Weld v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.

92 N.E. 415, 199 N.Y. 88, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1218
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 415 (Weld v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weld v. . Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 92 N.E. 415, 199 N.Y. 88, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1218 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Werner, J.

To the extent that the judgment herein depends upon competent evidence properly submitted to the jury, the unanimous affirmance in the Appellate Division precludes the possibility of further review. We are asked, however, to pass upon certain legal questions raised at the trial, which depend for their correct solution upon a proper view of the evidence and a clear understanding of the charge *97 to the jury. For that reason we preface our discussion with a rather voluminous statement of the facts which are pertinent to the legal questions to be reviewed. The action is brought, as has been stated, to charge the defendant with the damages sustained by the plaintiffs through the alleged negligence of. the former in transmitting a telegraphic message sent by the latter from New York to New Orleans. The message as written by the plaintiffs was: 61 Ellis N. O. Sell 20 thousand Mch. 12.70. Weld,” and as received by the New Orleans representative of the plaintiffs it had been so changed and transposed as to read: “ Sell twenty thousand March 1207. Well.” The import of the message as sent was well understood by the plaintiffs, their correspondents, and the operators of the defendant. It contained a direction to sell twenty thousand bales of cotton for March delivery at 12.70 cents per pound, which was understood by all concerned to mean a sale at 12.70 cents or more. The message as received was quite as clearly understood to mean a sale of twenty thousand bales of cotton for March delivery at 12.07 cents or more. The New Orleans representatives of the plaintiffs followed the instructions set forth in the message as received, sold the designated number of bales at various prices below 12.70 cents and when the error was discovered by the plaintiffs they directed their representatives to purchase at once twenty thousand bales of cotton for March delivery at the best prices obtainable. This was done in the New Orleans market at prices below 12.70 but above the prices at which the plaintiffs’ representatives had previously sold, and the net result was a loss to the plaintiffs of $27,565.

As the original message was not repeated ” the learned trial court charged the jury that the conditions printed on the blank or form upon which it was sent were binding upon the plaintiffs, and absolved the defendant from liability for damages unless they were occasioned by the defendant’s gross negligence. Under the unanimous affirmance by the Appellate Division of the judgment recovered by the plaintiffs, the defendant’s gross negligence must be deemed to have been *98 conclusively established, and the only question in that behalf which we have power to consider is whether the rule of liability given to the jury by the trial judge correctly states the law.

The liability of telegraph companies in respect of the business which' they carry on is regulated by two things: 1. By contract. 2. By the nature of their quasi public employment. In the absence of any special contract limiting or regulating their liability, they do not insure, the safe and accurate transmission of messages, but they are bound to transmit them with a degree of care and diligence adequate to the business which they undertake. The liability which a telegraph company assumes under this general rule may, however, be limited by special contract, and that is to-day the universal practice. As it is a business requiring employees of peculiar skill, so it is also subject to atmospheric and physical disturbances which may set at naught the greatest care and skill. It is, therefore, but right that telegraph companies should have the power to limit their liability in cases where mistakes occur through no fault on their part, or for such mistakes of their employees as will occur through ordinary negligence in spite of the most stringent regulations or the most vigilant general oversight. But manifestly this power cannot be extended further without placing the public absolutely at the mercy of those engaged in transmitting telegraphic messages. This is the reason of the rule, long since established iii this state, that individuals and corporations engaged in this quasi public business, cannot contract to absolve themselves from liability for their own willful misconduct or gross negligence. They may protect themselves by contractual limitations that are reasonable, but beyond that they may not go. That is the law as laid down by this court in a number of cases. (Breeze v. U. S. Telegraph Co., 48 N. Y. 132; Kiley v. Western Union Tel. Co., 109 N. Y. 231; Pearsall v. West. Union Tel. Co., 124 N. Y. 256; Halsted v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co., 193 N. Y. 293.) The cases cited all hold that a regulation limiting the liability of a tele *99 graph company for a mistake in an “ unrepeated ” message to the price paid for sending it is reasonable, but that it does not relieve such a company against the consequences of its gross negligence. The charge of the trial court in this respect was, therefore, clearly correct.

Counsel for the defendant argues, however, that the charge was erroneous because the jury were instructed that the magnitude of the transaction affected by the mistake in the telegram must be considered in determining the degree of the defendant’s negligence. We cannot agree with counsel in this criticism. It is true that the trial court referred to the importance of the transaction, but that was not improper in view of the conceded other facts which served to charge the defendant’s operator with notice that the figures relating to amount and price were of the utmost significance. It is to be noted, moreover, that the trial court very plainly told the jury that the amount involved did not determine the degree of care to be exercised in the transmission of the message. This could be amply demonstrated by excerpts from the charge, but that would unduly extend the discussion and serve to obscure the real point in the case. We content ourselves, therefore, with the suggestion that in this regard the main charge seems to be free from any error which can be definitely stigmatized as prejudicial to the defendant.

We are of opinion also that the defendant’s exceptions to that part of the main charge which relates to the measure of damages and the allowance of interest are not well taken. If the transactions between the plaintiffs and their New Orleans correspondents are assumed to have been the sale and purchase of contracts under which there was to be a future delivery of cotton it was lawful. In that aspect of the case we do not see why the measure of damages applied was not correct. The plaintiffs had the right to recover such damages as were the natural and necessary result of defendant’s negligence, after the plaintiffs had exercised reasonable care in reducing their loss so far as possible. Even if it be conceded, as claimed by defendant, that plaintiffs were under no obligation *100 to buy cotton to minimize their loss, the defendant is in no position to complain when it clearly appears, as it does, that .the action taken inured to its advantage. We regard as untenable the argument that the prices in March, when the cotton was to be delivered, might have been such as to result in no loss to the plaintiff's.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 415, 199 N.Y. 88, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weld-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-ny-1910.