Wallingford v. West. Union Tel. Co.

38 S.E. 443, 60 S.C. 201, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 8, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 443 (Wallingford v. West. Union Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallingford v. West. Union Tel. Co., 38 S.E. 443, 60 S.C. 201, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 94 (S.C. 1901).

Opinions

April 8, 1901. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The complaint herein, omitting the formal allegations, is as follows:

"V. That on the 27th day of December, 1895, the plaintiff engaged the defendant to transmit from the said town of Sheridan to the said town of Greenwood, and there to deliver to the said Sam. Wallingford, one of the plaintiffs herein, the following message: `Sam. Wallingford, Greenwood, S.C. Shall I sell Simms Wathen load for hundred, *Page 204 four months, six per cent. S.L. Wallingford.' * * *

"VI. That the said defendant had notice of the importance of the said message, and the damage and the damage and loss that would likely fall upon plaintiffs, if the said message was not delivered promptly and correctly to the said Sam. Wallingford.

"VII. That the said message was from the son and partner of the said Sam. Wallingford, and one of the plaintiffs herein, who wished to know if he should sell a load of mules, consisting of thirty head and belonging to the plaintiffs, to Simms Wathen at the price of $100 each, on four months time, at six per cent. interest.

"VIII. That said message was transmitted by the defendant to the said town of Greenwood, State of South Carolina, the residence of said Sam. Wallingford, and received by the agent of the defendant on the said 27th day of December, 1895.

"IX. That although said message was received by the agent of the defendant at Greenwood on the 27th day of December, 1895, the said defendant carelessly and negligently, and not regarding its duty in that behalf, failed to delivery said message to the said Sam. Wallingford for more than a week; that said Sam. Wallingford first learned of the transmission of said message for him through a letter from said S.L. Wallingford, his son and partner, at Sheridan, Indiana, when said Sam. Wallingford called at the office of the defendant in Greenwood, and received said message from the agent of the defendant, more than a week after its receipt at Greenwood by the said defendant.

"X. That the plaintiffs would have sold said load of mules, consisting of thirty head, at the price of $100 per head, which said price was offered to the plaintiffs by said Simms Wathen, had not the said defendant carelessly and negligently failed to deliver the said message to the said Sam. Wallingford upon its receipt by the defendant at Greenwood, S.C. or within a reasonable time thereafter.

"XI. That by reason of the careless and negligent conduct *Page 205 of defendant, in failing to deliver said message, the said Sam. Wallingford upon its receipt at Greenwood or within a reasonable time thereafter, the plaintiffs were unable to sell the said thirty head of mules for three months, and kept them at great care and expense to the plaintiffs, to wit: the sum of $7 per head per month in feed and attention, and at the end of said time sold said mules at great loss to the plaintiffs, to wit: at the price of $77.50 per head, which was the highest price they could get for them, making the total loss to the plaintiffs upon each of the said thirty head of mules, the sum of $43.50; and that thereby the plaintiffs have been damaged by the careless and negligent conduct of the defendant as aforesaid, in the sum of $1.305."

All except the formal allegations were denied. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for $675.

The defendant appealed upon exceptions, the first of which is as follows: "I. Question of admissibility of evidence. — (a) The Circuit Judge erred in refusing to reject the deposition of S.L. Wallingford upon the several grounds stated: (1) The original notice of taking said deposition was not signed by plaintiffs' attorneys. (2) The certificate of the notary public does not state where the examination of the witness was had. (3) The notary public does not, after his signature, state his jurisdiction or the source of his authority. (4) The certificate is not sealed with the seal of the notary public. (b) The Circuit Judge erred in allowing the question to the witness, S.L. Wallingford, and his answer thereto, as follows: `Q. Where was the nearest market for such mules and what was the best market price for the same from the time of the offer up to the time of the sale? A. The nearest market where there were pens and an auction sale of such mules was at Indianapolis, Indiana, thirty miles from my place of residence, but there had been foreign buyers, who were in the habit of coming to my place of residence and buying such mules up to and previous to the said time of sale to Simms Wathen, or the offer of such mules. And the best price that I had been offered from any one except *Page 206 the offer of Simms Wathen up to the time of the sale of such mules on January 18th, 1896, at $77.50, was $77.50 per head.' The error consisting in this: The measure of damages was the difference between the price offered and the market value at Sheridan on December 27th, 1895, if there was such market value there; if not, at the nearest market. This question and answer were not directed to this issue and were irrelevant. (c) The Circuit Judge erred in allowing the question to the witness, S.L. Wallingford, and his answer thereto, as follows: `Q. Please state whether or not you could have sold the mules for a better price at any time from the time of the offer and the sending of the telegram to the time you did sell? A. No.' The error consisting in this: The measure of damages was the difference between the price offered and the market value at Sheridan, on December 27th, 1895, if there was such market value there; if not, at the nearest market. The testimony offered was competent only in the event that there was no market on that day at Sheridan or elsewhere. Of this there was no evidence. The testimony was, therefore, irrelevant. (d) The Circuit Judge erred in allowing the question to the witness, Sam. Walingford, and his answer thereto, as follows: `Q. Suppose you had received that telegram when it ought to have been delivered, or in a reasonable time after it should have been delivered at Greenwood, what would have been your answer to S.L. Wallingford as to the sale of that carload of mules? A. My answer would have been to sell the mules.' The error consisting in this: Damages to be recovered must be the proximate result of the negligence alleged; that cannot be recovered upon evidence of what a man would have done under certain circumstances; that is too remote, contingent and speculative. (e) The Circuit Judge erred in excluding the testimony of the operator, M.M. Calhoun, as to replies made to him by T.F. Riley, proprietor of the hotel where Wallingford was boarding, when inquired of as to Wallingford's whereabouts; it being submitted that when an operator or messenger goes to a hotel for the purpose *Page 207 of delivering a message to the addressee the declarations of the proprietor of the hotel as to the whereabouts of the addressee are competent upon the issue of negligence. (f) (The same objection is made in (f) to the exclusion of the testimony of S.L. Perrin, messenger.)"

"(a)" Assignment of error: The record discloses the following: "Mr. Graydon offered to read testimony taken debene esse of S.L. Wallingford, a plaintiff. Mr. Cothran: We interpose two objections to the deposition. The first is that the notice is not signed by the plaintiffs' attorneys, and the second is that the certificate of the notary public does not state where the examination takes place, and again that it is not sealed by the notary public, where, as it should have been. When he signs, he signs `Newton Cowgill Notary Public,' without stating notary public where, and without a seal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 443, 60 S.C. 201, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallingford-v-west-union-tel-co-sc-1901.