Cannon v. Atlanta Warehouse Co.

Smith, J.,

dissenting. I cannot agree with the majority opinion of the court. The defendant was simply the agent of the plaintiff, and the physical possession of the cotton was that of the agent at Atlanta, Georgia, and not at Alma, Georgia. The principal adopted the telegraph company as the means of communication between himself and his agent, the defendant, and this action authorized the agent to constitute the telegraph company as a subagent for the purpose of communication between the principal and agent. The agreed statement of facts shows that the telegram sent by the defendant company to the plaintiff contained the words “f.o.b. Atlanta,” and that by mistake the telegraph company transmitted the message “f.o.b. Alma.” The mistake was the mistake of the telegraph company. The failure of the defendant to note that the reply telegram read “ f.o.b. Alma ” was a palpable and patent error, and I cannot say that the agent, who was simply a warehouse company, should be made to suffer for this innocent mistake. The cotton was sold not to the agent, but by the agent to third persons, for the best obtainable price f.o.b. Atlanta. If any right of action existed in behalf of the plaintiff against any one for this mistake in the telegram, it was against the telegraph company and not against the plaintiff’s agent in Atlanta. See Morris v. Warlick. *353118 Ga. 421 (1) (45 S. E. 407), and Dodd Grocery Co. v. Postal Telegraph Co., 112 Ga. 685 (37 S. E. 981).

Another reason why I cannot concur with the majority opinion is that the petition itself in paragraph 7 alleges that the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff for said cotton at the rate of thirty and five eighths cents per pound f.o.b. Alma, Georgia. The defendant being the agent of the plaintiff, a fair inference from this allegation wotild be that the cotton had been sold by the defendant at that price f.o.b. Alma, and that the defendant had failed to account to him for a part of the purchase-price actually received for the cotton. This is more clearly set out in the 8th paragraph of the petition, in which the plaintiff alleges that the cotton weighed 69,383 pounds, and at the price f.o.b. Alma, would have amounted to $21,248.54, but that the defendant had accounted to him for only $20,807.51, leaving a balance due of $441.03, which balance the plaintiff claimed, together with lawful interest. If the defendant in fact had sold the plaintiff's cotton for the larger sum and had failed to account for the difference, this conduct would have amounted to a conversion, and the suit would have been for a tort. The agreed statement of facts does not sustain the petition as to the amount of money received by the defendant for the cotton, nor does it show that it was sold f.o.b. Alma. I am therefore constrained to the conclusion that as a matter of law the mistake in the telegram was so patent (the plaintiff knowing that the cotton was stored in Atlanta) that the defendant was not liable to the plaintiff, for this reason, as well as for the other reasons above given.