W. U. Tel. Co. v. McKinney

2 Wilson 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1885
DocketNo. 1786
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Wilson 562 (W. U. Tel. Co. v. McKinney) 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
W. U. Tel. Co. v. McKinney, 2 Wilson 562 (Tex. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Opinion by

Willson, J.

§ 614. Damages in action against a telegraph company for failure to deliver a cipher dispatch; discussion of the question and the authorities; former decisions of this court overruled; case stated. Appellee, who was engaged in the business of peddling, on August 31,1883, delivered to appellant’s ágent at Houston, a telegraph message to be transmitted and delivered to P. Callaghan, at Kansas City, Mo., which was in the following words: “Twenty lumps, five looms, five buffs, five bucks.” This message was understood by appellee and Callaghan to mean that the latter, who was a merchant, should forward to appellee, at Houston, certain linen goods, which line of goods appellee was engaged in peddling. The message was never delivered to Callaghan. Appellee waited in Houston several days for the goods, and finally ordered them by telegram a second time and received them. By the non-delivery of his first message, he was delayed ten or eleven days in getting his goods, during which time he remained in Houston. He brought this suit to recover damages for the failure on the part of appellant to deliver said message, claiming damages generally in the sum of $125. In the justice’s court in which the suit was instituted he recovered judgment for $96.25 and costs. In the county court, to which the cause had been appealed by the company, he recovered judgment for $100 and all costs. Appellee testified, on the trial, that he remained in Houston ten or eleven days waiting for his goods, at. an expense of $5 per day; and that he was damaged $125, but did not specify any other damages than said expenses. This was all the evidence as to the damages sustained by him. It is plain that the message does not disclose its meaning except to the person to whom it was directed. It is in effect a cipher message, and did not, [563]*563upon its face, notify the company that it was of pecuniary value or importance. Such being the character of it, the rule laid down by perhaps the weight of authority, as to the measure of damage for failure to send or deliver such a message, seems to be, briefly stated, as follows: If the message itself does not show that it is of pecuniary value or importance, and the company has no notice of its value or importance from any other source, at the time it undertakes to transmit and deliver it, the sender can only recover nominal damages, or the amount paid for sending it. [3 Sutherland, Dam. 298, 299; 6 Wait’s Act. & Def. 19; Shields v. W. U. Tel. Co. Allen’s Tel. Cas. 5; Sedgwick on Dam. 413; Baldwin v. U. S. Tel. Co. 54 Barb. (N. Y.) 505; S. C. Allen’s Tel. Cas. 613; Candee v. W. U. Tel. Co. 34 Wis. 411.] This rule has been expressly recognized and adopted by the supreme court- of this state in Daniel v. W. U. Tel. Co. 61 Tex. 452, and in that case the doctrine of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, and of Baldwin v. U. S. Tel. Co. supra, is quoted and approved, and it is said that the limitation of the damages, as established by those decisions, “ must be held to apply with conclusive force to enigmatical cipher telegrams, the meaning of which is a sealed mystery to the operator.”

It is therefore the law of this state, as established by our supreme court, that in the case of a cipher telegram the sender can only recover, for .a failure to send or deliver, nominal damages, unless he alleges and proves that the company, at the time of receiving such telegram for transmission, had knowledge that it was of value and importance. And further, that although the company had knowledge of its value and importance, the damages will be limited to such as might fairly, reasonably, naturally and directly arise from the breach of the contract, according to the usual course of things; or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of the parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of a breach of it. In other words, the [564]*564damages must be the natural and necessary consequences of the breach of the contract, in the minds of the parties, interpreting the contract in the light of the circumstances under which it was made. Damages arising specially or consequentially cannot be allowed, unless they are shown to have been reasonably within the contemplation of both parties when making the contract; that is, unless both parties, at that time, were informed of the facts which would render such damages probable in the event of a breach of the contract. This rule limiting damages in actions for breach of contract, unaccompanied by fraud, oppression or gross negligence, is undoubtedly the settled law of this state. [Jones v. George, 61 Tex. 345; Pac. Ex. Co. v. Darnell, 5 Tex. Law Rev. 73; W. & W. Con. Rep. §§ 193, 1002, 1034, 1125; ante, § 283.] This court, however, in the cases of W. U. Tel. Co. v. Weiting [W. & W. Con. Rep. § 801], and W. IT. Tel. Oo. v. Bertram & Mueller [id. § 1152], announced a more liberal rule upon the subject of damages, as applicable to the breach of contract by telegraph companies, and these cases are, in this particular, in conflict with' Daniel v. W. IT. Tel. Co. supra, which expressly declares that the general rule limiting damages on the breach of a contract is not only applicable in the case of telegraph companies, but applies with conclusive force where the message is in cipher. It is still the opinion of this court, that the rule as stated by it in the two cases named, is not only supported by good authority, but is more in consonance with reason and justice than the one declared in Hadley v. Baxendale, supra. But while this court has not changed its opinion as to the correctness of its said decisions, we conclude that, for the sake of avoiding conflict in the civil decisions of the courts of last resort in this state, and to preserve, as far as practicable, a uniform rule upon this subject, the said decisions of this court, in so far as they are in conflict with the Daniel case, should be overruled, and we therefore do now overrule the same. We will here also remark, that, in our [565]*565opinion, the breach of the contract in this case, and in the cases above overruled, was accompanied with or rather was the result of gross negligence on the part of the company, and such being the case, the rule limiting the damages to such as were actual, direct and proximate, is not applicable. But such was also the Daniel case. There the negligence was gross, and yet the restrictive rule was applied, and in holding as we do upon this point, in this case, we are but holding what we understand to be the law laid down in the Daniel case.

§ 645. Notice of value, etc., of message; what notice is sufficient. It was proved that appellant’s clerk was notified by appellee, at the time of delivering the enigmatical message for transmission, that it was an order for goods to be shipped to him at Houston, from Kansas City. There was a conflict of evidence upon this point; but we will take it for granted that the jury determined the question in favor of appellee. Considering it, therefore, as a fact, that appellant had notice, when it received the message for transmission, that it contained an order for goods, this was sufficient notice that it was of value and importance. It was not necessary that the company should have been apprised of the details of the transaction. It was its duty to inquire for particulars if it desired them.

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2 Wilson 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-u-tel-co-v-mckinney-texapp-1885.