(after stating the facts.) This is an action against a telegraph company to recover damages alleged to have been caused by negligence on the part of said company in transmitting and delivering a telegram. The plaintiffs claim that, by reason of the negligence of the defendant company in the matter of delivering said telegram, they lost the right to purchase a certain 200 head of cattle from one Langley. It is conceded that, the facts established make out a case of negligence against the telegraph company, and the only real controversy between the parties relates to the question of damages. The circuit judge, on motion of the defendant, instructed the jury that the plaintiffs under the facts could recover only the price paid for the telegram; and whether this was a correct ruling is the question we are asked to consider.
Now, the contract which plaintiffs claim to have made with Langley gave them an option to accept and purchase a lot of cattle owned by him at $12 per head, this option to expire at noon on the 14th day of May, 1895. If the telegram had been received in due time, and plaintiffs had accepted the offered purchase, they would at that time have owned the cattle, and would have paid out the contract price thereof. The telegram was delivered on said day, but not until 7 o’clock p. m., some hours after the time allowed for the acceptance of the contract had expired; so plaintiffs lost the right to purchase the cattle, but retained the money they had agreed to pay for the same. It is manifest, therefore, that plaintiffs were not injured unless on the 14th day of May, at the time the telegram was delivered, the market value of cattle of the grade purchased was at that place greater than the contract price, or, unless, on account of the scarcity of cattle, or for some other reason, plaintiffs could not, by the use of due diligence, after the delivery of the telegram, have purchased the like number and grade of cattle for the contract price. The law requires that a party should exercise due diligence to avoid injury to himself, and the measure of damages in such a case is the difference between the contract price of the cattle and that which plaintiffs would have been compelled to pay at the same place in order by due diligence, after delivery of the telegram or notice of the failure to deliver it, to purchase the same number and grade of cattle. It is a matter of no moment that some days subsequent to the delivery of the telegram there was a rise' in the market value of cattle, and that, if plaintiffs had purchased cattle at the contract price, they might have obtained profits from such rise in value; for the law does not permit the recovery of such uncertain and speculative damages. Squire v. Western Union Tel. Co., 98 Mass. 232; True v. International Tel. Co., 60 Me. 9; Hibbard v. Western Union Tel. Co., 33 Wis. 558; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Hall, 124 U. S. 444; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Fellner, 58 Ark. 29.
Applying the rule above stated to the facts of this case, it will be seen that plaintiffs did not prove more damages than they recovered; for they did not show what the market value of the cattle was on the 14th day of May, the time when their right of action was complete, but undertook to establish the value thereof on the 16th day of May, and afterwards. We need not discuss this question at length, for the evidence bearing on that point- was subject to another defect stilL more radical. No witness had seen the 200 head of cattle that Langley agreed to sell at $12 per head, or knew what their market value was. Fain, the only witness who testified concerning that matter, said that he saw about fifty head of the cattle. “I saw enough of the cattle,” he says, “to close the trade, provided all the cattle came up, which they did or would have done.” But this statement that the cattle “did or would have come up” to the grade required is pure guess work on the part of the witness, for he had not seen them. Having seen only a fourth of the cattle, he could not tell what the market value of the two hundred head was, either on the 14th of May, or at any other time, and could not show that plaintiffs were injured-by failing to purchase said cattle at the price named in the contract.
Not only is it true that the evidence fails to show that the market value of these cattle on the 14th day or May exceeded their contract price, but the conduct of plaintiff Fain indicates that he even was doubtful as to the matter. Plaintiffs do not, as we understand, claim that there was any sudden rise in the value of cattle between the time the telegram should have been delivered and the time when it was delivered, for those two periods were separated bnly by a short interval. They claim that they had secured on the 8 th day of May the right to purchase these cattle on or before noon of May 14th at $1-2 per head, and that this was a valuable right; that the value of cattle commenced to advance about the 1st day of May, and continued to rise for several months, and that these cattle on the 14th day of May, at the time the option to purchase expired, were worth much more than the contract price. But Fain was a member of the firm, and it is not denied that he had the authority to purchase cattle without consulting his absent partners. Indeed, he seems to have done most of the buying for the firm. This being so, it seems reasonable to believe that, if he had been fully convinced that the market value of the cattle was much greater than the contract price, he would not have suffered the option to expire, but would have closed the trade, although he had not received the telegram. Yet he declined to assume the responsibility and accept the offered sale. This indicates that he did not feel sure that the cattle were at that time worth more than the price named, but desired to purchase with a view to future profits. It indicates that he was not certain, at the time he permitted the option to expire, that there would be a profit.in such purchase, and desh’ed his partners to share the responsibility of making it. Afterwards, when the price of cattle rose, he saw the loss his firm had sustained by not maleing the purchase, and sued the telegraph company to recover damages. But it was not within the meaning of the contract made with the defendant company that it should in any event be liable for such uncertain and speculative damages, and they cannot be recovered.
Again, it is not certain that plaintiffs would have purchased the cattle, even had the telegram been delivered in due time. This is not a case where a plaintiff has telegraphed his agent to go in the market and purchase a certain number of cattle, and afterwards the price of cattle rises, and, by reason of a delay in delivering such message, the agent is compelled to pay a greater price than he would have paid had the message been promptly delivered. The purchase which plaintiffs say they lost here was the purchase of a certain lot of cattle. The contract with Langley giving them an option to purchase such cattle was not in writing, and nothing had been paid on it, and it is apparent from the evidence that it amounted only to an agreement that Langley would sell a certain 200 head of cattle owned by him at $12 per head, and that plaintiffs would take the cattle at that price if the absent partners approved the purchase, and if the cattle came up to a certain grade or standard. In other words, Langley did not agree absolutely to sell 200 head of cattle of a certain grade, but only that he would sell a certain 200 head of cattle owned by him, with an option on the part of Fain to reject the offer if his partners failed to approve, or if the cattle did not come up to a certain grade. The evidence shows that the other partners approved the purchase, but it does not show that the cattle offered by Langley came up to the grade required. It; is possible that plaintiffs could have established this fact by the testimony of Langley, or of some other witness who knew the condition of the cattle, but they did not do so. Fain, as# he states, “saw enough of the cattle to close the trade, provided all the cattle came up.” We understand from this that one of the conditions of the contract was that the cattle should come up to a certain grade, and that, before closing the trade and paying the purchase money, 'he would have ascertained that fact by an inspection of the cattle. He made no such inspection, and introduced no evidence to show the grade of the cattle, but asks a judgment against the defendant company upon the bare supposition entertained by him that such cattle would have come up to the grade required, and that he would have accepted the offered sale, had the telegram been delivered in due time. As he had seen only a small portion of the cattle, he not only could not know that the cattle would have come up to the grade required, but he did not even know that Langley owned such cattle. The allegation that plaintiffs would have purchased the cattle had the telegram been delivered in time rests therefore upon conjecture, and is not made sufficiently certain by the proof to sustain a' judgment for damages greater than recovered. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Fellner, 58 Ark. 29; Western Union Tel. Co v. Hall, 124 U. S. 444.
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the judgment o! the circuit court is right, and the same is affirmed.