Gould v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co.

309 P.2d 802, 6 Utah 2d 187, 1957 Utah LEXIS 127
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1957
Docket8600
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 802 (Gould v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co., 309 P.2d 802, 6 Utah 2d 187, 1957 Utah LEXIS 127 (Utah 1957).

Opinions

WORTHEN, Justice.

Appeal by plaintiff from a judgment setting aside a jury verdict in the amount of $2,000 and substituting therefor a verdict for nominal damages only, against defendant, in the amount of $75.00. Plaintiff asks that the verdict of the jury be reinstated. Defendant contends that there is no evidence to support the jury’s verdict, and that an award of $75.00 is not an award for nominal damages, and asks that it be set aside and a judgment be. given against it for the sum of $1 only.

Plaintiff in the court below sued defendant alleging a breach of contract by defendant to list plaintiff in the classified section of the 1956 telephone directory of the Ogden, Utah metropolitan area. Plaintiff’s name, business address, business telephone, residence address and residence telephone were properly and correctly listed in the “white pages” alphabetical listings, but plaintiff’s name, business address and business telephone were not listed at all in the classified section or “yellow pages.”

: Plaintiff alleged as his sole damage loss of profits from his profession of attorney . and claimed $3,000 loss of past profits, $5,-000 loss of prospective profits and $5,000 • punitive damages. The matter was submitted to the jury who returned a verdict . for plaintiff in the sum of $1,000 loss of past profits and $1,000 loss of prospective profits and no punitive damages. The trial court upon motion of defendant for a new trial, set aside the verdict of the jury and awarded plaintiff nominal damages, only, in the sum of $75.

," Defendant on this appeal concedes its liability to plaintiff, but states that plaintiff failed to prove substantial damages and further contends that an award of $75 in the guise of nominal damages was clearly error.

We agree with defendant’s contention that an award of $75 is not an award of nominal damages. Nominal [190]*190damages is a trivial sum such as one cent or one dollar awarded to a plaintiff whose legal right has been invaded but who has failed to prove any compensatory damages.1 We hold that one entitled to nominal damages only may not be given $75.2

The sole remaining question is whether the trial court erred in setting aside the jury verdict for compensatory damages and in entering a judgment for nominal damages only. In order to properly consider this question a brief statement of the facts is essential.

Plaintiff is an attorney practicing law in Ogden, Utah. He was admitted to the Bar on July 12, 1953, and has been practicing law in Ogden since September 25, 1953, except for a period from December 15, 1954, to May 1, 1955, when he was employed as a claims adjuster by Allstate Insurance Company in Salt Lake City, Utah. He testified that during May, 1955, his gross income from practice was about $200 per month and this increased generally until October when his earnings to-talled $350 and that all this income was from “new business.” He further testified that after the omission of his name from the new telephone directory which was distributed in December, 1955, his gross income from new business dropped to where it totalled only $169.90 for the three months of December, 1955, January, 1956, and February, 1956.

In March, 1956, plaintiff moved his office and was assigned a new telephone number. He stated that in his opinion he was losing $200 per month gross fees by reason of not being listed in the yellow pages of the telephone directory.

Plaintiff testified that his actual cash receipts increased during December, 1955, January, 1956, and February, 1956, to $266.59, $300.36 and $989.85, respectively, but that this increase was due to the fact that he settled a negligence case for a fee of $750 in February, 1956, which had been in his office prior to the issuance of the 1956 directory.

Glenn Adams, another Ogden attorney, testified for plaintiff that because plaintiff’s name was not in the yellow pages, several cases that he would otherwise have referred to plaintiff were referred to other young attorneys instead. However, these were cases where the fee “at most could be $25.00 or something.” He testified that these were cases that either he didn’t desire to handle because of the paucity of the fee involved or couldn’t handle because he was representing clients with adverse interests.

One of defendant’s employees called by plaintiff as an adverse witness testified [191]*191that the yellow pages were extensively advertised by defendant and that the nature of the advertisements was to “ask people to refer to the yellow pages for advertisements, to look there for various products, services, supplies, etc.” Defendant also advertised on the front page of the yellow pages that “because it’s so easy, 9 out of 10 people use the yellow pages when looking for thousands of other products or services.” Said employee also testified that there were roughly 37,000 telephones in the Ogden vicinity and that-these telephones served a population of about 100,000. The 1956 Ogden directory which was introduced into evidence shows approximately 50 attorneys listed under “Lawyers” in the yellow pages.

Upon the foregoing testimony of damage the plaintiff rested. Defendant contends that the evidence cannot support a verdict for compensatory damages, stating that damages must be proved with reasonable certainty, and that any award of damages upon the foregoing facts must be necessarily based upon speculation and conjecture.

Defendant calls to our attention two cases involving failure on the part of telephone companies to properly list subscribers in directories. In Shealy’s Inc., v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., D.C., 126 F.Supp. 382, 386, defendant omitted from its directory plaintiff’s advertising. After the omission, plaintiff divided its gross sales into “local” and “transient” business. Plaintiff then introduced a statement to the effect that plaintiff’s transient sales dropped to $14,730.78 and that for the same period the preceding year these had been $16,377.81, although other business had increased 60% from the preceding year.

The court held that this evidence was not sufficient to show a causal connection between the omission of directory advertising and a drop in sales. The court said:

“ * * * Plaintiff did not allege, nor did it prove the specific loss of a single sale or service operation, but bases its entire claim upon the conjecture that there were such losses and that the losses would not have occurred had the advertisement been inserted in the directory.
“ * * * Since the plaintiff has failed to introduce any evidence even tending to show that its gross sales would have been increased had the advertisement been published, the mere fact that the gross profits for a preceding period were in excess of the gross profits for the period during which the advertisement was omitted from the directory is insufficient to show that the decrease in gross profits was the proximate result of the defendant’s failure to publish the advertisement. Their causal relation to the breach is purely speculative.”

[192]*192In Schwanke, Inc. v. Wisconsin Telephone Co., 199 Wis. 552, 227 N.W. 30, 31, 68 A.L.R. 1320, plaintiff operated a jewelry store. The telephone company published plaintiff’s name correctly in the directory, but also published the same number for another business.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 802, 6 Utah 2d 187, 1957 Utah LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-mountain-states-telephone-telegraph-co-utah-1957.