De Rutte v. New York, Albany & Buffalo Electric Magnetic Telegraph Co.

1 Daly 547, 30 How. Pr. 403
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1 Daly 547 (De Rutte v. New York, Albany & Buffalo Electric Magnetic 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
De Rutte v. New York, Albany & Buffalo Electric Magnetic Telegraph Co., 1 Daly 547, 30 How. Pr. 403 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1866).

Opinion

[553]*553By the Court.

Daly, F. J.

We are asked to reverse this judgment upon several grounds. The first ground taken by the defendants is, that their contract was to transmit the dispatch from 2íow York to Buffalo and deliver it there to the connecting line, which they did. That it is made their duty (Statute Laws of New York, for 1844, p. 395, § 11), to receive messages from ánd for other telegraph lines, and that where they transmit and deliver a message correctly to a connecting line, they are not answerable for errors occurring afterwards.

The duty which the statute imposes is as much for the benefit of the telegraph companies as for the individuals who make use of them ; for the business of a company where there are several connecting lines might he materially diminished if any of tiiern should refuse to deliver messages to or to receive them from it, and the object of this provision therefore was manifestly to enable new companies to compete with established lines, thus preventing the evils of monopolies and of combinations among companies. But while the statute makes it the duty of a telegraph company to receive and transmit such messages, it does not make it in such a case the collecting agent of the other lines. It imposes no higher duty than the words express, and leaves each company at liberty to require the payment of its own charges before it either delivers or transmits a message. Where a message is to he transmitted through many connecting lines, it is a matter of convenience to be enabled to pay the entire charge, either at the place from which it is sent, or at the place xxdiere it is received; and it is the interest of companies, especially xvliere there are competing- lines, to make arrangements whereby, upon the payment to them of the xvhole charge, a message may he sent the entire length"of telegraphic communication. It is to be assumed that this is the case, when a telegraphic company is paid fur the transmission of a message to a place beyond their own lineo, witiixvhich they are in communication by the agency of other companies, and they muse in such a case be regarded as undertaking that the message will be transmitted and delivered at that place.

The soma rule must be applied to them that is applied to a common catrín- xvho receives cue xvaole compensation ibr ¡"bo carnage or a package midrosmd to a placo beyond the limits cf his ov:n route; that is3 that In- engages for the due delivery [554]*554of the package at the place of destination, unless he expressly limits his responsibility to his own route, or the circumstances are such as to clearly indicate that that was tire understanding of the contracting parties (Weed v. Schenectady and Saratoga Railroad, 19 Wend., 534; Muschamp v. Lancaster and Preston Railway Company, 8 M. & Wels., 421; St. John v. Van Santvoord, 25 Wend., 660; Id., 6 Hill, 157 ; Wilcox v. Parmclee, 3 Sandf. S. C. R., 610). By taking pay in advance for the whole distances, he holds himself out as a carrier for the entire distances (per Walworth, C., in Van Santvoord v. St. John, supra). Where a railroad that terminated in Boston took a wagon at Troy that was to he carried to Burlington, Harris, J., said “It was no part of the plaintiff’s business to inquire how many different corporations made up the entire line of road between Troy and Burlington, or, having ascertained it, to determine at his peril which of such corporations had boon guilty of the negligence” (Foy v. Troy and Boston Railroad Co., 24 Barb., 382), and Lord Abinger, in Muschamp v. The Lancaster, &c., Railway, supra, remarked that it was useful and reasonable for the benefit of the public in such a case that if should be considered 'that the undertaking; was to carry the parcel the whole way. “It is better,” he said, “ that those who undertake the carriage of parcels for their mutual benefit should arrange matters of this kind inter sc, and should be taken each to have made the others their agents.” All of which remarks are as applicable to the transmission of a message as to the carriage of a parcel. In this case Lecour told the defendant’s clerk to send the message to California, and asked him what would he the charge for sending it to San Francisco, to which the clerk answered twenty-one dollars and fifty cents, which Lecour paid, and this, prima facie, was sufficient to show that the defendants engaged to send it to San Francisco. Whatever contract was made was made with them, and not with any other company. There was nothing said, nor was there anything to indicate that they were to be answerable only fur its correct transmission along their own line, They received the whole amount that was asked to send it to Gan Tranche :< without com n s. a ui e at i ng by what lines it would he Sc-aL-or any other particulars-o's to the r.ioxle or manner' of its commisssion. They took upon themselves the whole charge [555]*555of sending it, and. what arrangements were made, or what srmi would he paid, for the use of the lines in connection with them, were matters not disclosed to the party interested in the transmission of the message, and with which, consequently, he had nothing to do. He made his contract with them, and if injured by its non-fulfilment, he has a right to look to them for compensation for the injury sustained.

The next objection taken by the defendants is, that -they entered into no contract with the plaintiff; that they made their contract with Th. De Butte, who sent the message, acting as the agent of Gal!arden & Labourdette. It does not necessarily follow that the contract is made with the person by whom, or in whose name, a message is sent. He may have no interest in the subject matter of the message, but the party to whom it is addressed may be the only one interested in its -correct or diligent transmission; and where that is the case, he is the one with whom the contract is made. The business of transmitting messages by means of the electric telegraph is like that of common carriers in the nature of a public employment, for those who engage in it do not undertake to transmit messages only for particular persons,- hut for the public generally. They hold out to the public that they are ready and willing to transmit intelligence for any one upon the payment of their charges, and when paid for sending it, it forms no part of their business' to inquire who is interested in, or who is to be benefitted by the intelligence convoyed. That becomes material only where there has been a delay or a mistake in the transmission of a message, which has been productive of injury or damage to the person by whom, or for whom, they were employed, and to that person they are responsible, whether he was the one who sent, or the one who was to receive the message. It is somewhat analogous to the question which arises when goods are lost upon their carriage, whether the action against the carrier is to be brought by the consignor or the consignee, and the general rule upon that subject is that the one in. whom the legal right to the property is vested is the one to bring the action ; and if that is' the consignee, the c-m-signor in making the contract with the carrier, is regarded a-' haring acted as the ¡¡gene of the' other (Da'-Ktu v. Peck, 8 T. R., 330: Griffith v. Ingladew, 6 S. & Rawle, 429; [556]*556Freeman v. Birch, 1 Nev. & Mann, 420 ; Dutton v. Solomnson, 3 Bos. & Pull., 584; Ecerett v. Salters,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Daly 547, 30 How. Pr. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-rutte-v-new-york-albany-buffalo-electric-magnetic-telegraph-co-nyctcompl-1866.