Ellis v. American Telegraph Co.

95 Mass. 226
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 95 Mass. 226 (Ellis v. American Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. American Telegraph Co., 95 Mass. 226 (Mass. 1866).

Opinion

Bigelow, C. J.

These exceptions open an inquiry into the nature and extent of the duties and liabilities which are assumed [230]*230by those who are engaged in carrying on the business within this commonwealth of sending messages by means of the electric telegraph. It appears to have been taken for granted at the trial of the case, as it certainly was in the arguments of learned counsel at the bar of this court, that the rights of the parties were to be determined solely by having recourse to the rules and principles of the common law’. This we think is an error. We entertain no doubt that these would have been found fully adequate to the satisfactory solution of the various questions to which the pursuit of this novel branch of human skill and industry will in the course of time necessarily give rise. But the legislature of this commonwealth have not deemed it wise or expedient to leave to the slow progress of judicial determination the regulation of a business on which so many of the daily transactions of life, involving the most important rights and interests, are made to depend. By Gen. Sts. c. 64, provisions are made by which the general powers of “ telegraph companies ” are limited and defined, and their duties to a certain extent are prescribed and regulated. By § 13 of that chapter it is enacted that owners and associations engaged in the business of telegraphing for the public by electricity, although not incorporated, shall be subject to the liabilities and governed by the provisions of this chapter, in the same manner as corporations.” The defendants being a foreign corporation, established under the laws of another state, they likewise clearly come within the purview of this enactment. The true construction of the provision is, that owners of lines of telegraph not incorporated by the laws of this state, but transacting business within it, whether incorporated elsewhere or not, are to be subject to the same duties and liabilities as domestic corporations. It certainly could not have been the intention of the legislature, while prescribing the powers, rights and duties of individuals, and of corporations established under the laws of this state, in the management and control of a particular kind of business carried on here, to leave the door open to foreign corporations to conduct the same kind of business within the Commonwealth without any restriction or limitation, and subject to no requirements by which to secure [231]*231a faithful and honest performance of the service which they undertake to render to the public. Any doubt, however, concerning the interpretation of the above cited provision of the •statute is set at rest by a recurrence to the previously existing statute on the subject, of which Gen. Sts. c. 64 is a substantial reenactment, with such changes only as the commissioners on the revision of the statutes deemed necessary for the sake of brevity and comprehensiveness. By Si. 1849, c. 93, it was provided that every owner or association engaged in telegraphing tor the public, by electricity, in this state ” should be subject to the same duties, restrictions and liabilities as companies incorporated within the Commonwealth. This language is broad enough, and was manifestly intended to include all persons and bodies corporate of every description engaged in the business of transmitting messages by telegraph in this state. There can be no doubt, therefore, that foreign corporations of this class are put on the same footing, as to their rights, privileges and responsibilities, as domestic corporations chartered for similar purposes.

We are then to look into the provisions of the statute to ascertain how far they regulate and control the relative rights and liabilities of the parties to this suit. The only important clause bearing on the questions saved by the exceptions is found in the tenth section of the chapter of the General Statutes already cited. It is in these words : Every company shall receive despatches from and for other telegraph lines, companies and associations, and from and for any person; and, on payment of the usual charges for transmitting despatches according to the regulations of the company, shall transmit the same faithfully and impartially.” The leading feature in this enactment is, that it in effect takes the business of conducting and managing a line of electric telegraph within this commonwealth out of the class of ordinary private occupations, and makes it a quasi public employment, to be carried on with a view to the general benefit and for the accommodation of the community, and not merely for private emolument and advantage. Under this provision, an owner or manager of such a line becomes to [232]*232a certain extent a public servant or agent. He is bound, under a heavy penalty, to the due and faithful execution of the service which he holds himself out as ready to perform. He cannot refuse to receive and forward despatches; nor can he select the parsons for whom he will act. He cannot transmit messages at such times or in such order as he may deem expedient. He is required to send them for every person who may apply, at a usual or uniform tariff or rate, without any undue preference, and according to established regulations applicable to all alike. There can be no doubt that, in view of the nature of the business, these requisitions are just and expedient. They certainly tend to prevent monopoly and exclusive privileges, and to secure to the public an equal enjoyment of the benefits arising from this new method of intercommunication between distant points. In some respects, they assimilate the duties and obligations incident to the employment to those which the law attaches to that of common carriers. But it is a mistake to say that the extent or degree of responsibility is the same. There is nothing in the statute which gives countenance to the suggestion, urged by the plaintiff’s counsel, that owners or conductors of telegraphs are bound to warrant or insure the correct transmission of the messages which they undertake to send. Nor would it be just or reasonable to hold them to such a standard of diligence. The reasons of policy and expediency on which the rule of the common law is founded, which imposes on carriers of goods a liability for all losses not caused by the act of God or the public enemy, do not apply to the business of transmitting messages by means of the electric telegraph. Carriers are intrusted with the manual possession of the property committed •"o their care. While in their custody it is wholly out of the control and supervision of its owner. The identity of the article which they received with that which they delivered cannot be mistaken. By the use of a proper degree of diligence and care, such as is necessary to the safety of the goods in their charge, they can guard against their loss arising from any cause except such as from the nature of things are beyond their control while the danger of fraud and the opportunity for its practice [233]*233by those who have the exclusive and absolute custody and control of property for carriage render it expedient and necessary to hold them to the strictest accountability for its safe transportation and delivery.

But the trust reposed in the owner or conductor of a line of telegraph is of a very different character. No property is committed to his hands. He has no opportunity to violate his trust by his own acts of embezzlement, or by his carelessness to suffer others by means of larceny or fraud to despoil his bailors of their property.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Mass. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-american-telegraph-co-mass-1866.