Halsted v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.

85 N.E. 1078, 193 N.Y. 293, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 647
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 1078 (Halsted v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable 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
Halsted v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 85 N.E. 1078, 193 N.Y. 293, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 647 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Gray, J.

It is the plaintiffs’ claim that the defendant is liable to them, as the addressees of the telegraphic message, for the failure to properly perform its duty; from which liability it was not relieved by the terms of its contract with the sender of the message. The argument is made that the defendant, as a public service corporation, “ owes a duty to the public, for the breach of which, a party injured has a right of action, which is unaffected by any contract of limitation, to which the injured person is not a party;” notwithstanding the duty was undertaken by reason of such contract. So far as the plaintiffs’ claim was predicated upon the alleged gross negligence of the defendant, in the performance of the undertaking to transmit to them the telegraphic message from the sender in FJorth Carolina, it is sufficient to say that the evidence wholly failed to make out any case for the jury on that theory. It showed, simply, the commission of an error, which, so far as material in its consequences, occurred in the change of the word “ eighty ” to “ eighth.” The letter “y” was changed to the letter “h” in two instances. Whether such changes were the inadvertent, or mistaken, act of the receiving operator, or of any operator *300 at the relay station, or whether they were the result of atmospheric disturbances, or of perturbations of the electric fluid, to which, concededly, the transmission of telegraphic messages is more or less subject, is not material. The nature of the undertaking by a telegraph company suggests the possibility, if not the probability, of peculiar risks affecting it, whether in the one, or the other, way. However occurring, if by no willful misconduct, a mere mistake, or error, in the transmission of a message would not warrant a jury in finding that there had been more than ordinary negligence. (See Breese v. U. S. Tel. Co., 48 N. Y. 132; Primrose v. W. U. Tel. Co., 154 U. S. 1.) The hazards attending upon the accurate performance by telegraph corporations of their function of transmitting messages are obvious and the prudential character of such regulations, as this defendant had adopted in order to guard against inaccuracy in transmission and to prevent mistakes from any cause, is evident. The importance of accuracy to the parties cannot always be apparent to the operator; but it is to the sender. Where the wording of a message is such as to be obscure in its meaning, or unintelligible to the ordinary reader-, mistakes are reasonably possible in the transcribing. In any case, the regulations of the telegraph company afford the means of making accuracy reasonably certain, or of effecting insurance against mistakes.

The question in this case must be, what legal relation did the defendant sustain to the plaintiffs; or what was the measure of the duty owing by the defendant and of its responsibility for a failure in performance ? Was the duty an absolute one, as claimed by the appellants; or was the undertaking one within the terms of the contract with the sender ? In my opinion, the contract was binding upon the appellants and relieved the defendant of any liability beyond that stipulated for.

In the Appellate Division, it was held by a majority of the learned justices, in effect, that the defendant had the right to make the regulations, which prescribed its liability in accepting messages for transmission, and that whether the action *301 is deemed to rest upon the contract of the sender, or to result from a breach of duty, the limitation of the amount of damages to be recovered being reasonable, the plaintiff has no standing to maintain this action unless he is the real principal in the action, and then only to the extent of the amount paid for the transmission of the message.” The dissenting justices took the view that, as the contract of the defendant with respect to its liability was only with the sender of the message, the plaintiffs, as the receivers, were not bound by it and that their action rested on a negligent breach of the duty owing by the defendant to deliver the message as received. It was said that “ telegraph companies, being under a public duty to receivers of messages, senders of messages cannot, by contract, lessen, or do away with, that duty. They may only do so in respect of the duty due to themselves.”

For the decision of this case, it is unnecessary that the court should go as far as did the Appellate Division, in the prevailing opinion, in defining the general responsibility of the defendant towards the addressee of a message. It was alleged, in this complaint, that the “ plaintiffs requested the Cannon Mfg. Co. * * * to send them by wire the prices ” for the goods and such was shown to be the fact by the evidence of the plaintiffs. The Cannon Mfg. Co., therefore, in transmitting the information requested by means of the telegraph, was made the agent of the plaintiffs for that purpose. The plaintiffs, not desiring to await a communication from the Cannon Co. in the ordinary way of a letter, availed themselves of the latter’s services, and authorized them, to employ the telegraph system for sending a reply. In doing so, the sender was, either, the plaintiffs’ agent in making the contract with the defendant; or it made the contract for their benefit. While, in either view, the result would be the same, in so far that the plaintiffs would come under the obligation of the contract with the defendant, it is, probably, the more correct view that the Cannon Mfg. Co. acted as the agent of the plaintiffs in contracting for the conveyance of its message by a telegraph line. If that be true, *302 the plaintiffs must be concluded by the act of their agent. The Cannon Mfg. Co. had a reasonable latitude of action in entering into such a contract and that the terms of the contract, as made, were reasonable must be regarded as settled upon authority.

The defendant, while it may be likened to a common carrier, in its occupation of conveying messages from, and to, all persons, unlike a common carrier of goods, does not become an insurer in their transmission. Its duties are performed in a different way. The reasons for making common carriers of goods insurers of their value do not apply in the case of telegraph systems; for there is no custody of goods, and the conveyance of messages is subject to the contingencies of extraneous disturbances beyond the control of the telegraph owner, or to the fallibility of operators in transcribing by signals, or symbols, or in comprehending the message itself as written. By reason of the franchises and powers accorded to it, a telegraph corporation performs public functions and it comes under that general obligation, to which all quasi-public corporations are subject, to conduct its corporate business, and to discharge the duties incident thereto, with reasonable diligence and with a due care for the rights and interests of those concerned in the corporate operations. But, however strictly held to this general obligation, it is competent for it to make such rules and to prescribe such regulations for the conduct of its business as are reasonable. It is entitled to protect itself against the incidental hazards of operation and, by contract, to limit its liability for mistakes, or delays, or nondelivery, caused by the negligence of its servants, if not gross.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 1078, 193 N.Y. 293, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halsted-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-ny-1908.