Elwood v. . the Western Union Telegraph Co.

45 N.Y. 549
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by234 cases

This text of 45 N.Y. 549 (Elwood v. . the Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elwood v. . the Western Union Telegraph Co., 45 N.Y. 549 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Rapadlo, J.

The material question upon this appeal, is whether, upon the evidence, the court was justified in leaving it to the jury to determine whether or not the message in controversy was transmitted from Titusville to Pithole by any of the employes of the defendant at the Titusville office. The receipt of the message at the Pithole office over the defendant’s wires, and its delivery to the plaintiffs by the defendant’s agent, as coming from Titusville, were sufficient prima facie, at least, to establish, as against the defendant, that it was transmitted in the ordinary course from the Titus-ville office, and to throw upon the defendant the burden of disproving that fact.

But it is claimed on the part of the defendant that it was conclusively proved by the testimony of the three operators at the.Titusville office, that the message was not sent from that office; that the court should have been governed by that evidence, and itself decided the question of. fact, and that it was error, in that state of the proofs, to submit it to the jury.

*553 The only theory by which the testimony of the operators is sought to be reconciled with the conceded fact of the receipt "of the message at Pithole over the defendant’s wires, is that the wires were cut by McCarthy, or a confederate, at some intermediate point, and a machine there applied, whereby the message was transmitted. And it is claimed that the court was bound to solve the difficulty, by presuming that this was actually done, rather than to permit the jury to pass upon the credibility or accuracy of recollection of the witnesses.

There was no evidence in support of the theory that the wires were cut, except the physical impossibility that the message could have been transmitted by any other means, if not sent from one of the defendant’s offices. It is true that there was evidence of a break in the circuit at about the time in questionbut as this break occurred before two o’clock, when McCarthy applied to have his message sent, there is no ground for assuming that he had any agency in it, for it frustrated his own plan by preventing the sending of the message at two o’clock, which the defendant’s agent was willing and endeavored to send, and would have sent at that time but for the break.

The defendant contends, however, that the possibility of such an interference reduces the evidence of the sending of the message from Titusville to a mere presumption, which is entirely destroyed by the positive testimony of the defendant’s agents, and that their evidence must be treated as uncontradicted and unimpeached. And numerous authorities are cited in support of the proposition that neither the court or jury is at liberty to disbelieve such evidence.

It is undoubtedly the general rule that where unimpeached witnesses testify distinctly and positively to a fact and are uncontradicted, their testimony should be credited and have the effect of overcoming a mere presumption. (Newton v. Pope, 1 Cow., 110; Lomer v. Meeker, 25 N. Y., 361.) But this rule is subject to many qualifications. There may be such a degree of improbability in the statements them *554 selves as to deprive them of credit, however positively made. The witnesses, though unimpeached, may have such an inte rest in the question at issue as to affect their credibility. The general rules laid down in the books at a time when interest absolutely disqualified a witness, necessarily assumed that the witnesses were disinterested. That qualification must, in the present state of the law, be 'added. And furthermore, it is often a difficult question to decide when a witness is, in a legal sense, uncontradicted. He may be contradicted by circumstances as well as by statements of others contrary to his own. In such cases, courts and juries are not bound to refrain from exercising their judgment and to blindly adopt the statements of the witness, for the simple reason that no other witness has denied them, and that the character of the witness is not impeached.

Very clear and decisive evidence was required in this case to" establish that the message which came over the defendant’s wires was not communicated in the natural and ordinary manner. From the necessity of the case, such evidence as there is "to that effect proceeds wholly from parties having an important interest in the question. Each of them, if guilty of the negligent act, would have the strongest motive to deny it, as the admission would subject him or her to severe responsibility for the consequences. This is a controlling consideration in determining whether the statements of these witnesses should be taken as conclusive. Without imputing a want of truthfulness to these witnesses, we think that their relation to the subject-matter in controversy was of itself sufficient to take from the court the right to dispose of the case upon their evidence and to require that the jury should pass upon the weight to be given to their statements. There is also a want of distinctness in the statements of the witnesses, irrespective of any question of credibility.

The defendants claim that each of the operators positively denies sending the message in question. This, however, is not perfectly clear. Mary J. Carr testifies that McCarthy handed a message to Reynolds, who handed it to her to send, *555 and that she sent it, the whole of it; that she and Reynolds were in the office when it was handed to her; that it purported to come from Erie. She does not know to whom it was addressed, and she thinks it was signed by the cashier of a bank. The one signed “Keystone Bank” (Ex. B., 1) was shown to her, and she says she did not send that. A transcript of a message from Hamlin to McCarthy of August 10th was then shown to her. It is in these words:

“Erie, 10th, 186 .

“To T. F. McCarthy. Forwarded from Titusville 11th. I have made arrangements at Keystone Bank for you to draw on me at sight.

“ H. W. HAMLIN.

“ J. J. Town, Cashier.”

The name of J. J. Town, cashier, appears on the left hand side of the transcript of that message. She says she thinks that is the one she sent. That that is the one that McCarthy handed in, and that she sent. Yet that was a telegram addressed to McCarthy himself, and not designating anyplace to which it was to be sent. There is much obscurity about this testimony. If the message contained in that paper, arrived at Titusville in McCarthy’s absence, and was forwarded to him at some other place, and the paper shown was the transcript of the telegram received by McCarthy, it would be intelligible. But it is difficult to understand how he being present could have handed it in as a message to be telegraphed to himself, or how Miss Carr could send it, it not being directed to any place. The incongruity of this statement is, of itself, sufficient to cast a doubt upon its accuracy. If Miss Carr is mistaken, then, in saying that that is the message which McCarthy handed in and she sent, then her testimony that she did send one, which was handed in by him and signed by the cashier of a bank, is open to the construction that the message telegraphed by her was the message in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.Y. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elwood-v-the-western-union-telegraph-co-ny-1871.