Postal Telg. Cable Co. v. Louisville Cotton Oil Co.

122 S.W. 852, 136 Ky. 843, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 852 (Postal Telg. Cable Co. v. Louisville Cotton Oil Co.) 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 Telg. Cable Co. v. Louisville Cotton Oil Co., 122 S.W. 852, 136 Ky. 843, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 450 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

— Reversing.

At 4:16 p. m. on September 11, 1905, R. D. Winsliip & Co., a firm of brokers in Chicago, sent tlie following telegram to tlie Louisville Cotton Oil Company: [846]*846“Acclimate can sell handsome Bleachable fasten bastile Chicago September answer.” This cipher telegram, when translated, means: “On firm offer can sell 10 tank cars Bleachable prime summer yellow oil 27c. Chicago September answer.” At 4:40 p. m. on the same day, the Louisville Cotton Oil Company answered this telegram in the following message: “Absurdity Bastile Car Chicago handsome Bleach-able Fasten Memphis Exchange rules and arbitration Obedient buyers name” — which, when translated, means: “Telegram received and offer accepted 27 cents Chicago 10 tank cars Bleachable prime summer yellow Memphis Exchange rules and arbitration. On receipt of this please telegraph buyer’s name.”

This telegram was received at the Chicago, office of the cable company at 4:55 p. m., and sent by a messenger boy to the office of Winship & Co. The boy, finding the office closed, left the telegram under the door, where it was found by Winship & Co. the next morning, when they reached their office. The failure on the part of Winship & Co. to receive the telegram on the day it was sent resulted in the cancellation of the order, as the offer contained in the telegram of Winship & Co. was good only if accepted by the cotton oil company on September 11th, and notice of such acceptance delivered to Winship & Co. on that day. Thereupon the cotton oil company brought.this suit for damages against the cable company, charging that by its negligence in failing to deliver the telegram it lost the sale of the oil, and that on the following day the market price of such oil declined, and the highest price thereafter obtainable was 24 cents per gallon, at which the oil was sold, making a loss to the cotton oil company of $1,875. In its answer the cable company set up: (1) That the [847]*847telegram, it failed to deliver was a cipher message, the meaning of which was unknown to it, and the damages claimed by the cotton oil company were not, and could not reasonably have been, contemplated by it at the time it received the telegram for transmission as the probable result of a failure to deliver it; (2) that the telegram sent by the cotton oil company was not an acceptance of the offer made in the telegram of Winship & Co., and therefore no contract would have been completed between the parties if the telegram had been received by Winship & Co. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of the cotton oil company for $1,500.

Before coming to the merits of the case we will dispose of a question of practice raised by counsel for the cotton oil company who insists that we cannot consider the evidence in the case because all of it is not embraced in a properly certified bill of exceptions. On the trial of the case several witnesses testified orally in behalf of each of the parties, and there was read the depositions of R. D. Winship, Clarence Wimpenny, L. C. Doggett, W. E. Griffith, George J. Harding, and Charles A. Steams. In the official stenographer’s transcript of the evidence, attested by the stenographer and examined and approved by the trial judge,, is contained the evidence of all the witnesses who testified in person, and also a statement that the depositions of certain witnesses, naming them, were read in evidence to the jury. The depositions are not included in the stenographer’s transcript of the evidence, but are found in the record made by the clerk. In the bill of exceptions, examined and approved by the trial judge, there appears the following:

- “The plaintiff introduced as evidence in its behalf John G. Cafferty, Charles B. Finck, Charles A. Lud[848]*848wig, and read in evidence the depositions of R. D. Winship, Clarence Wimpenny, and U. C. Doggett, as shown by said transcript of evidence. Said depositions will follow immediately after this bill of exceptions in this transcript. * * * The defendant introduced L. R. James, P. J. Welsh, Ruby Meichels, and J. S. Wright, and read to the jury the depositions of W. E. Griffith, George J. Harding’, and Charles A. Stearns; all of which is fully set out in said transcript of evidence.”

Reading together the bill of exceptions, incorporated in the record made by the clerk, and the stenographer’s official transcript of the evidence, it is shown beyond question that the depositions of the persons named were read in evidence; but the point is made that, as the evidence of the witnesses who testified by deposition does not appear in the bill of exceptions or in the transcript of the evidence, it cannot be considered, and, this being so, w;e must presume that the omitted evidence supported the averments of the petition and was sufficient to sustain the. verdict. The sole purpose and office of a bill of exceptions is to bring before this court a record authenticated by the trial judge of things that transpired in the trial court that do not appear on the record book of the trial court. It is not necessary to put in the bill of exceptions the pleadings, orders of court, or any motion or paper that is mentioned in the orders of court as having been offered or filed as a part of the record, although it may not be copied on the record book, as the fact that it is there mentioned is sufficient evidence of its identification to make it a part of the record for this court when copied by the clerk, accompanied by his certificate.

Under the old system, and before the advent of the official stenographer, it- was the practice for attor[849]*849neys to write out a bill of exceptions containing the substance of what the witnesses said and tbe exceptions and objections thereto, and when any deposi - tion, instruments of writing, or record was introduced to recite in the bill, in substance, that the plaintiff (or defendant, as the case may be) read in evidence a deed from A. to B., or the deposition of H., followed by the words “here insert,” which was a direction to the clerk to insert the document or deposition at that place when he came to prepare a transcript for this court. And so, in reference to .instructions, the bill, to illustrate, would usually read: The plaintiff offered and the court gave instruction A, reading as follows, “here insert.” Occasionally a bill is made up in this way now,' although, with few exceptions, the oral evidence is taken down by the official stenographer, who makes out a transcript for use in this court as provided in section 4639 of the Kentucky Statutes. Under the new practice that has come into vogue with the official stenographer, it occasionally happens that the depositions read on the trial will appear in the transcript made out by the stenographer, and also in the record made out by the clerk, and often the depositions will appear in the stenographer’s transcript of the evidence and not in the record made out by the clerk, and sometimes in the record and not in the transcript of the evidence. Indeed, it is not a matter of much importance in what part of the record prepared for this court depositions or other like matter appear, so that it is authenticated by the trial judge as having been read on the trial, as the Civil Code of Practice provides, in. section 335, that “no particular form of exception or bill of exceptions is required.”

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 852, 136 Ky. 843, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/postal-telg-cable-co-v-louisville-cotton-oil-co-kyctapp-1909.