This was an action for damages by plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error, based upon a failure of the defendant in error to perform its contract and agree*397ment to deliver to the plaintiffs in error two telegraphic messages, sent to them from Galveston by one Watson, who was connected with the hardware and iron house of J. S. Brown & Co. The plaintiffs in error set up the fact of the delivery of the two messages by Watson to defendant in error, and the payment by him of the charges for transmission, their receipt of them, and their failure to transmit and deliver them.
They allege the amount of damages sustained by them growing out of the failure of defendants to comply with their coiltract to deliver the two messages set out in the pleadings. These are composed of two items resulting from this failure on the part of defendant. The first, the actual expense and cost which resulted to them from the failure of the defendant to transmit the two messages, this failure involving an unnecessary delay of many days, at an expense to them for hire of hands, etc., amounting to about seventeen dollars ($17) per day. They also alleged that they then had about one hundred and twenty thousand (120,000) feet of pine logs on hand that they could have sawed at once but for the failure of defendant, and made on it, at the then price of lumber, two hundred and forty dollars ($240), and they allege this also as an item of damage.
The defendant filed a general demurrer, and also special exceptions to the plaintiffs’ petition. One of these exceptions was directed against this last allegation of damages, embracing the loss of future profits, and this was sustained by the district court.
On the trial the plaintiffs offered the evidence of Watson, the sender of the two telegraphic dispatches set out in the pleadings, and on which the plaintiffs’ action was based, for the purpose of proving, among other things, The contents of the two telegrams that were thus made the basis of the suit. To this evidence it was objected that the original telegrams were the best evidence of their contents, and that the plaintiffs having failed to give the defendant notice to produce them, secondary evidence of their contents was not admissible. This objection was sustained, the evidence excluded, and the jury directed to find a verdict for the defendant. The case is brought here on a writ of error, and the ruling of the court on the defendant’s special exception to the petition, so far as it sought a recovery for the loss of the prospective profits to arise from the manufacture and sale of the one hundred and twenty thousand (120,000) feet of lumber that they could have manufactured from the pine logs on /hand, is assigned as error. The exclusion of Watson’s evidence is also assigned as error. Other errors were also *398assigned, which, in the view we have taken of the case, need not be noticed.
The evidence offered as to the contents of the telegrams, which were set out in the pleadings, and made the basis of the plaintiffs’ right to recover, was excluded by the court because it was secondary in its character, and no notice to produce the original telegrams had been given. Undoubtedly the best evidence of the contents of a written instrument consists in the actual production of the instrument itself, and the general rule is, that secondary evidence of its contents cannot be admitted until the non-production of the original has been satisfactorily accounted for. 1 Starkie on Evidence, marg. pp. 3G8, 3G9. Also, as a general rule, notice to produce must be given to the party having the written instrument in his possession, before secondary evidence can be resorted to. There are, however, well recognized exceptions to this rule, and notice to produce is always dispensed with, and secondary evidence allowed, when, from the very nature and character of the suit, the party must know that he is charged with the possession of the instrument. 1 Starkie on Evidence, marg. p. 403. In such a case, the reason for giving notice and the necessity for giving it cease. In this case the suit is based on two telegrams alleged by the pleadings to have been placed in the possession of the defendant by the witness Watson; their nondelivery in accordance with their contract to deliver is made the foundation of the suit. Their whole cause of action is bottomed upon the fact that the two written instruments under consideration passed into the possession of defendant under a contract on their part to transmit the contents to plaintiffs, and that they, contrary to their contract, kept the written instruments in their possession, and in violation of their duty withheld their contents from the plaintiffs.
In the last edition of his work on evidence, Hr. Wharton says: “ Notice to produce is not necessary in respect to a document described in the pleadings as that on which the suit is brought; nor when, from any reason connected with the form' of the suit, the party is bound to know that he is charged with the possession of the document, and will be required to bring it in court.”
There is no doubt that the general rule above cited as to the production of original written instruments applies to contracts by telegram. The original message is the primary evidence, and when it is not set forth fully in the pleadings, or made ' he foundation of the cause of action, as in this case, it must be procluw 1 or its existence and loss accounted for, before secondary evidence can be used. *399Whart. Ev., 2d ed., sec. 76; Whart. Ev., vol. 1, 2d ed., sec. 1128.
We have examined the subject with the assistance of such authorities as are accessible to us, and have found but one case in which the action was based on the telegrams where the original telegrams were required to be produced. In that case (West. Union Tel. Co. v. Hopkins, 19 Ind., 227) the point does not seem to have been pressed in the argument by counsel, or to have been much considered by the court, nor do the authorities cited in support of the position sustain the view taken.
We are also the less inclined to follow the rule there laid down, for the further reason that our own courts appear to have adopted a different and better rule in cases where the written instrument is set out in the pleadings and made the basis of a suit.
In Hamilton v. Rice, 15 Tex., 385, a similar question arose as to the introduction of secondary evidence to establish the contents of certain field notes of a survey, which from the pleadings appeared to be in the possession of one of the parties to the suit. On this point Judge Wheeler remarks: “ But whether it was merely notice, or whether any notice was given, is immaterial, for the reason that the case is clearly within an excéption to the rule which requires notice to the party in possession of the original instrument to produce it before secondary evidence will be received to prove its contents ; and no notice to produce the instrument was necessary. The answer of the defendant charged the plaintiff with the possession of the original field notes; and he was thereby fully apprised that the defendant relied on proving their contents to make out his case. And the rule is, that where, from the nature of the action, the party has notice that his adversary intends to charge him with the possession of an instrument, notice to produce it is unnecessary; and this is an exception to the general rule as well established as the rule itself. 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 561.”
In Dean v. Border, 15 Tex., 299, the same learned judge, in speaking of the exceptions to the rule of giving notice to produce, mentions as the third exception to the rule the following: “ And thirdly, where, from the nature of the action or pleadings, the party has notice that his adversary intends to charge him with the possession of the instrument.”
Under the circumstances of this case as disclosed by the pleadings, the secondary evidence offered of the contents of the telegrams should have been permitted to go to the jury.
The exception to the plaintiffs’ claim for damages, based on the *400prospective and speculative profits likely to result to them from the sale of the boards which were to be manufactured from the one hundred "and twenty thousand (120,000) feet of unsawed logs then on hand, wTas proper. The claim should be confined to the actual damages sustained.
[Opinion delivered January 26, 1883.]The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.