78 So. 580 | Miss. | 1918
deilvered the opinion of the court.
Appellee filed suit in the circuit court against appellant for damages for the value of several cows alleged
The testimony in the case shows that the appellant was in the grocery business, and among other things handled a great many sacks of a mixed molasses feed prepared especially for stock called “Summo;” that’ the appellee was a farmer and had a lot of dairy cows, and on various occasions prior to the time in question had purchased from the appellant sacks of this feed which' he had fed to his cattle; that on the 19th day of February, 1916, he purchased one sack of this feed from the appellant, being waited upon by one of the clerks in the store. The appellee says that he asked this clerk if he had any good mixed feed and the reply was, “Yes, the best there was.” Appellee then purchased one sack of it. That night he fed out of this sack a number of his dairy cattle, and they became sick and died, evidently from the effects of this feed. It is also clear from the record that this sack of feed was spoiled, and had become poisonous for cattle feed. The judgment in this, case could only be sustained in this court upon one' theory, viz. that the appellant knowingly sold poisoned stock feed to the appellee for the purpose of being fed to his cattle. There was no express warranty of the soundness of this feed, and there was no implied warranty of its soundness. Dulaney v. Jones & Rogers, 100 Miss. 835, 57 So. 225.
Reversed, and judgment will be entered here in favor "of appellant.
Reversed..