Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Esteve Bros. & Co.

256 U.S. 566, 41 S. Ct. 584, 65 L. Ed. 1094, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1589
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 1, 1921
Docket491
StatusPublished
Cited by195 cases

This text of 256 U.S. 566 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Esteve Bros. & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States 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. Esteve Bros. & Co., 256 U.S. 566, 41 S. Ct. 584, 65 L. Ed. 1094, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1589 (1921).

Opinion

*568 Mr. Justice Brandéis

delivered the opinion of the court.

In September, 1917, the Western Union Telegraph Company delivered to Esteve Brothers & . Company at New Orleans, Louisiana, an unrepeated cable message from the latter’s main office at Barcelona, Spain, directing a sale for future delivery of two thousand bales of cotton. The message actually sent had directed the sale of two hundred bales. The error in transmission resulted in a loss to Esteve Brothers & Company of $31,095. To recover, compensation for this loss they sued the Western Union in a state court of Louisiana. The case was removed to the Federal District Court and there was tried by jury upon these additional stipulated facts:

“The message was sent over lines of the Spanish Government Telegraph from Barcelona to Paris and thence over lines of the French Government to Havre. There it was delivered to the Western Union, transmitted by its cable to New York City and thence over its land lines to New Orleans. The error in transmission occurred on these land lines. The charge of $6.60, paid at Barcelona for transmitting the message, represented the sum of the local rates on the several connecting lines. The Western Union’s share was $4.65; and of this $3.75 was apportioned to the cable system and 90 cents to the land lines. This Western Union rate was established by its tariff of telegraph and cable rates, in force since some time prior to June 18, 1910. Under the act of that date, c. 309, 36 Stat. 544, making telegraph and cable companies subject to the Act to Regulate Commerce, this tariff had been filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission in May, 1916, by its permission and pursuant to an appropriate resolution of the company. The tariff so filed embodied the long used classification of messages, rules and regulations, including the provision that the company “shall not *569 be liable for mistakes ... in transmission . . . of any unrepeated message, beyond the amount of that portion of the tolls which shall accrue to it.” The plaintiffs did not in fact assent to this limitation of liability. They did not, in sending the message at Barcelona, use a blank containing the provisions so limiting liability. They did not have actual knowledge of the resolution of the company or of the filing of the tariffs with the Interstate Commerce Commission.

The plaintiffs contended at the trial .that in view of the above facts they were entitled to a verdict for the full amount of their loss. The company, contended that, since the message had not been repeated, the verdict should be limited to $4.65, the amount received by it as tolls. A verdict was directed for $31,095 with interest; judgment thereon was affirmed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, 268 Fed. Rep. 22; and a petition for writ of certiorari was granted. 254 U. S. 624. The sole question presented for our decision is the amount of damages recoverable.

For more than fifty years prior to the transaction here in suit the Western Union had maintained these two classes of rates for general cable and telegraph service. The usual or basic rate was for service practically at the sender’s risk, liability being limited to the amount of the toll collected. Another special rate entitled the sender to have the message repeated back to the point of origin and rendered the company liable in case of mistake or nondelivery up to fifty times the amount of the extra charge. The extra charge for this additional service was for telegrams one-half and for cables one-quartér of the basic rate. In Primrose v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 154 U. S. 1, decided in 1894, this classification of rates and the limitations upon the company’s liability were declared by this court to be reasonable and valid, in the absence of willful misconduct, or gross negligence. The *570 limitation upon the company’s common-law liability was held to be in the nature of contract; and this liability unlike that of a common carrier, was not an insurer’s. It was merely for «the damage flowing from failure to use due care in transmission. Primrose v. Western Union Telegraph.Co., supra, 14. Since the limitation of liability was in the nature of contract, the provision had to be brought home to the sender of a message in order to be legally binding upon him. Assent by the sender was ordinarily established if the message was written upon one of the company’s blanks which set forth the limitation of' liability. Primrose v. Western Union Telegraph Co., supra, 25; compare Cau v. Texas & Pacific Ry. Co., 194 U. S. 427, 431. Whether, in view of long established practice, the mere sending of a message, although not written on such a. blank, imported assent to the usual terms of the rate involved then an issue of fact. See New Jersey Navigation Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 6 How. 344, 383. The question presented for our decision is whether since the amendment of June 18, 1910, to the Act to Regulate Commerce, the sender is, without assent in fact, bound as matter of law by the provision limiting liability, because it is a part of,the lawfully established rate.

The Act of June 18, 1910, c. 309, § 7,36 Stat; 539,544, broadened the scope of the Act to Regulate Commerce to include “telegraph, telephone, and cable companies (whether wire or wireless) engaged in sending messages from [a] State ... to any foreign country.” And whatever may have been the legal incidents of transmitting the message from Barcelona to Havre under' Spanish and French law, the Western Union in sending the message. over its own lines from Havre to New Orleans was governed by,:, the provisions of that act. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Ry. Co. v. Woodbury, 254 U. S. 357. In the third paragraph of § 1 of the amended act Congress provided that messages might be -“classified *571 into day, night, repeated, unrepeated, letter, commercial, press, Government, and such other classes as are just apd reasonable, and different rates [might] be charged for the different classes of messages.” Acting, in May, 1916, under the authority of that provision, the Western Union by appropriate action approved the tariff involved in the present case and by permission of the Interstate Commerce Commission filed with it the tariff, including the provisions here in question. The company was not required so to do by the terms of the act or. by any order of the Commission; compare 25th Annual Report I. C. C. (1911) pp. 5, 6. But the rate, long before established, ther, formally adopted and filed, was thereafter the only lawful rate for an unrepeated message, and the limitation of liability became the lawful condition upon which it was sent. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. v. Warren-Godwin Lumber Co., 251 U. S. 27, 30;

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Bluebook (online)
256 U.S. 566, 41 S. Ct. 584, 65 L. Ed. 1094, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-esteve-bros-co-scotus-1921.