Hocker v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
Hocker v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff, through Murphy & Co., brokers in Savannah, Ga., made a contract on the New York Exchange for the pur chase of seven hundred bales of cotton to N' delivered in August following. To protect the brolors
The declaration contains six counts, five of them based upon this transaction. A demurrer was filed to the declaration which was sustained, and final judgment was entered for the defendant, from which the plaintiff sued out writ of error from this court.
The second count of the declaration alleges that for a valuable consideration the defendant undertook to send the first message to its destination at once, and that it undertook for a valuable consideration to correctly deliver the second, “which said message was agreed by the defendant with the plaintiff to be received by it for the purpose, and was intended by the plaintiff to revoke or modify the said instructions contained in the said first telegram, which said instruction was then and there, before
The first ground of defendant’s demurrer is that the declaration sIioavs upon its face that this suit was not begun in the county where the defendant has its principal office and place of business or where the cause of action accrued. We find nothing in the declaration to indicate that the defendant, as contended, has its principal office in Duval county; but this is immaterial. The defendant is a foreign corporation doing business in this State, and under provisions of section 1001 of the Revised Statutes may be sued in any county “wherein such company may have an agent or other representative.”
Under the second and third grounds of demurrer it is urged that the damages claimed are too' speculative, remote, contingent, and conjecturál, and are dependent upon elements uncertain and contingent in their character. This contention is not well founded. The amount claimed is the difference between a certain price at which
The fourth ground of demurrer is that the messages in question related to a contract pertaining to cotton futures and margining cotton which was against public policy, illegal and .void. There is a conflict of authority as to whether in the absence of Statute such contracts are invalid. In the present case the question does not arise. The contract was undoubtedly good if the intention of the parties was to make an actual sale and delivery of the cotton contracted for, and there is nothing in the declaration to show that this -was not the case. The mere fact that a margin was deposited with the broker does not necessarily stamp it as a contract where no goods were to pass, but only a difference in price was to be paid (Peters v. Grim, 149 Pa. St. 163, 24 Atl. Rep. 192; Hopkins v. O’Kane, 169 Pa. St. 478, 32 Atl. Rep. 421; Sheehy v. Shinn, 103 Cal. 325, 37 Pac. Rep. 393; Dewey on Contracts for Future Delivery and Commercial Wagers, 106, 214), and the presumption where the contrary does not appear is that the parties intended such contract as was lawful. Irwin v. Williar, 110 U. S. 499, test 510, 4 Sup.
The fifth ground of demurrer is that the declaration shows no negligence on the part of the defendant. The declaration alleges that the defendant, with full knowledge of the facts, contracted to send the second message for the purpose of revoking or modifying the first. This might readily have been done in such way as to effect the purpose intended by observing the correct order of priority in delivering the messages, or by indicating on the messages the time at which each was received for transmission. The declaration alleges that the defendant wilfully, carelessly and negligently neglected to send the first message promptly, and so delivered them as to work the injury complained of. It certainly cannot be said as matter of law that no state of facts which might be shown under the allegations of this declaration would convict the defendant of negligence, and this ground of demurrer cannot be sustained.
The remaining grounds of the demurrer suggests negligence on' the part of plaintiff in sending these messages with so short an interval of time between them without so framing them as to show on their face which controlled. This might be urged with more force had the plaintiff sent the second message within seventy minutes of the first and from a different office without precaution as to their proper delivery and trusting to chance as to the time in which each would in the office receiving it be reached
The demarre/' as to the second count should have been overruled.
The first, fourth and fifth counts do not question the delivery of each message with reasonable diligence, and allege no facts showing any duty resting upon the defendant io deliver the messages, which were sent from different offices, in the same order in which they were received at the respective offices for transmission. The allegations therein that the defendant negligently delivered the second message before the first therefore state no cause of action.
Treating; the third count as the parties do, as based upon negligence, it is defective, for while it alleges that the defendant bad a «andcss and incompetent agent in charge of the office from which the first message was sent, if does not allege that this negligence entered into or affected fhe acts complained of-in Hie count, and it should held bad on demurrer.
TP** validity of the sixth count is not contended for by Hie plaintiff.
Tn- judgment of the lower court in sustaining the dennu-cr to the plaintiff's declaration and entering judg-. mem for H-e defendant is reversed, and the cause remanded for farther proceedings in accordance with law. -
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Hocker, in Error v. Western Union Telegraph Company, in Error
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. A suit against a' foreign corporation doing business in this State may under section 1001 Revised Statutes be instituted in any county in which the company has an agent or other representative. 2. The damages claimed in a suit to recover the difference between the price at which a contract for cotton would have been sold had the defendant 'done its duty and a lower price at which it was sold as the result of defendant’s negligence are not too remote, speculative or contingent for recovery. 3. The uocgj-j- 0j> a margin for the protection of a broker buying cotton on the stock exchange for another does not necessarily imply that the contract is one where no goods are to be delivered, bur only a difference in price to be paid. 4. Where the contrary does not appear, the presumption is that the parties to a contract intend that which is legal. 5. An allegation that the defendant telegraph company had received a second message, and, with knowledge of the facts, agreed -to transmit it for the purpose of revoking or modifying an^ earlier ruessag.e received by it for .immediate transmission, and had wilfully, carelessly and negligently neglected to send -the first message at once, and delivered the last message first whereby the first revoked the last in violation of the defendant’s ivndertaking, sufficiently alleges negligence on the part of the defendant. • sending a second message by telegraph, seventy minutes after the first, for the purpose of revoking or modifying ■the first who explains the situation to the telegraph company receiving them for transmission and contracts that they shall he so transmitted and delivered as to accomplish the desired result, is not, by his failure to make the messages show on their face which is later, guilty of such negligence as to bar recovery for damages sustained by the defendant’s neglect. 7. An allegation that the defendant telegraph company negligently delivered a second message sent from one office after the first message sent from another, with nothing - to show either a contract or a duty to deliver them in the order in which they were received for transmission at the different offices, states no cause of action. 8. An allegation that the defendant had a careless and incompetent agent in charge of its office, with no averment that he was careless or incompetent in the performance of the act which forms the subject-matter of the litigation, states no cause of action.