Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Love & Walters

200 S.W. 889, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1918
DocketNo. 1281.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 S.W. 889 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Love & Walters) 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. Love & Walters, 200 S.W. 889, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 70 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*890 HALL, J.

This is a suit by Love & Walters, a firm composed of C. D. Love and G. C. Walters, as assignees of Kreitmair & Co., of Liverpool, England, of a claim for damages against appellant company. Appellees sue for damages in the sum of $767, on account of the negligence of appellant in the transmission of a telegram sent by appellees from McKinney, Tex., to Kreitmair & Co., at Liverpool, England, and for $2.52 charged appellant for the transmission of said message. Appellees set up the facts constituting their cause of action substantially as follows: That plaintiffs were at the times herein mentioned engaged in the business of buying and selling cotton to various persons and firms in the United States and foreign countries, including the firm of Kreitmair & Co., of Liverpool, England, and the said firm of Kreit-mair & Co. were likewise engaged in said business. That said business was conducted by means of telegrams or messages sent and received from the Western Union Telegraph Company’s lines, which messages were in the English language and the contents thereof known to said company, its servants and agents, and all said facts were known to said company. That the market price of cotton, both in the United States and in Liverpool, England, was subject to change and fluctuation from day to day. That the Western Union Telegraph Company owned, controlled, and operated a line of telegraphic communication from McKinney, Tex., to Liverpool, England, over which it transmitted messages generally for the public for hire. That on November 11, 1914, having and desiring to sell a hundred bales of good middling, root staple cotton, at 4.73d., or 9.46 cents per pound, sent Kreitmair & Co. at Liverpool, England, over the lines of the Western Union Telegraph Company, the following message:

“No. 1: Offer two hundred fully mids full eighths four sixty, one hundred mist four eighty five, hundred root four seventy three, answer quick”

—meaning and intending to offer for sale to F. Kreitmair & Co. with other grades of cotton 100 bales of root staple cotton at 4.73d., or 9.46 cents per pound, said message being so understood by F. Kreitmair & Co. That said Kreitmair & Co., desiring to purchase said 100 bales of root staple cotton, and in addition thereto 100 additional bales of said cotton at said price, sent to Love & Walters over the line of the Western Union Telegraph Company, the following reply:

“No. 2: Accept hundred good middling full eighth strictly equal root four seventy three, and bid same price further hundred, sixty days, Parrs, reply quickly”

—meaning and intending to accept said offer of 100 bales of root staple cotton at 4.73d., or 9.46 cents per pound, and to bid the same price for 100 additional bales of said cotton, payment therefor to be made through Parr’s bank, and said message was so understood by Love & Walters, but Love and Walters having and desiring to sell only 100 bales of said cotton, on November 12, 1914, sent to Kreit-mair & Co. over the line of the Western Union Telegraph Company the following message:

“No. 3.- We confirm sale hundr’ed. Make offer on fully mids”

—meaning and intending thereby to confirm, the sale to F. Kreitmair & Co. of only 100 bales of said root staple cotton, and the said F. Kreitmair, on said date, in order to make clearer, if possible, and confirm the number of bales of said root staple cotton Love & Walters had sold them, sent’ to Love & Walters over the line of the Western Union Telegraph Company, the following message:

“No. 4. Presume your confirmation refers to hundred good middling root staple we accepted and hundred same quality we bid for, together two hundi’ed, reply. We now bid four fifty hundred fully middling full eighth prompt shipment, sixty days, Parrs, reply quickly”

■ — meaning and intending thereby to inform Love & Walters that they (F. Kreitmair & Co.) understood Love & Walters had agreed to sell them 200 bales of good middling, root staple cotton, and not only 100 bales of said cotton, and which message was so understood by Love & Walters, but Love & Walters only having 100 bales of said cotton, and having only agreed to sell 100 bales in order to make clearer, if possible, to Kreitmair & Co. that they had agreed to sell them only 100 bales of said cotton on said date delivered to Western Union Telegraph Company at McKinney, for transmission and delivery to F. Kreitmair at Liverpool the following message:

“No. 5. Confirmation refers to hundred .you accepted not two hundred. Offer fully mids to low”

—meaning and intending thereby to inform F. Kreitmair & Co. that Love & Walters had agreed to sell them only 100 bales at said price per pound, being the market price of said cotton at Liverpool on said date, and said cablegram would have been so understood by F. Kreitmair & Co. had it been delivered to them at Liverpool in the form as originally written and delivered to the Western Union Telegraph Company at McKinney. That Love & Walters and F. Kreitmair & Co. paid the Western Union Telegraph Company the price charged for the transmission and delivery of said messages and Love & Walters paid the Western Union Telegraph Company $2.52, the price charged for the transmission and delivery of said last message.. That the Western Union negligently failed to transmit and deliver the message last above mentioned, as written, and in the form delivered to it at McKinney, but carelessly and negligently changed its wording and delivered in its stead to F. Kreitmair & Co. at Liverpool, the following message:

“No. 6. Confirmation refers to hundred you accepted to two hundred. Offer fully mids to low.”

That the message as delivered to F. Kreit-mair & Co. meant and caused them to under *891 stand and believe that Love & Walters had' sold them 200 hales of cotton at 4.73d. or O.46 cents per pound. That the same would be delivered to them under said contract, and, acting upon said belief and advice, P. Keitmair & Co. contracted with other parties for the sale to them of said 200 bales of good,' middling, root staple cotton. That on or about January 20, 1915, Love & Walters and P. Kreitmair & Co. for the first time discovered that said last-mentioned message had been changed in transmission, and that Love & Walters had agreed to sell Kreitmair' & Co. oniy 100 bales of said root staple cotton, and the market price of said cotton had greatly advanced, and Love & Walters, being unable to furnish said additional 100 bales of said cotton, and Kreitmair & Co. being unable to buy same for a 'less price, Kreitmair & Co., in order to fill their contract of sale to other parties of said additional 100 bales, and in order to protect themselves against further loss, immediately, and on January 20, 1915, went into open market at Liverpool, England, and purchased 100 bales of cotton of a- like kind and quality as the 100 bales of root staple purchased from Love & Walters, but, instead of being able to purchase same at 4.73d. or 9.46 cents per pound, Kreitmair & Co. were compelled to pay for said 10(> bales 5.49%d.

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200 S.W. 889, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-love-walters-texapp-1918.