Western Union Telegraph Co. v. First State Bank & Trust Co.

241 S.W. 789, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 941
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 1922
DocketNo. 1891.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 789 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. First State Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. First State Bank & Trust Co., 241 S.W. 789, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 941 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

This is an action for damages, brought by the First State Bank & Trust Company of Hereford, Tex., against the Western Union Telegraph Company and John Young. Plaintiff alleged that John Young caused to be delivered to the telegraph company for transmission and delivery to the plaintiff bank a forged telegram, bearing the signature of Donna Gardner. That the telegraph company negligently accepted said telegram, and thereafter delivered it to the bank, causing the bank to pay out, to its ultimate loss, certain funds on account of the said Donna Gardner. A trial resulted in judgment in favor of John Young, on instructions by the trial court to the jury that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the submission of an issue as to his forgery of the message and in judgment in favor of the bank against the telegraph company, on findings of the 'jury that the telegram, purporting to be signed by Donna Gardner, was forged; that the telegraph company was guilty of negligence in receiving and transmitting such message, and that the bank on the faith thereof had paid out funds on account of said Donna Gardner.

On May 30,1918, Donna Gardner made and delivered to John Young her check for $2,-500, on the plaintiff bank. Before the checlt was presented for paym&t she instructed the bank not to pay it. Thereafter, on June 2d the telegraph company delivered to the bank the following telegram:

“Amarillo, Texas, 6/2/1918.
“To First State Bank & Trust Co., Hereford, Texas. You can pay twenty-five hundred check to John Young. Donna Gardner.”

Thereafter John Young presented the check for payment, and the bank paid it. Such de *791 tails of the evidence as áre necessary to be considered will be stated in connection with the various propositions discussed.

Under the first and second propositions appellant contends that no liability against it was shown because there was no evidence offered as to the circumstances surrounding the receipt by it of the telegram. The telegraph company produced on the trial the original message, delived to its office at Amarillo. This message was typewritten, signature as well as body. No evidence was introduced by either party as to any of the circumstances of its delivery to the telegraph company. Plaintiff offered evidence to the effect that Donna Gardner did not deliver it or authorize any one to send such a message for her. Proof of the fact that the telegraph company delivered to the plaintiff a false message made a prima facie ease of negligence against the telegraph company, “calling for evidence from the defendant to exculpate itself.” Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Uvalde National Bank, 97 Tex. 219, 77 S. W. 606, 65 L. R. A. 805, 1 Ann. Gas. 573; Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Citizens’ Bank, 144 Ark. 577, 223 S. W. 29, 10 A. L. R. 822; State Bank of Commerce v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 19 N. M. 211, 142 Pac. 156, L. R. A. 1915A, 126. The propositions urged by appellant are thus answered by the Supreme Court in the case above cited:

“If it be urged that the burden was on plaintiff to show negligence, the answer is that it did show that the company was apparently in the wrong in delivering a false telegram. The defendant, charged with the duty which, as we have seen, rested upon it, should have shown, not only that it was ignorant of the falsity of the message, but that it was justifiably ignorant. It eojild not establish this without showing that the imposition upon it occurred notwithstanding the use of proper care on its part. The character, necessities, and limitations of its business, as well as its regulations and modes of conducting it, were best known to it. In the arrangement and conduct of this business it commands the best skill that can be had, and it is peculiarly in its power to develop and explain all that should be known to court and jury in the determination of the questions like that before us. Ryan v. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. [65 Texas, 13].”

This language, as well as reference to the authority cited by the court in that connection, clearly shows that the court applied the rule of prima facie negligence, frequently applied by our courts to other situations where the defendant has special knowledge of the facts which are pertinent to be considered- in determining whether there was any fault on his part, advisedly and not inadvertently, as appellant’s counsel argues.

The third and fourth propositions are to the effect that there is no liability for any negligence in the delivering of the forged message because the bank was not induced thereby to pay the $2,500 check, but such action was the result of reliance dn representations of John Young. Thfe evidence shows that the check ha'd been in the possession of a bank in Amarillo, and inquiry had been made by such bank as to whether the check was good. On receipt of the telegram the plaintiff bank had wired the Amarillo bank that it would pay the check, and the plaintiff was expecting that the check would be presented for payment by the Amarillo bank, and the officers of the plaintiff bank were surprised when the check was presented by John Young in person. Young made an explanation, and in the course thereof said something about Miss Gardner “being in his office [in Amarillo] and going down and sending the message.” The officer handling the business of the bank testified that at the time he paid the check he believed that Miss Gardner sent the telegram authorizing its payment. This officer later wrote Young a letter, in which this statement is made:

“You then got check, came to Hereford, on June 4th and presented it for payment and stated to me that Miss Gardner had sent tne telegram stating, ‘You caul pay twenty-five hundred dollar cheek to John Young,’ and on that statement I, acting for the bank, paid the check.”

Wie think the evidence sufficiently shows that the delivery of the forged telegram was the primary cause of the payment of the check. This is shown by the fact that plaintiff had, after receipt of the message, agreed to pay the check before the conversation with John Young. This conversation was incidental to an explanation of the fact that the check was not presented by the .Amarillo bank, and calculated to allay any suspicions suggested by such circumstance.

The petition alleged on information and belief that John Young forged and delivered said telegram to the defendant company at Amarillo. The evidence offered which tended to connect John Young with such matter was that already set out in our discussion of the foregoing proposition, and in addition evidence by Donna Gardner that about June 1st she had told John Young that she had stopped payment of the check, and he agreed to meet her and make some modification of the contract, in connection with which the check was given, and that she did not see John Young in Amarillo. The court gave a peremptory instruction in favor of John Young, on the ground that the evidence did not sustain the allegations oi the petition as to him. Under the fifth proposition the appellant contends that the plaintiff could not recover against it without establishing the fact that John Young forged and delivered the message, as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition. The gist of the cause of action against the defendant was its negligence in accepting and delivering the forged .telegram. As we have seen, the delivery of the forged *792

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Related

Wise v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
172 A. 757 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1934)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. First State Bank & Trust Co.
258 S.W. 591 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)

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241 S.W. 789, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-first-state-bank-trust-co-texapp-1922.