176 P. 782 | Idaho | 1918
This is an action for the alleged conversion of certain sheep. The cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of respondents for the amount prayed in the complaint. This appeal is from the judgment entered on the verdict.
It appears that the appellant J. L. Gray was president and manager and S. D. Phillips, secretary, of the Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, Limited, at the time of the transaction involved herein. Some time prior to July 3, 1914, Bicknell had a conversation with Phillips, concerning the sale of the company’s 1914 crop of lambs. At that time Phillips thought they would sell the lambs to another party. Bicknell wanted
After the telephone conversation between Gray and Bicknell, the latter wrote Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, advising them that he had purchased these lambs and instructing them to use their own judgment in regard to the sale thereof, inclosing a draft for $5,000 and a draft to be filled in for whatever Gray’s count should, amount to at $3.55 per head, plus $25 expenses, and also inclosed the contract to be delivered to Gray.
When Gray and Phillips reached Omaha with the lambs, Rosenbaum Brothers & Company turned the contract over to Gray, who refused to sign the same, for the reason, as he stated, that the contract provided that the lambs on the range were to be delivered on or before September 10, 1914, at the option of the buyer, but that according to his understanding the contract should have provided for ten or twelve days’ notice. He refused to accept the $5,000 draft, wired Bicknell that he was returning the contract because it was not as agreed upon, and sent him a letter, inclosing the contract, and setting out his objections thereto.
The lambs were sold by Rosenbaum Brothers & Company for $25,701.37, which was alleged in the complaint to have been the reasonable value of the lambs, and which allegation of value is admitted by failure to deny the same in appellants’ answer. Payment was made to the appellants on the basis of $3.55 per head, according to Gray’s count, plus $25 expenses, a portion of the payment being made to creditors of the Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, including Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, under instructions from appellants. The balance of the proceeds, after deducting expenses, freight and commissions, amounting to $7,050.92, was retained by Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, who declined to pay the same to either party, pending the result of this litigation.
While appellants’ brief contains many specifications of error, the controlling question in the ease is: Was there a delivery of the 4,325 head of lambs by appellant Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, Limited, to respondents, at Rogerson, Idaho, on the third day of July, 1914, and an acceptance of the same by respondents? If there were no such delivery and acceptance, respondents’ case must fail under appellants’ plea of the statute of frauds, to wit: Rev. Codes, sec. 6009, for it is conceded that there was no written contract. If, on the other hand, there were such a delivery and acceptance, respondents should prevail under the record presented to us, for in that event the statute of frauds would have no application. The law is well settled that delivery and acceptance of property sold under an executory contract of sale takes it out of the statute of frauds. (Coffin v. Bradbury, 3 Ida. 770, 95 Am. St. 37, 35 Pac. 715.)
While there is authority to the effect that the same person cannot act as agent of the seller to negotiate the sale and as
The evidence shows that after the conversation had between Bicknell and Gray over the telephone, the latter stated in substance that they would stop loading and go on with what they had loaded, that they would not load any more, since he had sold to Bicknell, and informed Crouse, who had a number of lambs that he intended to include in Gray’s shipment, that he could sell to Bicknell for the same price. Thereupon Crouse stated he would not sell to Bicknell, and would not ship his sheep, but would return the same to the range with Gray’s sheep that he was not shipping.
The jury was justified in reaching the conclusion that Gray did not ship all the sheep he intended to ship at that time, or make up a shipment out of the sheep that he had at Rogerson, including Crouse’s sheep. This action on Gray’s part, coupled with the agreement to accept $25 for his expenses in accompanying the sheep to Omaha, and the count at Montpelier, was sufficient evidence to justify the jury in finding that there was a delivery on the part of the Owyhee Sheep & Land Company and a receipt by respondents.
Furthermore, the evidence is clear that Bicknell was buying the sheep to immediately resell them, of which fact appellants had full knowledge; they had already been consigned by appellants to a commission broker at South Omaha for that purpose, and this consignment was allowed to stand at Bicknell’s suggestion, who immediately, and before the lambs
While it is true that no act of a seller of personal property alone can constitute a delivery, taking the contract out of the statute of frauds, without a receipt and acceptance by the buyer, the act of the buyer of goods under a contract within the statute of frauds in offering to sell the goods which he has contracted to purchase is such an act as constitutes an acceptance of the goods so as to take the contract out of the operation of the statute. (Beedy v. Brayman Wooden Ware Co., 108 Me. 200, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 273, 79 Atl. 721, 36 L. R. A., N. S., 76.)
The evidence is sufficient to justify the jury in reaching the conclusion that the sheep were delivered to Bicknell at Rogerson, and that he accepted them unconditionally. (Snow v. Warner, 10 Met. (51 Mass.) 132, 43 Am. Dec. 417, 419; Dean v. Tallman, 105 Mass. 443; A. C. Dauphiny & Co. v. Red Poll Creamery Co., 123 Cal. 548, 56 Pac. 451.)
Questions of sale, delivery and acceptance sufficient to take a contract of sale out of the statute of frauds are questions of fact, for the jury, under proper instructions, and their verdict should not be disturbed if there is sufficient evidence to justify them in reaching the conclusion that the goods were delivered and accepted unconditionally. (Coffin v. Bradbury, supra; Idaho Implement Co. v. Lambach, 16 Ida. 497, 101 Pac. 951; Devine v. Warner, supra; Bass v. Walsh, 39 Mo. 192; Pinkham v. Mattox, 53 N. H. 600, 605; Burrows v. Whitaker, 71 N. Y. 291, 295, 27 Am. Rep. 42; Gray v. Davis, 10 N. Y. 285, 295; Jones v. Reynolds, 120 N. Y. 213, 24 N. E. 279; Becker v. Holm, 89 Wis. 86, 61 N. W. 307; Smith v. Stoller, 26 Wis. 671; Rappleye v. Adee, supra.)
From what has been said it is apparent that the question must be resolved in favor of respondents. We have examined the specifications' of error touching the pleadings, the motion for nonsuit, the admission of evidence and the giving and refusing to give certain instructions, and find them with
Petition for rehearing denied.