101 P. 151 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause has been four times tried and twice heretofore appealed. (See Ettien v. Drum, 32 Mont. 311, 80 Pac. 369; also, 35 Mont. 81, 88 Pac. 659.) The result of the last trial was that defendant had a verdict and judgment, and plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial. For a statement of the facts reference is made to the opinion rendered upon the last appeal. Three contentions are now advanced: (1) That the court erred in not striking out certain testimony of the witness Warr; (2) that the court erred in defining an innocent purchaser; (3) that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. We shall first consider the second specification.
1. Let it be recalled that Ettien claims to have purchased of Deaton all of the “pitchfork” brand cattle, and that forty-two head of said cattle were afterward sold by Deaton to Drum. These are the cattle in controversy. The plaintiff’s amended reply alleges “that the plaintiff was to pay $33 per head for said cattle when delivered and counted out at said two deliveries.” Plaintiff testified: “On the fifth day of August six hundred and seven head were delivered. I paid for these cattle at the rate of $33 per head. There were ninety-eight cattle in the second delivery. I paid for them. Under the terms of this contract, I was to pay $33 per head for every animal delivered to me. I understood that whatever cattle were not delivered to me on the 25th of August, the date of the second delivery, were then my property. Under the terms of the contract, I was to be the owner of fifty-five undelivered
We quote the testimony of these two witnesses on the part of the defendant to show that they substantially corroborate the plaintiff as to what the contract was. Warr also testified, without contradiction, that the two receipts, given by plaintiff to Deaton “stated the price to be $33 per head.” The bill of sale of the cattle, signed by Deaton and delivered to Ettien by Warr, recited: “That I, W. D. Deaton, * * * for and in consideration of the sum of $25,080, * * * do sell to [Ettien] * * * seven hundred and sixty head of stock cattle branded [pitchfork] on left shoulder. It is intended hereby to include and convey * * * all cattle branded with said brand and owned by said [Deaton] and also to * # * sell * * to said [Ettien] all right, title, and interest in and to the said [pitchfork] brand and in and to the use thereof.” The purchase price of seven hundred and sixty cattle at $33 per head would amount to $25,080; but we have no hesitancy in holding from plaintiff’s own testimony that the contract was that only such cattle as were actually delivered to him and paid for at the rate agreed upon should become his property. The bill of sale, viewed in the light of their actions, was not the contract between them. It is admitted that plaintiff never paid the full amount of $25,080, but only seven hundred and five times $33, or $23,265. It is true that plaintiff testified, and also told Warr, that he expected to get all cattle not actually delivered for nothing, but he does not incorporate any such understanding in any agreement which he claims to have had with Deaton; and his evidence that he would have been willing to receive cattle after the second delivery, providing he was satisfied that he had not previously received the same animals, seems inconsistent with what he now claims to have been his understanding of the contract. If plaintiff was, by virtue of the bill of sale, to become the owner of all cattle not actually delivered, and Deaton had seven hundred and sixty cattle, which the evidence
The court at the request of the defendant gave the jury this instruction: “You are instructed that the transfer of personal property, such as cattle, is conclusively presumed, if made by a person having at the time the possession or control of the property, and, if not accompanied by an immediate delivery and followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the property transferred, to be fraudulent and therefore void, as against the purchaser in good faith, subsequent to the transfer; so that in this ease plaintiff can only recover cattle actually delivered to him by Deaton, unless the defendant Drum was not a purchaser in good faith. The term ‘good faith’ means one who buys honestly for a valuable consideration, and without notice of the rights of other parties.” To this requested instruction plaintiff made the following objection: “Plaintiff objects to defendant’s offered instruction 3, for the reason that the definition of an innocent purchaser contained therein should have added, ‘or without such notice as would put a reasonably prudent man on his inquiry, which inquiry, if followed up, would inform him of the prior sale of the property in question.’ ” If the plaintiff had objected to the giving of any instruction on the subject, we are not prepared to say that his position would not have been well taken; but the additional matter which he sought to have incorporated therein could not have aided the jury in determining the real issue in the case, which was: Did Deaton sell to Drum any of the cattle previously sold and delivered to Ettien?
3. It is insisted that the cause should be reversed for the reason that the verdict is not supported by the testimony. We have given this assignment serious consideration, and conclude that we ought not to disturb the judgment of the court below. As to one particular animal the testimony seems to us to preponderate in favor of the plaintiff, and there may be serious question as to a few others; but on the whole the evidence is in such condition, being almost wholly circumstantial, as to leave the mind in doubt whether Drum ever received from
Affirmed.