Barrett v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

42 Mo. App. 542, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 418
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 42 Mo. App. 542 (Barrett v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 42 Mo. App. 542, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 418 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

‘Biggs, J.

This is an action against the telegraph company for damages for the failure to transmit or deliver the following message, delivered to the defendant’s agent at Denison, Texas, on the night of the eighteenth of October, 1888 :

“To Holt, Payne & Co., Union Stock-Yards, St. Louis, Mo.:
“Have your bank to notify First National Bank of Denison to pay draft for seven hundred and fifty-six dollars Friday ; will ship three loads.
“ (Signed) E. P. Barrett.”

[544]*544This message was written by the plaintiff on one of the defendant’s blanks ; among the printed conditions and stipulations on which was the following: “And that no claim for damages shall be valid, unless presented in writing within thirty days after sending the messageThe allegation of negligence in the petition was “that the defendant, unmindful of its duty and of its obligation to plaintiff, negligently and carelessly failed either to transmit or to deliver said message to said Holt, Payne & Co.” In the statement of the damages suffered by the plaintiff on account of the failure to send the message, it was averred that the plaintiff was engaged in the business of buying cattle in the state of Texas for shipment to the St. Louis market; that, on the fifteenth day of October, 1888, he had bought one hundred and forty-six head, which were to be delivered to him at Sherman, Texas, in time for shipment on the twentieth of the month ; that he paid part of the purchase money for the cattle, and expected to finish paying for them out of the proceeds of the draft mentioned in the telegram ; that, on account of the failure to send the message, the Texas bank refused to cash his draft on Holt, Payne & Co.; and that, by reason of this, the plaintiff was unable to pay for and ship the cattle until the twenty-third day of October. AJjter alleging several items of damage, such as feeding, shrinkage, etc., the petition contained this averment: “ That, but for the said negligence and carelessness of the defendant, plaintiff could and would have sold said cattle in St. Louis, on, to-wit, the morning of Wednesday, October 24, for two and forty-hundredths ($2.40) dollars, and two and twenty-five-hundredths ($2.25) dollars per one hundred pounds; that said cattle were sold as soon as they arrived in St. Louis, to-wit, on Monday of the following week, October 29, at one and seventy-hundredths dollars and two ($2) dollars, which was the highest obtainable market price at that time ; whereby plaintiff suffered great additional loss in the sum of, [545]*545to-wit, four hundred and five and thirty-four-hundredths dollars (§405.34).”

The defendant by its answer first denied all allegations of the petition, except the delivery of the message. By way of special defense, that portion of the printed matter on the message was set forth, and that was followed by this averment: “Defendant avers that no claim for damages for failure of defendant to deliver said message, or for any other alleged failure or neglect of defendant in relation to said message, was presented to defendant in writing by plaintiff, or any other person, within thirty days after said eighteenth day of October, 1888.”

The plaintiff’s reply put in issue the new matter stated in the answer ; the cause was submitted to the jury, and, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the court at the instance of the defendant gave an instruction that, under the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiff could not recover. The plaintiff submitted to a voluntary nonsuit, and the court, refusing subsequently to set the nonsuit aside, has prosecuted an appeal to this court.

The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all of the plaintiff’s evidence. Only that portion bearing on the controverted questions has been preserved in the transcript. The contentions of the plaintiff are: First. That he did deliver to the defendant’s agents in St. Louis a sufficient written statement of his claim; second, that the company, by its conduct towards him, waived the necessity of a written claim ; third, that, as the defendant failed to send the message, it could not avail itself of this provision in the contract so as to defeat plaintiff ’ s action. There is also a controversy concerning the extent of the plaintiff’s damages. This question is presented by the pleadings, and by exceptions saved to the rejection of evidence. As before stated, the evidence contained in the record only bears on the negotiations between the parties in reference to an adjustment [546]*546of the claim, and the measure of the plaintiff’s damages, as limited by the pleadings. We, however, find this statement in the bill of exceptions: “It is admitted that there was evidence tending to prove'all the other issues on behalf of the plaintiff under the pleadings, and that, as to the issues to which the foregoing testimony was' applicable, the said testimony was all the evidence in the case.”

Under our view of the law applicable to the third proposition, it will not be necessary to discuss the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence in support of the first and second. It will be observed that the allegation of negligence in the petition was that the defendant failed to transmit or to deliver the message. The evidence as to the nature of the defendant’s default is not preserved. The bill of exceptions, however, does state, in effect, that the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to sustain this averment. But the contention is made that proof, tending to show that the defendant failed to transmit the message, is no proof that the message was not started. We think that this distinction is too fanciful to be maintained. Proof that the company failed to transmit the message, that is, that it was not received at the office at St. Louis, is certainly prima facie evidence that it was not started.

The legal obligations in plaintiff’s favor attached upon the delivery of the message to the defendant’s agent in Denison. Prom that moment the defendant was liable to answer to the plaintiff, in proper damages, for a failure to transmit, or for material mistakes in transmission or unnecessary delays in the delivery. The clause in the contract, requiring the plaintiff in case of loss to present a written statement of the damage within a specified time, must be construed in the nature of a forfeiture of such right of action. Upon the principle that the law does no't favor forfeitures, this clause of the contract should be strictly construed as against [547]*547the defendant corporation. It is a condition or limitation of its own making, and, in order to bring about a forfeiture of the plaintiff’s right of action, the evidence must bring the case within the very letter of the limitation clause. The words of the contract, are, “that no claim for damages shall be valid, unless presented in writing within thirty days after sending the message.” That is, the plaintiff’s right of action for the damages sustained shall be taken away, if he, for thirty days after the message is sent, fails to present a written claim. The neglect of the defendant, and not the presentation of the claim, creates the cause of action. There Is no evidence in the case that the message was sent, but on the contrary the bill of exceptions states that there was evidence that it was not transmitted, which, as we have shown, is tantamount to proof that it had never been started,.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Mo. App. 542, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-western-union-telegraph-co-moctapp-1890.