Union Constr. Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co.

125 P. 242, 163 Cal. 298, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 409
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1912
DocketSac. No. 1732.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 125 P. 242 (Union Constr. Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Constr. Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co., 125 P. 242, 163 Cal. 298, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 409 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The action is to recover damages arising from the alleged negligence of the defendant in failing to deliver two telegrams sent to the plaintiff's agents in San Francisco.

The plaintiff was constructing a power plant on the Stanislaus River in Tuolumne County. On October 10, 1906, it made an agreement with the Risdon Iron and Locomotive Works, of San Francisco, by which the plaintiff was given the option to close a contract with said Iron Works, within ninety days from said date, for the construction by said Iron Works of a part of the plant, consisting of an additional pressure line, known as the Mine Line, at a cost of one hundred and forty-three thousand dollars, to be paid by the plaintiff. The right to exercise this option expired at midnight of January 8, 1907. The determination whether or not plaintiff would accept said contract within that time was committed by plaintiff to its engineers, Sanderson & Porter, of New York. Plaintiff’s headquarters for said construction work was at Yallecito, Tuolumne County, where H. F. Jackson, its manager, conducted the work. It also maintained an office in the Kohl building in San Francisco, in charge of H. P. Yeeder. A day or two before January 8, 1907, Jackson went to San Francisco, expecting there to receive a telegram from Sander-son & Porter, accepting or rejecting the contract offered by *302 the Iron Works, and for the purpose of at once closing the contract with the Iron Works if it were accepted. In the afternoon of January 8th, he procured Mr. Field, the agent of the Iron Works, to come to the office of the plaintiff and remain in his company so as to be ready to receive the acceptance for the Iron Works. In the evening a little before six o’clock, no telegram having been received, Jackson and Field went out to dine together, leaving "Feeder in the office. Plaintiff endeavored to prove at the trial that it was arranged between them that "Feeder should remain in the office for the purpose of receiving the expected telegram, should it arrive, and bringing it to Jackson where he was dining with Field. The court refused to allow this evidence and exception was taken to the ruling. If it appears that this evidence was material the error would be injurious. In the consideration of- the case, therefore, we must assume that such arrangement was-made.

On that day, Sanderson & Porter, sent to plaintiff, at Vallecito, the following telegram regarding this option: “Wire Jackson that we will exercise option on Mine Line and header.” The plaintiff’s agent at Vallecito received this telegram and thereupon wrote and delivered to the agent of the Western Union Telegraph Company at Vallecito, for transmission to Jackson at San Francisco, the following telegram:

■ “Vallecito, Cal., Jany. 8, 1907. “H. F. Jackson, 909 Kohl Building, S. F., Cal.
“Hobart Porter wires he will exercise option on Mine Line and header.
“(signed) Union Construction Company.”

This telegram was received by the telegraph company at its San Francisco office at 8:35 p. m. of that day. It was not delivered to Jackson, or to plaintiff, until after 9 a. m. the next day. Porter had left New York for California and had arrived at Chicago, on January 8th. He there delivered to the defendant for transmission the following telegram:

Chicago, Jan. 8, 1907.
“H. P. Veeder, Kohl Building, San Francisco,
“Advise Jackson that we wired him Vallecito to close option oñ Mine Line and header.
“ (signed) Hobart Porter.”

*303 This message was received at the Sam Francisco office of the defendant at 6:57 p. M. that day. It was not delivered until after 9 A. M. the next day. These are the two messages which it is alleged the defendant negligently failed to deliver on the day on which they were received at defendant’s San Francisco office. The Vallecito message was given to the defendant, by telephone, at San Andreas, California, at 7:55 p. m. of January 8th. The Chicago message was given to defendant for transmission at Chicago at 7:50 p. m. Chicago time, being the same as 5:50 p. m. California time.

The complaint alleges that, after the defendant had received the dispatches at its San Francisco office, and during the evening of January 8th, the plaintiff inquired of the defendant’s agent at that office to learn whether or not said telegrams had been received by defendant and was informed by said agent that they had not been received. Jackson testified, for the plaintiff, that he went out to dine Avith Field that evening and remained at the restaurant with him until nearly ten o’clock. As stated, he was not allowed to testify that he directed Veeder to stay at the office and bring or send him any telegrams that were received while he was at the restaurant. The court also refused, to permit him to testify that during his absence at dinner he had inquired of Veeder by telephone in regard to the telegrams. Veeder testified that he remained at the plaintiff’s office after Jackson went out to dine, that Jackson left at 6 o’clock, that he was himself absent at dinner from 6:30 to 7:15, that he then stayed in the office until 10:15 that evening, that no telegrams were received or delivered there during that time, and that when he reached the office after dining he looked about to see if a notice of a telegram had been left during his absence. Finding none, he then took down the telephone and called the central telephone office to connect him with the line running to the Western Union Telegraph Company’s office in the city. The connection was made and some one responded,- apparently at the Western Union office. He then inquired if that was the Western Union Telegraph office and received through the receiver the answer: “Yes.” He did not recognize the voice of the person ansivering and had no means of knowing that he was connected with the defendant’s office, except that he had made the call and received the response in the usual and customary manner of telephone *304 communication. It was also shown in effect that the plaintiff had a telephone in its office as a part of the public telephone system then in operation in San Francisco, that the defendant’s office had a like telephone connection, that the telephone company had printed and issued to its subscribers the usual directory showing the name, address, and telephone number of each of its subscribers, among which were those of the plaintiff and defendant, respectively, and that the telephone company operated its system by means of operators at a central station to make connections between subscribers when called on to do so and in the usual manner. The court refused to allow testimony of the conversation over the telephone between "Feeder and the person answering for the defendant through the receiver. There is a sort of a suggestion in the defendant’s brief that the court was not informed of the nature of the conversation sought to be produced. We do not understand, however, that it is claimed that it was not made to appear that it related to the receipt of a telegram by defendant for plaintiff at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
125 P. 242, 163 Cal. 298, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-constr-co-v-western-union-tel-co-cal-1912.