Vollbracht v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

219 Ill. App. 563, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 183
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 27, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 Ill. App. 563 (Vollbracht v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vollbracht v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 219 Ill. App. 563, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 183 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Waggoner

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants are engaged in business at Camp Point, Illinois, a part of which is buying and selling seed. John J. Buffington & Company are in the wholesale seed business at Baltimore, Maryland. Sales of seed were made, by the former to the latter, by means of offers and acceptances by exchange of telegrams.

On August 14,1912, appellants delivered to appellee, for transmission, the following telegram:

“John J. Buffington & Co., Baltimore, Md. Message received—cannot accept your bid—will take five dollars hundred our track—two hundred fifty bags—ten days shipment—like sample of other car—wire instant acceptance—will wait until noon August fifteenth— market looks higher in the west owing to wet weather. Wm & H. F. Vollbracht.”

The message was transmitted and when delivered, to the firm to which it was addressed, read “one days shipment” instead of “ten days shipment.”

On receipt of this telegram, John J. Buffington & Company replied by wire, saying:

“Tour wire received. We accept. Ship Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.”

Assuming that they had made a sale of two hundred and fifty bags of timothy seed at five dollars a hundred pounds to be shipped within ten days to John J. Buffington & Company, appellants made a shipment of that number of bags of such seed weighing thirty-three thousand eight hundred and seventy-five pounds within that time. The consignees did not accept the timothy seed, appellants sustained a loss by reason thereof, and this suit was brought to recover such loss.

The declaration contains two counts charging, in substance, that appellee was employed by appellants to transmit a telegram from Camp Point, Illinois, to John J. Buffington & Company, Baltimore, Maryland, for the sale of timothy seed, consisting of two hundred and fifty bags at five dollars a hundred pounds, f. o. b. Camp Point, on ten days’ shipment, but by mistake of the telegraph company, the telegram was caused to read “one day” shipment, and appellants thereby lost the difference between the market value, after a serious decline, when they learned of said mistake, and what would have been the contract price if said mistake had not prevented a contract between John J. Buffington & Company and appellants; and also loss and expense of one of appellants’ firm in necessary travel to Baltimore to ascertain what the trouble was in reference to the sale of the seed.

To the declaration a plea of general issue was filed, together with a special plea, stating that the appellants ought not to recover more than nominal damages because John J. Buffington & Company, on the receipt of said (appellants’) telegram, believing that a mistake had been made in the offer and proposition contained therein providing for shipment in one day, immediately executed a letter in words and figures following :■

“Baltimore, Md., Aug. 15, 1912. Messrs. Wm. & H. F. Vollbracht, Camp Point, Ill. Gentlemen:—This morning we 'received your- night wire of 14th inst., offering 250 bags of timothy seed at $5.00 per 100 lbs., f. o. b. for shipment in one day, quality like sample of other car for our wire to reach you by noon this date. We wired you this morning accepting the lot of seed, requesting prompt shipment. Hope you will get the seed out promptly. Please let us call attention also to be careful to keep the quality fully up, as it is only on the line of what we must have in quality. Make arrival draft allow inspection against bill of lading.
Yours very truly,
John J. Buffington & Co.”

The special plea also alleged that said letter was placed in an envelope, properly stamped and addressed to the appellants, and deposited in the post office at Baltimore, Maryland; that it was duly received by the appellants and read by an agent and employee of the appellants duly authorized to open mail; and notwithstanding the receipt of said letter, appellants negligently failed to read the same or give proper attention and negligently failed to reply and without the exercise of reasonable care to ascertain its purport, failed to discover said mistake of the appellee; that if appellants had exercised reasonable care, they would have discovered before shipping the seed in controversy, that the telegram delivered to John J. Buffington & Company, at Baltimore, Maryland, was not the telegram delivered by the appellants to appellee at Camp Point, Illinois, and did not submit to John J. Buffing-ton & Compand, the proposition or offer appellants intended to submit by their said telegram, but on the contrary, submitted an entirely different proposition, to wit: An offer to ship such seed in one day instead of ten days, and solely by reason of the negligence of the appellants they failed to discover said mistake before purchasing and shipping such seed, and well knowing the premises, the appellants, nevertheless, more than eight days and after the receipt of said letter and reading the same, procured said seed designated in said proposition and shipped the same by freight to John J. Buffington & Company, who first placed their refusal to accept said seed upon the ground they were denied by the appellants the right to inspect the same, but afterwards placed such refusal on the ground that the said seed was not shipped in the time stated in the telegram received by them; that appellants were not compelled to deliver said seed to John J. Buffington & Company, and that the same was purely voluntary, arid that the loss or damage resulting by reason of such shipment must be borne by appellants.

Appellants filed a replication to the special plea, in which they denied receiving the letter in question.

The court submitted to the jury three special interrogatories asking (1) if appellants, before shipping the seed in controversy, received the letter dated August 15, 1912; (2) did John J. Buffington & Company refuse to' receive the seed designated in the telegram in question because appellants would not permit them to inspect it before paying for it; and (3) did John J. Buffington & Company waive their right to refuse the seed because the same was not delivered in one day as stated in the telegram in controversy. The jury answered each of these questions in the affirmative, and returned a verdict finding appellee not guilty. The court rendered judgment in favor of appellee for its cost, in excess of those tendered by it, and ordered that appellants have leave to withdraw the sum of five dollars of the amount tendered.

bio evidence was offered of any tender having been made to either of appellants, or to one of their attorneys, either before or after the commencement of the suit, and of bringing an amount tendered into court, which should have been done in order to constitute a tender. All that is shown by the record, in reference to a tender, is that on the trial it was agreed that the record might show that the clerk testified, over the objection of appellants, “that five dollars and cost were put up as a tender.

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219 Ill. App. 563, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vollbracht-v-western-union-telegraph-co-illappct-1920.