First National Bank v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

34 Pa. Super. 488, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1907
DocketAppeal, No. 68
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. Super. 488 (First National Bank v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 34 Pa. Super. 488, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 167 (Pa. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Orlady, J.,

The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the court below on the following facts, which are undisputed.

The plaintiff, a national bank at Wampum, received by due course of mail on August 31, 1903, between 9 and 10 o’clock A. M., a letter purporting to have been mailed at Verona, Allegheny county, Pa., and on the stationery of the First National Bank of Verona, viz.:—

“No. 4877.
R. D. Ellwood, Pres. Verona, Pa., Aug. 31,1903.
H. W. Armstrong, V. Pres.
Wm. E. Barger, Cashier.
The First National Bank of Verona, Pa. W. H. Groves, Cashier, First National Bank, Wampum, Pa.
“ Dear Sir: — I have issued draft on ITanover National Bank, N. Y. (No. 12,873), in favor of C. E. Armstrong calling for 1387.00. Please honor on presentation and advise me by return mail. I will confirm this letter to you by telegram. ■
“Yours truly, Wm. E. Barger, Cashier.”
About 2 P. M. of the same day, the telegraph operator of the defendant company at Wampum telephoned, and the next day delivered to the cashier of the plaintiff bank a message as follows :—
“Western Union Telegraph Company.
Received at--, August 31, 1903.
Dated Verona, Pa., 31
To W. H. Grove, First National Bank, Wampum, Pa.
“Confirming my letter August 31, Hanover National Bank, N. Y., No. 12,873, C. E. Armstrong three eighty seven is O. K.
“ Wm. E. Barger, Cashier.”
[491]*491Within an hour after the receipt of the telegram, a man, with whom the cashier was not acquainted, came to the bank and presented a draft in the following form :—
“ No. 12873. $387. Verona, Pa., August 31st, 1903.
The First National Bank of Verona, Pa.
“ Pay to the order of G. E. Armstrong three hundred and eighty-seven dollars.
Wm. E. Barger, Cashier. To the Hanover National Bank, New York.”

As testified to by the cashier of the. plaintiff bank — “He presented this paper — -he came into the bank and to the window, and introduced himself as C. E. Armstrong. And he then took the paper and went to the desk and indorsed it and came back and asked me, if I didn’t get a telegram from Mr. Barger at Verona, and I didn’t answer him for a little while, and I said, ‘yes, I had no evidence that you are C. E. Armstrong.’ He said, ‘Well, Mr. Barger had informed him that he would send this telegram, that he wouldn’t have any trouble in getting the money on it.’ I noticed the draft was dated on the same day he was there and asked him ‘ why he didn’t get the money and bring it with him.’ He said, for two reasons : He had got this draft after banking hours on Saturchay, and Mr. Barger told him all bank’s business that they do after banking hours goes over to the next regular day for doing business, and he didn’t care to carry the money.” “ Q. You told him you didn’t know him? A. Yes, sir. I didn’t know him only by the telegram. Q. Did you ask him where he lived? A. No, I didn’t. Q. Did you ask him what his business was ? A. I don’t know that I asked him that. I asked him what he was doing in that neighborhood. He told me he was buying poultry and produce.”

The draft was paid by the plaintiff bank to the unidentified stranger, and soon thereafter it was learned that the letter, telegram and draft were forgeries, and that the defendant company did not have an office at Verona, Pa. The Wampum bank did not know of the bank at Verona, and never had any business transactions with it, but did have a directory giving its location and officials, which, on examination, showed that the cashier’s name was spelled Bargar instead of Barger on the [492]*492letter and telegram. A proper notice was served on the defendant within sixty days, and this suit brought to recover damages sustained by reason of the defendant neglecting “ to exercise that degree of care and caution which the nature of its business demanded.” The act of negligence charged against the defendant “ was in delivering, as genuine, a message authorizing and directing the paying of money by the person to whom it is addressed, purporting to have been sent from aplace where the company did not have an office, and from which place said company did not transmit the message,” as stated and affirmed in the plaintiff’s second point.

The transaction was out of the ordinary course of business, and, taking the case as of the moment when the draft was cashed, it must be conceded that the telegram, if read without reference to the letter, would be unintelligible, and if the letter had not been received the draft would not have been paid. Neither of these communications, taken separately, could be-said to be the inducing cause of the loss. As the draft was. directed to the Hanover Bank of New York there was no legal duty on the Wampum bank to honor and cash it, and, in so-doing, the latter bank volunteered to do a gratuitous act. It. was not a correspondent of the Verona bank; did not then know the name of its cashier, and hence could not know his. signature. The bank directory at hand was not consulted to-identify the name of the Verona bank’s cashier, and when subsequent^ examined it showed a material difference in the-way the name was spelled. Further, the payment was made to an unidentified stranger on the faith of a letter which obviously bore an improbable date, and also on a telegram which, had been orally transmitted by telephone. On the trial there-was no dispute in regard to the facts, and after refusing-to enter a nonsuit, the court unqualifiedly affirmed the following points submitted by the defendant: “ Fourth, that if the-jury find that the plaintiff paid the draft in evidence, relying-both upon the letter and the telegram in evidence, the plaintiff is nob entitled to recover. Fifth, that even if the telegraph, company should be found to be in default in delivering the1 telegram in question, yet if its default was made mischievous, to the plaintiff by the operation of some other intervening-cause, to wit: the letter, the defendant company cannot be held. [493]*493liable for the loss. Ninth, that if the jury find that in the payment of the draft the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence the plaintiff cannot recover,” but refused the tenth, “ that under- all the evidence the verdict must be for the defendant.”

The law does not undertake to hold a person who is chargeable with a breach of duty towards another with all the possible consequences of his wrongful act. It, in general, takes cognizance only of those consequences which are the natural and probable result of the wrong complained of, and which in the language of Pollock, C. B., in Rigby v. Hewitt, 5 Exch. 240, may reasonably be expected to result, under ordinary circumstances, from the misconduct. Every injury is preceded by circumstances, if any one of which had been wanting the injury would not have happened..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. Super. 488, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-western-union-telegraph-co-pa-1907.