Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Blanchard, Williams & Co.

68 Ga. 299
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 68 Ga. 299 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Blanchard, Williams & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Blanchard, Williams & Co., 68 Ga. 299 (Ga. 1882).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

Blanchard, Williams & Co. sued the Western Union Telegraph Company in an action of assumpsit for the sum of $189.71 as damages claimed to have been sustained in consequence of an error in the transmission of a day message from the city of Columbus to the city of. New York.

The declaration alleges that on the 19th of May, 1879, the plaintiff below caused to be delivered to the defendant a message in writing as follows:

Waldron Tainler, New York.
Cover two hundred September, one hundred August.
(Signed) Blanchard, Williams & Co.,”

[304]*304tobe sent and delivered to Waldron & Tainter, New York, and the defendant for a certain consideration agreed to do it. That the company did not transmit the message as received, but changed it so that when delivered to Waldron & Tainter, in New York, it read as follows:

To Waldron Tainter, New York.
Cover two hundred September, two hundred August.
(Signed) Blanchard, Williams & Co.”

The declaration alleged that Waldron & Tainter were at that time factors and commission merchants in New York, engaged in buying and selling cotton, and then held for plaintiffs ioo bales of cotton, to be delivered to their order in August, 1879, in New York, and that plaintiffs, desiring to sell said 100 bales, delivered said message to defendant, to be carried to New York to be delivered to said Waldron & Tainter. Plaintiffs aver that the message was an order from them to Waldron & Tainter to sell said. 100 bales of cotton on their account, to be delivered in New York in August, 1879, and would have been so understood if it had been delivered to them as written and delivered to the telegraph company.

That the message, as sent by defendant, was an order to sell 200 bales, to be delivered in New York in the month of August, and was so understood by Waldron & Tainter ; and in consequence of the change of the message they sold 2co bales of cotton on account of plaintiffs, tobe delivered in New York in the month of August, instead of 100 bales as directed by the message delivered by plaintiffs. By reason of this change Blanchard, Williams & Co. were compelled to buy 100 bales to. comply with the sale made by Waldron & Tainter.

That on the 20th of May, 1879, they advised Waldron & Tainter of the change in the message, and they on the 21st of May bought 100 bales of cotton to comply with said sale made; but in consequence of the fact that cotton had advanced, a loss was incurred by plaintiffs of $159.67, [305]*305and they were also put to the expense of $25.00 in selling and buying said 100 bales, and $5.00 in sending messages by telegraph to New York in connection therewith.

To this suit defendants filed the pleas,

(1.) Of the general issue.

(2.) That the plaintiffs at the time of sending said message made no request to have said message repeated, did not offer or pay to have said message repeated, but paid for it as a single message under the rules and regulations of the company, which were known to plaintiffs and assented to by them.

(3.) That the message of plaintiffs was an obscure or cipher message, and plaintiffs did not 'at the time of its transmission inform the defendant of the value or importance of the message. That the plaintiffs well knew of the rules and regulations of the company as to sending obscure or cipher messages, and the same was sent under said rules, etc., and defendant, under said rules, was not liable, and they were sent at risk of plaintiffs.

(4.) That plaintiffs did not communicate to defendants at the time of the transmission of said message, the special circumstances under which it was sent, nor were they known to defendant — that the message was of any value or importance.

(5.) That the contract in respect to which said message was sent was an illegal contract under the law, being a contract touching the sale of cotton futures.

Under the evidence and charge of the court the jury . returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, whereupon the defendants made a motion for a new trial on various grounds as set forth in the record, which was overruled by the court and defendant excepted.

It appears from the evidence in this case that the plaintiffs below delivered to the telegraph company at Columbus (the defendant) a message to be transmitted and delivered to Waldron & Tainter, factors and commission merchants, engaged in the buying and selling of cotton [306]*306in the city of New York. That in said message, as delivered by plaintiffs to the company, the said factors were instructed to “cover two hundred September and one hundred August.” But the message received by the factors was to “cover two hundred September and two hundred August.”

The message as received in New York by the factors, according to universal commercial usage among cotton men, meant the plaintiffs desired their factors to sell on their account two hundred bales of cotton to be delivered in August, and two hundred bales to be delivered in September. Whereas, the message as delivered for transmission to the company at Columbus, meant for the factors to sell two hundred bales to be delivered in September and one hundred to be delivered in August on account of plaintiffs. The evidence further shows that the words used in the telegram are terms of trade in ordinary use, and having the same import universally in trade. They meant a direction to sell, and implied that the plaintiffs were long of cotton to be delivered to them at such times.

In transmitting the message it further appears that the message passed as delivered correctly over the wires from Columbus to Washington city. That at that point it was received in the words as written and delivered in Columbus, but that at Washington city the telegram was changed, the word two was substituted by the operator for the word one in the August delivery. Austin, a witness for the defendant and the telegraph operator at Washington city who transmitted the message to New York, says : “ If the printed copy at New York differs from the manuscript copy handled by me at Washington, the presumption is the error was made by me, as being received upon the printing instrument at New York, it is bound to record exactly as transmitted, though I am unable to explain it, save by the operation of unconscious mental action.”

It is clear then, the error was not the result of any [307]*307“atmospheric agency,” but inattention and negligence in the operator at Washington, which he, in mild terms, calls “ the operation of unconscious mental action.” And it is against the operation of this unconscious mental action, that the law gives redress when loss results therefrom.

That the damage claimed resulted to the plaintiffs by reason of this error is fully sustained by the proof, and not controverted; though plaintiffs diligently sought by telegrams to rectify the error and guard against its consequences as soon as discovered, but without avail.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Ga. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-blanchard-williams-co-ga-1882.