292 P. 773 | Kan. | 1930
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff sued in replevin to recover 191 head of cattle and to recover damages for failure to furnish pasture for the cattle according to contract. The defendant in a cross petition sought to recover damages for violation of the contract by the plaintiff. There is now no controversy about the possession of the cattle. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $477.50 damages sustained by him by reason of the violation of the contract by the defendant. From that judgment the defendant appeals.
1. The defendant complains of the following instruction:
“I further instruct you, gentlemen of the jury, if you find by a preponderance of the evidence that the contract between the plaintiff J. D. Cage and the defendant W. A. Stalker was that Stalker was to pasture 270 head of cattle belonging to plaintiff J. D. Cage and was to furnish four acres of good grass land with sufficient grass to properly pasture these cattle, and he failed and neglected to do so, and plaintiff’s cattle were damaged because of insufficient pasture, water, and salt being furnished them, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff J. D. Cage in such sum as the evidence shows, if any, he was damaged.”
2. The defendant argues that there was- no evidence to show any damage to the plaintiff. The contract provided that there should be four acres of pasture for each one of the cattle. The evidence showed that there was much less than that number of acres for each one of the cattle and that the grass was short and the water scarce. Plaintiff testified that—
“The approximate weight of the cattle per head when I shipped them from Texas was 800 pounds. About the 1st of June they weighed approximately. 700. The average gain per head of cattle the first month of pasture is about 100 pounds. The value of these cattle on the 1st of May, 1926, was about $60." Their value when I took them out in June was about $50.”
There was an abundance of evidence to show that a shortage of grass did prevent an increase in the weight of the cattle. The contention of the defendant that there was no evidence to show damage to the plaintiff cannot be sustained.
The judgment is affirmed.