Postal Telegraph Cable Co. of Texas v. Talerico

136 S.W. 575, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 575 (Postal Telegraph Cable Co. of Texas v. Talerico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. of Texas v. Talerico, 136 S.W. 575, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 233 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, C. J.

The action was brought against appellant for damages alleged to. have been caused Talerico by the failure of appellant to deliver the following telegram sent by him from San Antonio- addressed to-the Fruit Dispatch Company at Houston; “Ship car Bluefield firsts thousand cocoanuts - Wednesday’s steamer. Good stock.” — which, according to the petition, meant by “Blue-field’s first” a kind and quality of banana known and understood by defendant and all: other persons having business transactions with the fruit trade, and that “Wednesday’s Steamer good stock” meant that the bananas- and cogoanuts were to be of good stock and to be shipped from a steamer arriving at *576 New Orleans on Wednesday following, all of which meaning defendant and its agents and employés well understood. As his damages, plaintiff in his petition claimed the difference between what the shipment would have cost him and its reasonable market value at San Antonio, alleging the difference based on the wholesale and also the retail values at San Antonio. The verdict was for $150 in favor of plaintiff.

[1] The first assignment of error is the refusal to give a peremptory instruction for the defendant. Under this, it is insisted that there was no evidence that, if the order embodied in the telegram had been received, the order would have been filled. We find against this contention. It was shown, among other things, that plaintiff received from the Fruit Dispatch Company, ahead of time, a list announcing the fact that there were bananas and cocoanuts coming to New Orleans on that Wednesday’s steamer. The witness Wm. Talerico testified: “I say there were some bananas and cocoanuts come in on a steamer that got into New Orleans on a certain Wednesday, because I got a list from the Fruit Dispatch Company ahead of time. I knew when they got their lists out they were going to have the goods there; * * * that as soon as we received -their wires on Monday, and as soon as we received the wires quoting prices, we ordered.” It was shown that it was the custom of the Fruit Dispatch Company to wire Talerico every Monday morning the prices on all arrivals of the current week. It cannot reasonably be supposed that such lists and prices would be sent out to the trade with reference to incoming steamers, unless they had the goods on such steamers. This was sufficient evidence to show that the Fruit Dispatch Company could have filled the order, and that they would have filled it sufficiently appeared from the fact that Talerico was an habitual customer, and his orders had never been turned down.

[2] It is also contended under this assignment that damages for the loss of prospective and speculative profits were not recoverable, and that, where only such damages were shown, the peremptory charge should be given. There was testimony showing that defendant had notice of the fact that plaintiff was, and had for a long time been, engaged as a dealer in fruit in San Antonio, and the testimony showing that the result of the failure to deliver the telegram was that Talerico did not get the shipment he ordered, and thereby lost the difference between what the same would have cost him, and its reasonable market value at San Antonio at the time he should have received it. This is the correct rule applicable to this case, and is not objectionable as involving speculative or prospective damages.

[3] There is a third proposition, which Is that the peremptory instruction should have been given because the evidence showed no loss except the loss of profits which would have been made if the plaintiff had received and sold the fruit, and there was no evidence that the telegraph company had any notice of the contemplated profits of the plaintiff and no notice of anything except of what appeared upon the face of the telegram. Defendant was shown to have been familiar with the fact that Talerico was a dealer in fruits, and therefore had notice that he was ordering these goods to dispose of in the course of his business; and this subjected defendant to damages for his loss of profits, to be measured in the proper manner. Under testimony in this record, the fruit would have been disposed of by Talerico in the San Antonio market, the bananas at $3.75 per hundredweight, and the cocoanuts for $5.50 per sack of 100, and that this was at wholesale and as disposed of to the trade. There was proof, also, that bananas were scarce in the market at San Antonio at the time the ear should have arrived and afterwards, and there was no way by which he could otherwise supply himself, either at San Antonio or Houston, without paying a price that would not justify handling them. Under these facts, the rule for the measurement of plaintiff’s damages was as charged by the court, which was the difference between the cost to plaintiff and what the reasonable market value of the fruit was in San Antonio at the time.

[4] Besides the above, the peremptory charge should not have been given, because plaintiff was shown to be entitled to recover the cost of the telegram.

[5] We overrule the second and third assignments. The charge concerning the measure of damages was not erroneous, and it was not asked to be made more specific, as to distinguishing, between retail and wholesale prices. The verdict indicates that retail prices were not adopted by the jury and appears to correspond with what was shown to be the difference in value based on wholesale prices. At any rate, appellant has not undertaken to point out and explain wherein the rulings on demurrers complained of by these assignments resulted in prejudice to It.

[6] The second proposition is not within the scope of the assignments, and-cannot be considered.

The fourth assignment is overruled. The profits sued for were not prospective or speculative, and notice of such character of loss from nondelivery of the telegram was both alleged and shown to have been possessed by defendant.

The fifth assignment is overruled. We have already stated that the charge the court gave on the measure of damage was the correct one upon the facts of this case. Edgeworth v. Talerico, 95 S. W. 677.

From what has been said we cannot sustain «the proposition under the sixth and seventh assignments.

*577 [7] The eighth is that the court erred in refusing to gire a charge that if it was the custom at the time among dealers to receive a communication of orders such as this one on the next day, and that by reason of this plaintiff should have known that said order or telegram had not been received by the addressee and an ordinarily prudent person would in such circumstances have taken steps toward having the order in, and that, but for such failure, his damages would not have accrued and that therein he was guilty of negligence contributing to and causing his damages, to find for defendant.

The court gave a general charge submitting contributory negligence. The above requested charge appears to be based upon the testimony of Wm.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 575, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/postal-telegraph-cable-co-of-texas-v-talerico-texapp-1911.