De Castro v. Compagnie Francaise Du Telegraphe De Paris A New York

32 N.Y.S. 960, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 391, 85 Hun 231
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 32 N.Y.S. 960 (De Castro v. Compagnie Francaise Du Telegraphe De Paris A New York) 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
De Castro v. Compagnie Francaise Du Telegraphe De Paris A New York, 32 N.Y.S. 960, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 391, 85 Hun 231 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

We think that the these rulings excluding the evidence offered should be overruled. • If, however, we regard them as relevant and competent, they do not change the conclusion to be reached upon the question of plaintiff’s right to recover. That question turns upon the determination of whether the letter written by the secretary of state of the United States, Mr. Gresham, as explained by the opinions of Mr. Coudert contained in his letters, shows a fulfillment of the conditions upon which the plaintiff’s right to compensation depended.

At the outset, it will be noticed that the letter of Mr. Gresham bears date August 28, 1893; and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, its existence may therefore be presumed at the time when the correspondence relating to this subject was opened by the plaintiff with the defendant, the first letter in which bears date September 2, 1893. Whether Mr. Gresham’s letter was received at the latter date, or its existence known to plaintiff, does not appear. If it was already in existence at that time, plaintiff’s claim being based ¡upon its procurement by him from the United States secretary of state, it can make no difference whether he knew of its existence or not. If he did not know of its existence, he certainly did not .procure it. If he did know, and the defendant did not, the contract ■subsequently made would be void as to the defendant, and it could ■not be required to pay for the procuring of something which already existed. If, however, we take the inference most favorable to the plaintiff,—that Mr. Gresham’s letter was not written until after the company, at the suggestion of plaintiff, had authorized him to [963]*963proceed and obtain the rights mentioned in their letter,—it still remains to determine whether that letter complied with the contract.

It cannot be seriously contended that the defendant entered into a contract by the terms of which it was to pay the large sum, in two payments, of 300,000 francs, and in return receive nothing or very little of substantial value. We may concede, as argued by plaintiff, “that the Virginia act gave to the defendant company an unrestricted and unattackable right to land its cable.” If so, there was nothing further that it could obtain from the federal government. The filing with the postmaster general of an agreement to be bound by the conditions affecting telegraph companies, though done at the suggestion of the plaintiff, did not confer any additional rights or privileges upon the defendant, because it will be noticed from the language of the section quoted that it relates to domestic corporations, its express terms confining it to telegraph companies now or hereafter organized “under the laws of any state”; and in the opinion of the attorney general (1872; 14 Op. Attys. Gen. 63) it is said:

“It is manifest that this act was intended to apply simply to interior lines of telegraph, designed for communication between points within the United States, and not exterior oceanic lines, designed for telegraphic intercourse with foreign lands.”

The filing, therefore, of defendant’s acceptance, in view of the effect thereof and of the terms of the agreement between the parties, was not a compliance with the contract, entitling plaintiff to the compensation; and, even if we regard it as a step in that direction, it did not secure to the defendant all that it ought to obtain. This, we think, is conceded by plaintiff, who stakes his recovery upon the position that the letter of Mr. Gresham was a compliance with the contract, and was the only declaration which, in view of the situation and of the facts known to the parties, could possibly be obtained or have been within their understanding or intention. Was that, however, all that the defendant wished and that the plaintiff undertook to secure? We think a reading of the correspondence shows that the parties at the time were in doubt as to whether the Virginia act was sufficient to confer upon the defendant the right to land its cable, and to engage in the business of telegraphy in the United States, and that both parties were impressed with the necessity of securing from the federal government a recognition ■of their right under the Virginia act to do business in the United States without interference from the general government. If in this they were both mistaken, and if, upon obtaining the right from the state of Virginia, the defendant with safety could have proceeded with the laying of its cable and the transaction of its business here, then the mutual mistake into which the parties had fallen of supposing something more to be necessary would not give the plaintiff a right to enforce the terms of such a contract in his favor as against the defendant. In other words, if, with a view to enabling the defendant to do business, the plaintiff undertook to get something which was entirely unnecessary, and which, in point of fact, the plaintiff did not get, the mere ascertaining [964]*964that there was no necessity for getting it would not be a compliance with the contract. What the plaintiff undertook, to use his own language, was to procure a federal official document “consecrating” the right to land the company’s cable in the United States. What the defendant agreed to pay for was “a declaration of the federal government "which assures to it the enjoyment, without restriction and unattackable, of the landing right which it holds from' the separate government of the state of Virginia, * * * without obligation or prohibition to connect it at any fixed point, —in a word, unconditional.’-’ This right, it would seem, the plaintiff concluded he could obtain from the executive department of our government,—a right which, as stated in plaintiff’s letter to Mr. Coudert of November 6th, would assure the company “against all interference, prohibitive or restrictive, by the federal government, in the exercise of the right of landing which it holds from the state of Virginia.” What plaintiff obtained—assuming, for the sake of argument, that it was secured after the agreement was entered into—was a statement from the executive department, contained in the letter of Mr. Gresham, that “there is no legislation of the United States conferring authority upon the president to grant or deny such permission, and, in the absence of such legislation, executive action of the character desired would have no binding force.” It will thus be seen that the executive department to which the application was made conferred no additional rights upon the defendant, but dismissed the application, with the statement that the president had no authority or jurisdiction over the subject; leaving the company, therefore, in the same position as it was before the application was made, with all its rights that it had received from the state of Virginia, and no others.

It is insisted, however, that this was an expression of an opinion by that department of the government which, by stating that it had no jurisdiction in the matter, removed doubt as to the possibility of its interference with the landing of the company’s cable. It may well be that this was all that could be obtained from the executive; but it was not all that the plaintiff agreed to obtain, or that the defendant had a right to expect. In the letters of Mr. Coudert, which were written in response to letters confining his attention to particular questions formulated by the plaintiff, it appears that he was considering the effect of Mr. Gresham’s letter so far as it related to executive action. If that was all there was, we agree with what he says in his letter of November 9th:

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32 N.Y.S. 960, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 391, 85 Hun 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-castro-v-compagnie-francaise-du-telegraphe-de-paris-a-new-york-nysupct-1895.