Diffenderffer v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
Diffenderffer v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs (respondents) recovered a judgment against the defendant in the sum of $300 on a cause of action based upon a petition asking special damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of a negligent delay in the transmission and delivery of a telegram. The message was sent from National Stock Yards, Illinois, to the plaintiffs at Lebanon, in this State. It was, therefore, an interstate message and the law governing any. recovery thereon must he construed as it has been construed by the Federal courts touching the question.
Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that the sender filed this message with the defendant at about nine o’clock on Sunday morning, January 23, 1916, and that it did not reach Lebanon until about four o’clock that afternoon. It is shown that from twenty minutes to one hour is the reasonable and ordinary time required for transmitting such a message between those points.
Other evidence tended to show that the message was not filed at the sending office until eleven o’clock Sunday morning.
The special defense set up in the answer is as follows:
“Defendant further answering avers the facts to be: That the telegram set out in plaintiffs’ petition
“ ‘All messages taken by this company are subject to the following terms:
“ ‘To guard against mistakes and delays,, the sender of a message should order it repeated, that is, telegraphed back to the original office for comparison. For this one-half the regular rate is charged in addition. It is agreed between the sender of the following message and this company, that said company shall not be liable for mistakes or delays in the transmission or delivery or for non-delivery of any unrepeated message, beyond the amount received for sending the .same, nor for mistakes or delays in the transmission or delivery, nor for non-delivery of any repeated message beyond fifty times the sum received for sending the same unless specially insured, nor in any ease for delays arising from unavoidable interruption in the working of its lines, or errors in cipher or obscure messages, and this company is hereby made the agent of the sender, without liability, to forward any message over the lines of any other company when necessary to reach its destination. ’ ”
It will be noted there is no averment in this special defense that there was a value placed on this telegram. This observation is made because in reading the cases cited by appellant practically all have this same set of provisions ■ in the messages involved, but with this further provision: “In any event the company shall not be liable for damages for any mistakes or delay in the transmission or delivery, or for the non-delivery of this message, whether caused by the negligence of its servants or otherwise, beyond the sum of fifty dollars, at which amount this message is hereby valued,” etc.
It is further noteworthy that when we come to consider the bill of exceptions and look at defendant’s
Now the circuit court struck from the answer the special defense above quoted, and the propriety of that action is before us for decision.
The question is: Where a telegram is properly addressed with no error whatever in the address or body of the message which could not, and- did not, cause any delay in the transmission and delivery, and yet the message was delayed beyond a reasonable time in being delivered to the addressees, will the amount of recovery by the addressees be restricted to the amount paid by the sender to the company as the charge for transmission and delivery? That is to say, under the stipulation on the back of the telegram heretofore quoted, is the total amount that plaintiffs can recover the sum of thirty-eight cents?
This very question has been considered and decided by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in an opinion by Judge Ellison in the case of Jacobs v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 196 S. W. 31, wherein it is held that the plaintiff may recover the value of the telegram and will not be restricted to the cost of transmission and delivery where the delay, which caused the damage, could not under any construction have been laid to some error in the message that might have been corrected had it been repeated.
We have no doubt that the law is — under the cases cited by appellant and cited in the case of Poor v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 196 S. W. 28 — -that if a mistake occurs in the transmission of an unrepeated message whereby the plaintiff is damaged and the mistake or delay or failure to deliver would have been eliminated to some extent at least by a repetition of
We think the logic of the Jacobs opinion, supra, is unanswerable and controlling on the facts of our case, and we will follow it rather than the Clement case.
In the present case, as hereinbefore pointed out, there was no value of fifty dollars or any other sum placed on the telegram; or at least if there was the abstract of the record before us fails to show it. Under this condition, following the Jacobs case, the amount paid for sending the telegram being eliminated as a controlling factor, will leave the amount to be recovered by plaintiffs the reasonable value of the telegram, which the jury under evidence sufficient' to support the verdict found to be $300.
The court refused instruction No. 2 asked by the appellant. This was error. There was evidence that the message was not filed at the sending office until eleven o’clock in the morning on Sunday which was after the closing hours at the office in Lebanon and there is no evidence that the sending office knew of the office hours at Lebanon. It became a jury question to determine whether this message was filed at nine o’clock, the time sworn to by the sender, or at eleven o’clock as shown by other evidence in the case; and if it was filed at nine o’clock it would further be a question of fact for the jury to determine whether the message could in an ordinary and reasonable time have been transmitted before the office at Lebanon closed at ten o’clock that morning. It has been held in Missouri and is supported by decisions in other states that the
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.