Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Schaefer

62 S.W. 1119, 110 Ky. 907, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 1119 (Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Schaefer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Schaefer, 62 S.W. 1119, 110 Ky. 907, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 155 (Ky. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE BURNAM

Reversing.

This suit was instituted by the 'appellees, who were plaintiffs- in the court below, against -appellants, who own and operate a telegraph line, to reeoyer dam-agesi for their failure to correctly transmit and deliver - a certain telegram to- N. Bernstein & Co., of Cleveland, Ohio. The facts necessary to a correct understanding of the case are as- follows: On the 23d day of August, 1897, John Schaefer & Sons, wholesale produce and fruit merchants at Louisville, Ky., delivered to the defendant, for transmission to N. Bernstein & Co.,' produce brokers in Cleveland, Ohio, this telegram: “Bulk potatoes one seventy barrel. Can ship two cars nice stock to-day. Wire quick.” The message was written out upon one of defendant’s printed blanks. On the same day they 'received from Bernstein & Go., 'Over the Western Union Telegraph line, "the following response to their message: “Telegram received. Ship two oars, your price.” And in response to this telegram appellees shipped two ears of bulk potatoes, .amounting to 340 barrels, at the same time advising Bernstein & Co. of the shipment by ia telegram which reads ais follows: “Ship ciar® L. & N., 15,231 and 15,483 potatoes via Big 4.” And on the same day they mailed invoice -with bill of lading attached to a draft for $589, or the price of 340 barrels of potatoes at $1.70 per barrel. On the 25th day .of August, appellees received from Bernstein & Co., a telegram which reads, viz.: “Bill received 2 oars potatoes one [911]*911seventy bbl. Price named in message one seven bbl. Please explain.” In response to this, appellant answered: “Our copy of telegram reads one seventy. Have notified telegraph company.” And on the next day appellee received from the Ohio people the following message: “Your telegram delivered to us says orne seven bbl. We shall insist upon the twro cars at that price. Instruct bank correct draft at rate of one seven bbl. Will give you until 3 o’clock. You will have to look to telegraph company, not to us.” To which appellees replied on the same day: “We do not comply to your declaration of draft. See telegraph company if error.” All these messages passed between the parties before the arrival of the potatoes at Cleveland, which was on the 27th, wThen Bernstein instituted a suit for damages against appellee for the difference between the contract price claimed by him and the value of the potatoes, and attached the potatoes in the hands of the railroad company. In a day or two thereafter, appellees notified appellant of the exact situation, and .asked them whether they should accept $1.07 per barrel for the potatoes from Bernstein & Co. Appellant declined to advise them as to what course to pursue. They thereupon employed an attorney to defend the suit instituted against them by Bernstein & Co., and this litigation was prolonged for some time. The potatoes in the meantime were left in the cars on the track of the railroad company for several weeks, when they were sold for $250 to pay the freight; the over-plus being held to await the result of the siuit of Bernstein & Co. At the conclusion of the litigation with Bernstein & Go., the appellees, Schaefer & Sons, instituted this suit, in which they allege that they had not only lost all of their potatoes, which were worth $570, but in addition [912]*912thereto, had been compelled to pay out $321.51 in defending the suit instituted against them by Bernstein & Co., making the aggregate of $898.51, which was, however, to be credited with $114.10, the proceeds of the sale, less freight, leaving a balance of $785.41, which they alleged was directly attributable to the negligence and carelessness of the defendant in improperly transmitting their message. They also made a claim for damages arising from the loss of Bernstein’s custom. The circuit judge sustained a general demurrer to all that part of the petition which sought to recover for attorney’s fees, cost of the attachment suit, or any of the items except what he regarded as the direct loss on the potatoes. The defendant, in its .answer, says that it is not liable to the plaintiff for the amount sued for, or for any amount: First. Because plaintiffs were under no legal obligations to deliver the potatoes sued for to Bernstein & Co., at the price of $1.07 per barrel, as the message of .plaintiff and the response of Bernstein & Co., did not constitute a binding and legal contract between them, whereby plaintiffs were bound to ship the potatoes at the price named in 'the telegram. Second. Because the damages sued for are not the natural and proximate consequences of the mistake complained of in the transmission of plaintiffs’ messaage to Bernstein & Co., and were not within the contemplation of the parties to the contract for the transmission of the telegram at the time it was sent. Third. That as the dispatch was not repeated, their liability was, by the terms of the printed blank upon which it was. written, limited to 40 cents, — the cost of the telegram. Fourth. It is insisted that in no event can they be liable for any greater suim than the difference in the price named in the telegram as received by it¿ and the fair market val[913]*913ue of the potatoes on tlie Cleveland market when they arrived. Fifth. It is insisted that plaintiffs made no reasonable efforts to render their injury as small as possible, but negligently permitted the potatoes to remain in the cars until many of them were spoiled and destroyed. So much of the answer as pleaded that plaintiffs were1 under no legal obligation Lo deliver the potatoes sued for at the price of the delivered message, and also that part of the answer which denied liability because the dispatch was not repeated, was stricken out. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for $656,' the value, of 340 barrels of potatoes at $1.70, with G per cent, interest thereon from the 31st day of August, 1896; and, a motion for a new trial having been overruled, defendants prosecute this appeal.

I't is complained that the court enred in its instruction as to the measure of damage, ,and also that the verdict is flagrantly against the weight of evidence. The instruction complained of is as follows, viz.: “The court instructs the jury that if they shall believe friom the evidence that, by the negligence of the defendant or its agent, the telegram mentioned in the petition, sent by the plaintiffs to N. Bernstein, was changed so as to read $1.07, instead of $1.70, per barrel for the potatoes in controversy, when the said telegram was received by the said Bernstein & Co., and that plaintiffs were thereby damaged, then they should find for the plaintiffs in such a sum as they .believe, from ■the evidence, represented the difference between potatoes at $1.70 per .barrel and the sum for which the plaintiffs oould have sold them at Cleveland, Ohio, after definitely learning of the mistake in the telegram by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, if there was such mistake. If they find for the plaintiffs, they may, in their discretion, [914]*914allow interest from the 28d day of August, 1897.” The deposition of Nathan Bernstein was 'taken and read as evidence by the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 1119, 110 Ky. 907, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/postal-tel-cable-co-v-schaefer-kyctapp-1901.