contract, hy the defendants,-does not bring them within the excepted terms. “Delay” in sending and delivering a message, implies that it was or would be sent at some time, but not sent or delivered promptly. “Error” in sending or delivering a message, implies sending or delivering a wrong message, or to the wrong place or person. “ Eémissness” also implies a sending or delivering, but in a tardy, negligent or careless manner. It is neither delay, error nor remissness that is charged, but the entire omission or refusal to send or deliver the message, and this is admitted; It is true that it is stated in the complaint that the message was correctly transmitted to the defendants, and was then put upon their lines. The meaning of putting it upon their lines is not explained by either pleading, and whether or not it was sent on the wires we are not informed; but as this expression is immediately followed by the positive allegation that it was never transmitted, we cannot assume that it was, or that these two allegations, unexplained, are in conflict, but they must be construed to be in harmony. Then, in legal view, it comes to this: the defendants were employed and paid to transmit a message for the plaintiffs. This undertaking it was the defendants’ duty to perform. They agreed to perform it; they failed to perform, and are guilty of a bre.ach.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Barb. 505, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-united-states-telegraph-co-nysupct-1867.