Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Gardner

278 S.W. 278
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1925
DocketNo. 9432. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 278 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Gardner) 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. Gardner, 278 S.W. 278 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

Appellees B. H. Gardner and W. C. Witwer recovered judgment against appellant, Western Union Telegraph Company, on a suit in the district court of Dallas county for the sum of $1,370.13, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from October 18, 1920. Weatherford ' Crump & Co., a corporation, with its principal office in Houston, Harris county, Tex., was also a defendant in the suit below, but, having prevailed in said suit, and neither side complaining of the judgment entered in its favor, and the cause of action alleged against it being separate and distinct from the cause of action alleged against appellant, such defendant is not a party to this appeal. The facts of this case are as follows:

Weatherford Crump & Co. bought, sold, and exported cotton, maintaining offices in Houston, Tex., and New Orleans, La. Appellees bought and sold cotton, maintaining their office during the cotton season at Mineóla, Tex., and, during the remainder of the year, in Dallas, Tex. For the cotton season of 1920-21, appellees had established a business relation with Weatherford Crump & Co., under which, on the days on which Weatherford Crump & Co. desired .to purchase cotton from appellees, it would make an offer, either over the telephone or by means of the telegraph, to appellees, that it would buy from them a stated number of hales for that day at a stated price, basis middling. If appellees availed themselves of this offer,.they would accept it by wire, stating the number of bales within the limit given that they would deliver.

*279 Appellant was the only telegraph company at Mineóla and had direct connection by wire between said place and the city of Houston. The office at Houston was located near the office of Weatherford Crump & Co. in that city. Both appellees and Weatherford Crump & Co. daily had numerous transactions with appellant in the way of sending and receiving messages in reference to their cotton business, and the character of the business of each was well known to appellant and its agents and employés in its offices both at Mineóla and at Houston.

On October 15, 1920, Weatherford Crump & Co., pursuant to the said business relation then existing between them, offered to buy from appellees on that day as much as 150 bales of cotton at the price of 19 cents per pound, basis middling, delivered at Houston, and directed appellees, if they availed themselves of this offer, to send it a telegram at Houston accepting same. Relying upon this offer, appellees went into the market on said day and purchased 50 bales of cotton, wiring their acceptance of the offer to the extent of the said 50 bales. Later they purchased 100 bales, the balance of their limit, and, at 8:05 o’clock p. m., filed in appellant’s office at Min-eóla a' message addressed to Weatherford Crump & Co., at Houston, giving their acceptance of said 100 bales, thus completing the amount of cotton that said company had offered to purchase from them on that day. Each of these telegrams was at once transmitted by appellant’s Mineóla office, but only the first one was received on that day by Weatherford Crump & Co. The latter telegram was not received at appellant’s Houston office until 7:30 p. m. on October 18th. Ap-pellees did not know that their telegram fn reference to the 100 bales of cotton had not been received by the addressee until the 18th of October, 1920, when, in a telephone conversation with Weatherford Crump & Co., they were informed that it had never received that telegram and would not then take the said 100 bales of cotton, though same had been shipped to Houston, to Weatherford Crump & Co. The cotton market had declined 275 points from the 15th to the ISth of October, and Weatherford Crump & Co. declined to receive the cotton on its offer of purchase made on the 15th, and would only accept the cotton on the market value of that day, which was 16% cents. Appellees sold to said company this 100 bales of cotton at said price, which was the market price for cotton on that day. As a result of the conditions thus obtaining in reference to their sale of this cotton, appellees sustained a loss of $1,-370.13. Appellees filed this suit to recover said damages because of alleged negligence of appellant in transmitting the said message, and in their original petition named appellant only as defendant. In an amended petition appellees made Weatherford Crump ‘ & Co. also a party defendant; the allegations in the first count of the petition being directed against appellant, and the allegations in the second count being directed against Weath-erford Crump & Co. No joint recovery was sought against the defendants; the said second count in the petition being in the nature of an alternate plea. When the allegations in both of the counts in this petition are analyzed, it is evident that appellees sought the recovery of damages against appellant on the theory that no binding contract of sale and purchase had been entered into between them and Weatherford Crump & Co. because of the failure of appellant to deliver the said message in reference to the 100 bales of such cotton, such delivery being necessary before there could exist between the parties a completed contract, and that the alleged negligent failure of appellant promptly to deliver the said telegram was the proximate cause of the damages they sustained; that their cause of action alleged in their alternate plea against Weatherford Crump & Co. was on the theory that, when they filed the message of acceptance in appellant’s office at Mineóla, the contract of sale and purchase was complete, and the refusal of Weatherford Crump & Co. to-accept the cotton at the price named in the offer was an unwarranted breach of such contract, and entitled them to recover their damages.

Appellant defended the suit on the theory (1) that appellees’ pleading was insufficient to recover damages against it on their theory above stated, in that said pleading only alleged an offer on the part of Weatherford Crump & Co. to purchase the cotton with direction that, if the offer was accepted, they should signify such acceptance by telegram addressed to it, and that, under tbe law, the filing of the telegram by appellees at its office in Mineóla completed the contract, and that its negligence, if any, in the delivery of the telegram was not the proximate cause of the damages appellees suffered, but that such damages were caused by the breach- of the contract by Weatherford Crump & Co. in its refusal to take the cotton; (2) that as this contract was made under the rules governing the Texas Cotton Association, and that, as said rules prohibit the making of contracts after 8 o’clock p. m. of any day, the contract pleaded was not an enforceable one against Weatherford Crump & Co., and therefore no suit for damages in reference thereto could be maintained against appellant. Appellant’s pleading fully raised the issues of its said defenses. Weatherford Crump & Co. defended the suit against it on the ground that, under the contract existing between appellees and it, no acceptance would be binding upon it until the message transmitting such acceptance was received by it. The answer of -this defendant also contained other-allegations as grounds of defense that it is not necessary *280 to mention tor a disposition of the questions raised on this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-gardner-texapp-1925.