(after stating the case). Without passing upon the question of the plaintiffs’ own culpability in sending off a second so near the first message, without any intimation upon its face that a previous one had been sent, which the last was intended to modify, and with no allusion whatever to it, a fact which seems to have caused the perplexity in the minds of the agents as to what ought to be doné, and in consequence they did not act at all; or upon the indifference of the agents themselves in not, at once, inquiring, by telegraph, the meaning of the conflicting communications, and regulating their conduct bjr the information thus obtained, we think it was but a reasonable requirement, that the importance of the message, and of its speedy, as well as accurate transmission, should have been known to the receiving operator, so as to stimulate his activity in forwarding it, in more distinct and direct terms than those tes*305tified to by the partner. The message itself speaks n> certain sound, and conveys to the reader unacquainted with the new meanings affixed to words in the Code, no suggestion as to its real significance, as it did not, as th.e operator swears, to himself. This is but a reasonable requirement on the part of the company, and if the sender chooses to speak in unintelligible language to those who are to pass it over the wires, it is due to the company, if it is to be held responsible for serious damages, that the information of its importance should be given to the sending operator, in order that he may communicate it to an intervening agency employed in forwarding, and thereby diligence and care be secured from each. If the message be in the form of a proposal to buy or sell on certain terms, so that, in case of concurring minds, a contract would result, its importance would appear on its face; if not thus disclosed, and a party chooses, to send a single unrepeated message, liable to be misunderstood and erroneously conveyed in passing through other offices, when, at small additional expense, the mistake could be avoided, it should be at his ow7n risk, in the absence of gross and inexcusable negligence on the part of the company and its servants.
Such is the import of the ruling in Lassiter v. Tel. Co., 89 N. C., 334, where the plaintiff assumed the hazard of a single communication, and acted upon it.
There are decisions which hold an analogy between public carriers of goods and public carriers of messages, and put the same rigid responsibility upon each. The supposed analogy is repudiated by others, as a message transmitted has not a property value like goods, requiring safe custody and delivery.
But assuming some such similar relation to have been formed between them and the person employing their services, it by no means follows, in either case, that the loss of a bargain made, or which might have been entered into, *306from which profit would have resulted, can be visited in damages upon the carrier uninformed of the purpose or importance of the communication. Thus in Horne v. Mid. Rail Co., L. R., 7, C. P., 583, a case commented on in Wood’s May. Dam., Sec. 34, page 40, the plaintiff had contracted to deliver a lot of shoes in London, on February 3d, 1871, intended for the use of the French army, and on delivering them to the company for transportation, he gave the information to the latter, that the contract required a delivery on that day, but did not state the special nature of the contract. In consequence of the delay in the carriage, the contract could not be complied with, and the goods were refused. The market price had not varied between the day when the shoes were due, and that on which they were received, but it was below the contract price, of which the company was ignorant. It was held that the company was not liable for this difference, it not having been advised of the special circumstances which led to the special loss.
And so in Sanders v. Stuart, 1 C. P. D., 326, noticed in the next section of that work, the rule was extended to a telegraph company. The plaintiffs intrusted the defendant with a message in cipher to be sent by telegraph to America, which was not delivered, and the plaintiffs lost considerable profits in consequence, which otherwise would have been made. The message was unintelligible to the defendant, and so intended to be, giving him no clue as to the special loss that might result from his negligence. It was held, that no more than nominal damages could be recovered. But a more serious obstacle, in the way of the plaintiffs’ recovery of substantial damages, is presented in the fact that they made no contract, from which either profit or loss could come, did not buy (the agents acting for them) at the advanced rates beyond what the cotton might have been Bought for, on the day of the reception of the messages, and, *307for aught that the casé shows, they might have bought at a subsequent time before they were required to deliver at the same, or at a reduced rate. However this may be, no actual loss is proved to have been incurred, and the loss is merely of an opportunity of making a bargain, which would have been profitable had the goods been sold on the 6th day, at the market price then prevailing. It is not shown that any loss was sustained upon the plaintiffs’ contract from their being compelled to pay a higher price than that which ruled on the 3d.
But the very point, now under consideration, came before the Supreme Court of the United States at a recent term, W. U. Tel. Co. v. Hall, 124 U. S. 444, and the opinion of Mr. Justice Matthews is so full, and his reasoning so conclusive, that we are content to refer to it as a controlling authority, and decisive of the case before us.
The defendant in error, plaintiff in the Court below, at 8 A. M., November 9th, 1882, sent from Des Moines, Iowa, by the company’s line of telegraph a message, upon a similar form as ours, to Charles I. Hall, at Oil City, in Pennsylvania, as follows: “ Buy ten thousand, if you think it safe. Wire me.” The message was forwarded, and from negligence and want off care, reached Oil City at 11 A. M., the same day, leaving out the name of the person to whom it was addressed. Had it been given, Hall would have received it at 11:30, and would have bought the petroleum, meant in the message, at $1.17 per barrel, the market price.
When the name was ascertained, and the dispatch delivered to Hall at 6 P. M., the exchange was' closeed, and, at the opening next morning, the price had advanced to $1.35 per barrel; and in consequence, it being left to his judgment, Hall did not buy. The action was to recover the difference in price, to-wit, 18 cents per barrel.
After an elaborate examination, following a full and exhaustive argument, with a large number of cited cases, the *308Court came to the conclusion that the plaintiff could only recover the cost of the transmitting the message. The Court say: “Of course, where the negligence of the telegraph company consists, not in delaying the .transmission of the message, but in transmitting a message erroneously, so as to mislead the pa'rty to whom it is addressed, and on the faith of which he acts in the purchase or sale of property, the actual loss, based upon changes in market value, are clearly within the rule for estimating damages“ neither does it appear,” the opinion proceeds to say, “that it was the purpose, or intention of the sender of the message, to purchase the oil in expectation of profit to be derived from an immediate resale.”
Brought to the test of this ruling, it is plain that there have been sustained no damages for which the law will give redress upon the defendant beyond a nominal sum. Had the goods been bought on the day of receiving the message, it was not with a view to sell on the day when the price had risen, but to provide for existing engagements, and it does not appear that it could not have been bought on as favorable terms afterwards, in time to fulfil those engagements; and if so, the loss would be of expected but uncertain profits.
The rule is thus stated in a note at page 242 (332) in Ewell’s Evans’ Agency: “ In this country the telegraph company is also liable (having referred to cases in which it is held that the liability is to the sender only in England) to the person to whom the message is transmitted, upon delivery thereof, in case of an error in transmission, attributable to the fault of the company, “ when the error is attended with damage to the person receiving it,” referring in support of the proposition to Big. Torts, 277; Big. Lead. Cases on Torts, 619, 621, and several adjudged cases. Unquestionably, the same liability will arise when the damage results from an erroneous communication of the terms of a dispatch.
We have avoided an expression of opinion upon the numerous other exceptions taken at the trial, and will only re*309peat what was said, in substance, in Lassiter v. Tel. Co., supra, in reference to the difficulties incident to a correct communication of intelligence over wires, and the reasonableness of a rule which, to insure entire accuracy, requires the message to be repeated : “ The electric ticks to be given at one end of the line, and to be interpreted and read at the other, are not articulate sounds, like those of the human voice, and are much more liable to be misunderstood, and the individual handwriting of the sender himself, and his meaning, may be misunderstoodand again, quoting the words of Chief Justice Bigelow : “ The unforeseen derangement of electric apparatus, a breach in the line of communication at an intermediate point, not immediately accessible, occasioned by accident or by wantonness, or by malice, the imperfection necessarily incident to the transmission of signs or sounds by electricity, which sometimes renders it difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish between words of like sound or orthography, but of different signification; these, and other similar causes, the effect of which the highest degree of care could not prevent, make it impracticable to guard against errors and delays in sending messages to distant points.”
These suggestions point strongly to the reasonableness of the requirement of a repeated message, by which, at an inconsiderable expense, the error in a dispatch would be avoided, and that the company’s responsibility should be made to depend upon its observance, especially where the cipher form is adopted, which furnishes to the operator no means of ascertaining its import
But, for the errors pointed out, the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial had in the Court below.
Error. Venire de novo.