Brown v. Postal Telegraph Co.

16 S.E. 179, 111 N.C. 187
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 179 (Brown v. Postal Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Postal Telegraph Co., 16 S.E. 179, 111 N.C. 187 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

MacRae, J.:

The plaintiffs were damaged by the negligence of defendant’s agent in substituting the words “forty-seven” in the message as delivered, for “twenty-seven” in the message sent, by reason whereof the plaintiffs’ tobacco was sold for a price less than it would otherwise have brought on the market. The message was written on the blank furnished by the Western Union Telegraph Company, with the well-known stipulation upon it that the company would not be liable for damages caused by mistakes or delays, unless repeated. This message was delivered to-and sent by the agent of the defendant The Postal Telegraph Co., but we prefer to treat the question presented as if there were but a single and controlling point involved, and to this we address ourselves.

It was not ordered by the sender to be repeated, and was therefore what is known as an unrepeated message. Upon the admissions in the pleadings, and the verdict in response to the issues fixing the value of the tobacco at the time of the sale, the plaintiffs moved for judgment in their *189 favor for the difference between the ‘sum actually received by them and the value of the tobacco. Iiis Honor, in accordance with the decision in Lassiter v. Telegraph Co., 89 N. C., 334, denied the plaintiffs’ demand and signed judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum paid by the sender to the defendant for the transmission of the message. The plaintiffs-appealed, and this brings up again the question whether the stipulation upon the back of the blank, and made part of the contract, as before referred to, is valid and binding upon the parties.

It was held by a divided Court in Lassiter v. The Telegraph Co., supra, that a stipulation contained in a form used by a telegraph company in its business operations, to the effect that it will not be responsible for mistakes in transmitting-unrepeated messages, is a reasonable one and will, be enforced by the Courts. Lassiter’s was the first case which came before this Court involving a construction of the said stipulation and its effects upon the rights and liabilities of the-parties thereto. This Court, recognizing the persuasive-authority of the Courts of last resort in other States, adopted the views expressed in a majority of the cases which had been decided, although even then there were very respectable authorities to the contrary. Since this decision was made, there has been much discussion, and many and conflicting adjudications upon the same question have been made in other Courts. And we are induced to review the opinion, heretofore announced by this Court.

It was early held that telegraph companies were not common carriers and therefore not insurers, but that there was an analogy between the duties and responsibilities of these transmitters, for reward, of messages, and those of carriers of goods for hire, and that the former were, like the latter, held to a high degree of diligence in the conduct of their business. Thompson on Electricity, sec. 137, and note.

*190 When the art of telegraphy was yet in its infancy, when its operators were untrained, its appliances crude and its efforts tentative, it would have been unreasonable to require that skill which would be demanded in a more advanced stage when, with practiced operators and perfected machines, the system had become an indispensable part of the business of the world.

The condition printed as a part of the contract upon the back of the blank upon which messages were written, that, to ward against mistakes and delays, the sender of a message should order it repeated at an additional charge of oné-half the regular rates, was considered not so much a stipulation against negligence, ai a reasonable precaution in order to procure accuracy in the transmission of messages by means of the electric current. It was then that by the fancied analogy between this system and the business of the common carrier, the Courts came to use the terms which had been used with regard to the latter, and to hold that the telegraph companies might, on account of the novelty of their operation, provide against negligence on the part of their employees, or by reason of imperfections in their instruments, by means of which negligence or imperfections, mistakes and delays were permitte 1 to occur in the transmission of messages. The then recognized distinction between what was called gross and ordinary or slight negligence was invoked, and it was held that while for ordinary or slight negligence they would not be responsible, yet they would be held to account for gross or wilful negligence.

But negligence is the failure to exercise that care which, under the circumstances of the case, a prudent man ought to use. There can be no degrees in negligence in this matter. In ascertaining what damages may be awarded against one for injury by reason of negligence, the question whether it was gross or ordinary may determine as to punitive or compensatory damages; or where the doctrine of compara *191 tive negligence is recognized, it may be necessaiy to distinguish between degrees; but where there is a contract to transmit a message for reward, a failure to perform the undertaking is either excusable or negligent — if negligent, the party injured thereby is entitled to his damages, not according to the degree of negligence at all, but iti proportion to his injury, unless it be a case in which punitive damage is allowed. If, on account of an electrical disturbance in the atmosphere a message could not be sent, so that there was delay; or it could not be but imperfectly sent, so that words were dropped; or if from any other cause, not to be provided against with the appliances afforded by science and by a reasonable foresight, there was a failure to comply with the contract, these were matters provided for by law, and not necessary to be stipulated against in the contract.

The old principle that one cannot provide by contract against liability for negligence, applies to every species and degree of negligence or tort. Cooley on Torts, 687. In Lassiter v. Telegraph Co., supra, this exemption from liability “ is not extended to acts of omission involving gross negligence, but is confined to such as are incident to the service, and which may occur when there is but slight culpability in its officers and employees.”

In Pegram v. Telegraph Co., 97 N. C., 57, it is said that the stipulation on the back of the blanks restraining liability for unrepeated messages, where the complaint is not a mistake in the message, but for delay or failure in delivery, is unreasonable and void. In Cannon v. Telegraph Co., 100 N. C., 300, the doctrine in Lassiter’s case is affirmed, but the language of the opinion in Telegraph Co. v. Hall, 124 U. S., 444, is quoted with approval: “ Of course, where the negligence of the telegraph company consists, not in delaying the transmission of the message, but in transmitting a message erroneously, so as to mislead the party to whom it is addressed, and on the faith of which he acts in the purchase *192

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 179, 111 N.C. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-postal-telegraph-co-nc-1892.