Greer v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

123 A. 447, 143 Md. 665, 1923 Md. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 A. 447 (Greer v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greer v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 123 A. 447, 143 Md. 665, 1923 Md. LEXIS 142 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff (appellant) on the 13th of December, 1915, obtained from the defendant (appellee) at- its Baltimore office a foreign money transfer order for the sum of $175, payable to her husband, John Greer, who was at Newcastle, New -South Wales, Australia, and paid the appellee $14.30 for it, in addition to the amount of the order. The appellee gave the appellant a receipt for the amount which reads as follows:

“Baltimore, Md., Dec. 13, 1915.

“Received of Clara Greer one hundred and seventy-five dollars ($175.00) to be paid to John Greer at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, subject to the terms and conditions of transfer order of this date.

“J. M. McLean, T. A. Manager.”

“Charges paid, $14.30.”

*667 She found that her husband had not received the money, went to the office of the defendant to ascertain why he had not received it, and about two weeks afterwards an agent sent for her to come to the office and identify a receipt. Upon looking at it she found .that it- was not her husband’s handwriting and that it was signed “John Green,” instead of “John Greer.” She inquired about it from time to time and about six months afterwards was told that “they,” referring to the company's agents, had not heard anything about it, but that another man had got the money. About two months later she vras told at the office that a man named Green got it, that he had gone off to the war, used some, and returned some of the money.

She said she read the receipt, and saw on it, the words, “carried to Newcastle subject to1 the terms and conditions of the transfer order of this date” — that the transfer1 order was dated December 13, 1915, the day she signed it. In some way the original transfer money order, or application, as it is also spoken of, was lost or mislaid before the trial. On the stand she was shown a blank order and said it did not look like that — was a little wider, and not quite that long; that- “it was; like, a money order blank where you are supposed to siga your name and the one you were sending to and where it was to go. That is all I can remember what was on it, T remember 'pay to the. order of.’ ” She was; asked about the conditions on it which will he seen later, and said she did not see them. Later she said, “I never saw that paper I signed again: about a year afterwards, they showed me a paper there once that they said I signed. T did not read it.”

John Alexander Greer, the husband, testified that he uever received the money and described the efforts he had made to find, it, that he was informed in Newcastle that a man by the name of Green had received it.

The defendant read to the jury the deposition of M. P. Martin, who testified that he lived in San Eraneiseo, and said, “I am telegraphic man in the Anglo, London, Paris *668 National Bank, exchange departments and cable in the business of transferring money orders by telegraph; that was my position on December 13, 1915. I remember, and my records show a receipt from the Western Union Telegraph Company on said 13,th day of December, 1915, a telegraph money transfer for one hundred and seventy-live dollars from Baltimore, Maryland, to John Greer, care of David Baker, Newcastle, New Sbuth Wales, Australia. I received that money order on the 13th day qf December, 1915. I forwarded it on the same day to the Union Bank of Australia at Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, by telegraphic cable.” He said they had no correspondent at that time at Newcastle, and the nearest one was the Union Bank of Australia at Sydney; that there was no method of sending money directly by cable •to Newcastle, the Union Bank would remit 'by telegraph under receipt from them; that they gave a receipt to the Western Union for $175. “It was paid to our bank to be cabled to John Greer at Newcastle, New South Wales. We sent a cable to New South Wales directing the payment of this money received from the Western Union; that was December 13th, 1915, by Postal Telegraph and Cable Company. The company owning, the cable is the Commercial Pacific Cable Company; its lines extend from San Francisco, California, to Sydney, Australia. The, cable message was sent to Union Bank of Australia at Sydney; the message filed by me with the Postal Telegraph Company at San Francisco, California, directed the payment of the” money received from the Western Union to John Greer at Newcastle. He said he did not have the original message, as that is held by the Postal Telegraph Company, but it directed the payment of the money to John Greer ,and not John Green; that he Was informed by the Postal Telegraph Cbmpany that it was sent correctly in the name of “Greer” but in some way the name was changed to “Green” when the message reached Sydney; that he was instructed to send the money to John Greer. He further said that his bank had recovered twelve pounds,

*669 two shillings and eight pence, which was paid by mistake to John Green, and it was now holding that draft for the Western Union from whom they received it.

Victor J. Albert, manager of the Western Union business in Baltimore, explained the method employed in sending money from one telegraph office to another. Re said: “The transfer order is the order of the payee on the telegraph company to pay money. It is the application blank. The form that you hand me was in use in our company in 1915. I am not sure that our office has the identical paper that was signed by this. lady. If we have not that identical form it was turned over to you, or it appears to me that that was mislaid or something. I am not sure.”

The form spoken of is as follows:

“Form 572-A.
“The Western Union Telegraph Company of Baltimore City.
“Newcomb Carlton, President.
“Foreign Money Transfer Order.
“No..... .............., 191....
“The Western Union Telegraph Company of Baltimore City, subject to the conditions below, pay to ...............the foreign equivalent of the sum of ........dollars at the rate of exchange established by ■tbe company or its foreign agents, for transfers of the similar amount on the date of this transfer.
“When the company has no office at destination authorized to pay money, it should not be liable for any default beyond its own lines, but shall be the agent of the sendexq without liability, and without further notice, to contract on the sender’s behalf with any other telegraph or cable line, bank or other medium, for tbe further transmission and final payment of this order.”

Re was then asked about the loss of the: paper and whether it had been seax'ched for and said, “Oh, yes, our office looked £oa‘ it at that time; there was no different form. I have entire charge of the offices here in Baltimoi'e, the employment *670 of people, the purchase of everything. I think I saw the paper that Mrs. Greer did sign. After the claim was made, the papers were brought — an investigation was made, and the result of the investigation was given to the complainant.

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Related

Lind v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
217 N.W. 486 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 447, 143 Md. 665, 1923 Md. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-western-union-telegraph-co-md-1923.