Sweatland v. Ill. & Miss. Telegraph Co.

27 Iowa 433
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 6, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 27 Iowa 433 (Sweatland v. Ill. & Miss. Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweatland v. Ill. & Miss. Telegraph Co., 27 Iowa 433 (iowa 1869).

Opinion

Dillon, Ch. J.

Properly to examine and' cóúfe'idkü the important, and, in this State, undecided questions .arisw ing on the record, this cause was held over from the last term. We are now prepared to decide it.

1. Telegraph piintelTrastrictions: statute. The original message left with the defendant for transmission was this:

“ LÍVe h°SS> S1'X (6)> SÍX (6J). Dressed, s^x three-quarters (6f), seven (7) firm.”

¿Leliwered to the plaintiff it read:

“ Live hogs six three-quarters, seven (7) firm.” Prom the middle of the message was omitted the words :
“ Six (6), six quarter (6^), dressed.”

The effect of the omitted words was that the price of dressed hogs was stated to be the price of live hogs. That the mistake occurred is not controverted. That the plaintiff acted upon the message as delivered, purchased hogs upon the basis of value therein stated, and was damaged in consequence to the extent of $950, are undisputed facts.

The general question in the case on the merits is, whether the defendant is liable for this mistake and the damages which it occasioned to the plaintiff?

The solution of the question involves the consideration of several others, which we proceed to notice in proper order.

The plaintiff, in the first place, maintains that the defendant is liable'for this mistake by the express provisions of the statute. (Eev. § 1353.)

The section is this:

[446]*446“ The proprietor of a telegraph is Halle for all mistakes in transmitting messages made by any person in his employment, as well as for all damages resulting from a failure to perform any other duties required by law.”

To this portion the defendant answers, that the statute applies only when the parties have made no special contract; that the legislature did not intend to prohibit parties to enter into such reasonable stipulations as they might deem proper respecting the transmission of messages ; that in this instance the parties, viz., the company on the one side and the plaintiff, through his agents, on the other, did regulate their respective rights by the conditions and terms printed at the head of the message; and it is to these conditions and terms, so far as they apply, and not the general declaration of the statute, that resort must-be had to determine the measure of the defendant’s liability.

To this the plaintiff rejoins, that the statute is founded on public policy and is declarative of it; that it authorizes no regulations or contracts restricting the liability it imposes ; and it is argued that since it is shown that, by repeating messages, mistakes may be avoided, it becomes under the statute the duty of the company itself to repeat the message, a duty which it cannot, by regulations, shift on to the public.

On this point the court below held with the defendant, as will be seen by reference to the instruction numbered one, copied in the statement of the case. If there was any error in this it is one of which the defendant cannot complain. Our inclinations, however, are that the point was rightly ruled below, but since the exigencies of the present appeal do not require any positive determination of it, we pass it, with the statement that we will concede, for the purposes of this case, that the statute does not make the defendant liable at all events, and that it is [447]*447competent for the company, notwithstanding the statute, to enter into stipulations, or to adopt reasonable rules, conditions and regulations governing the transmission of messages; and it will also be conceded that the regulation respecting the repetition of messages (the only one involved in this case), is reasonable, and binding upon the parties. It is the more proper to pass the point without any decisive ruling, because it has occurred to us, though counsel, we believe, did not allude to the circumstance, that since the message was delivered to the defendant in another State, it might be debatable whether our statute had any application to the case, even though the mistake may have happened in that part of the defendant’s line wdiich is situate in this State.

Respecting the right to limit liability by stipulation, or printed conditions, see, generally, Wann v. Telegraph Company, 37 Mo. 472, 1866 (similar statute to Iowa); Camp v. Telegraph Company, 1 Met. (Ky.) 164, 1858 (right affirmed without aid of statute); Ellis v. Telegraph Company, 13 Allen (Mass.), 226, 1866; MacAndrew v. Telegraph Company, 17 C. B. 3, 1855; Telegraph Company v. Carew, 15 Mich. 525, 1867; S. C., 7 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.) 18; Birney v. Telegraph Company, 18 Md. 341, 1862; Breese v. Telegraph Company, 45 Barb. 274, 1866; and see cases collected, 2 Am. Law Rev. 615-632; and by Prof. Dwight, 4 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.) 192-199.

2. extent on ligence. Having assumed the validity of the printed conditions so far as respects the repetition of messages, and that the message in question was sent subject thereto, the inquiry next arises, What is the meaning and effect thereof, so far as they relate to the facts of the present cause?

As to the cause of the mistake, the parties differed. One of the positions assumed by the plaintiff, if not the [448]*448main one, was that the mistake was caused by a defective instrument in the Office of the company at the place at which the message was received. He offered evidence tending to establish his theory. This theory was denied by tine defendant, and it offered evidence ten ding to show that the mistake could not have been occasioned by the alleged defect in the instrument, but must have been occasioned by uncontrollable atmospheric causes.

The third and fourth instructions of the court (see statement) relate to these two conflicting theories.

In the third instruction the court directed the jury that, although the contract was made as claimed by the company, yet a it was still the duty of the defendant to employ skillful operators and proper instruments, * * and if the message was not transmitted correctly, not by reason of its not being repeated, but because of unskillful operators or defective or imperfect instruments, the defendant is liable.”

The fourth instruction lays down the converse proposition, and says to the jury that if the mistake was caused “ by the interruption of the working of the telegraph by atmospheric electricity, or other unavoidable or uncontrollable cause, then the defendant is not liable.”

The tenth instruction requires that the company, notwithstanding the special conditions, shall keep good instruments. The eleventh instruction substantially tells the jury that it is incumbent on the plaintiff to show that the mistake happened by reason of a defective instrument. The twelfth instruction lays down the law to be that, if the mistake happened in consequence of the want of ordinary skill in the operators, or in consequence of the use of imperfect or defective instruments, the defendant would be liable. And from the special terms and conditions at the head of the printed message the defendant could not well complain of this statement of the law. On general prin[449]

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