123 F. 641 | 8th Cir. | 1903
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant below filed an assignment of errors embracing no less than 47 specifications of error, but, as the case has been presented for review, there are two principal questions, and one or two others that are incidental and collateral, to be considered and determined. The first of these questions is whether the plaintiff’s petition stated a good cause of action; and the second is whether the case is one which should have been submitted to the jury for its determination.
Relative to the first of these questions, it is to be observed that the defendant did not demur to the petition when it was filed, but am swered in the manner heretofore stated. The bill of exceptions shows, however, that at the commencement of the trial the defendant’s attorney did object to the introduction of certain evidence on the ground that the petition did not state a cause of action, and that he renewed this objection at the conclusion of all the evidence, when he asked for a peremptory instruction in the defendant’s favor. The objection to the petition, winch is urged in this court and is founded on certain Nebraska decisions (to wit, Hill v. Campbell Comm. Co., 54 Neb. 59, 74 N. W. 388, and Raymond v. Miller, 50 Neb. 506, 70 N. W. 22), is to the following effect; That the action was in trover for the wrongful conversion of 157 head of steers; that such an action
The method of testing the sufficiency of the petition that was practiced in this case, by making an oral objection to the introduction of any evidence after a lengthy answer had been filed and the complaint had been treated as sufficient, is one that does not commend itself to the favorable consideration of the court, because such a mode of attack often operates as a surprise, besides tending to delay trials after the-parties have incurred considerable expense in taking testimony and in procuring the attendance of witnesses, which might not have been incurred if the sufficiency of. the complaint had been tested in the usual way, by a demurrer. When such a mode of challenging the sufficiency of a complaint is adopted, the pleading in question should be construed liberally. Merely technical defects of averment should be overlooked, and objections made thereto should be overruled, unless they are of a substantial or fundamental character; that is to say, unless there is a total failure to allege some matter which is essential to the relief sought. This is the rule that obtains in Nebraska, in which state this case was tried, as well as the rule which has been sanctioned by this and other courts. Roberts v. Taylor, 19 Neb. 184, 188, 27 N. W. 87; Marvin v. Weider, 31 Neb. 774, 48 N. W. 825; Johnston v. Spencer, 51 Neb. 198, 200, 70 N. W. 982; Glaspie v. Keator, 5 C. C. A. 474, 56 Fed. 203, 211; Rush v. Newman, 7 C. C. A. 136, 139, 58 Fed. 158; Raithe v. McDonald, 7 Kan. 261; Whitbeck v. Sees (S. D.) 73 N. W. 915, 916.
Applying these rules of construction to the pleading in question, we cannot assent to the view that the averment that the plaintiff was “the qualified owner” of the 157 steers in controversy was a mere allegation of a conclusion of law, and that for that reason it should be wholly disregarded. An averment that one is the owner of certain described property is an averment of an ultimate fact such as is permissible in good pleading. It is not usually deemed necessary, when making an allegation of this sort, to describe the manner in which the pleader became the owner of the property, whether it was by purchase or otherwise. The essential fact necessary to be statqd is that he was at a given date the owner. The plain meaning of the allegation that the plaintiff was “the qualified owner” of the cattle, when taken in connection with what follows, is that the cattle in question had been mortgaged to the plaintiff company to secure an indebtedness due to it in the sum of $25,000; that this indebtedness had not been paid when the cattle were removed and sold; and that the plaintiff’s interest in the cattle was that of a mortgagee. This, we think, was a sufficient showing of an interest in the cattle to warrant the legal conclusion that the plaintiff had been damaged by the alleged removal of the cattle from the state and the sale thereof on the Chicago market.
In the present case the cattle were sold on the Chicago market, presumptively for the purpose of being slaughtered. The mortgaged property has therefore lost its identity, and cannot be recovered by the mortgagee, even if it should make the attempt. Under these circumstances he doubtless has a cause of action. against the one who has thus destroyed his lien. We fully concur in the view of the trial judge that the petition disclosed a cause of action on the case for the wrong in question, or at least that it contained sufficient allegations to support a judgment after verdict, and that the objection to the introduction of any evidence in support of the allegations of the petition was properly overruled.
Turning next to the defendant’s answer, with a view of ascertaining what defenses were interposed, we think it clear that the defendant did not plead that it was a purchaser or mortgagee of the cattle in good faith or a creditor of the mortgagor, in such a sense
Counsel for the plaintiff in error suggests, however, that the mortgage in question did not create a lien, even as between the mortgagor and mortgagee, as respects the 157 head of steers now in controversy, because they were not so described in the mortgage as to be conveyed. Relative to this contention, it is to be observed that the mortgage purported to convey “four hundred and eighty-two (482) head of steers two and three years old past, all dehorned and all branded-on the left hip.” This was the brand, as it seems, which the mortgagor usually placed on his stock. It was further recited in the mortgage “that all of said * * * cattle * * * aré owned by said party of the first part, and * * * that said cattle * * * are * * * in the undisputed possession of the party of the first part on premises of said party on Sec. Nos. 27 and 28, in Tp. No. 27, range No. 2 E., in Wayne county, Nebraska, * * * and that said party of the first part will forever warrant and defend the title and possession of said cattle * * * against each and every person whomsoever.” On the trial there was testimony tending to show that a good many of the 157 steers which were removed and sold were not thus branded and dehorned. Hence it is claimed that they were not covered by the mortgage, even so far as the mortgagor was concerned. On the other hand, the plaintiff below claimed that it had established beyond controversy (and if certain testimony to be hereafter considered was admissible, we think that it did so establish) that when the
The testimony to which allusion has been made in the last paragraph as showing very decisively, in connection with other evidence, that Manning had not to exceed 471 head of steers on his premises in Wayne county when he executed the mortgage in question, consists of records kept by a railroad station agent at Carroll, Neb., near where Manning resided, and from which station he shipped all of his cattle. The records consisted of ‘ letterpress copies of waybills issued to Manning by the station agent when he shipped cattle, and showed in detail the number of cattle shipped, the date of shipment, the number of the car in which the shipment was made, and the names of the consignor and consignee. These copies of waybills were made by the agent in the usual and ordinary course of business, and were preserved in a book kept in his office. The plaintiff in error, the defendant below, caused the deposition of Acton, the station agent, to be taken, and the copies of the waybills in question to be produced and
On the trial the plaintiff below, the defendant in error here, offered those waybills, which showed the shipments of cattle that had been made by Manning from November 6, 1900, to about June 26, 1901, after which date, as it was shown, Manning had no cattle on his premises. Subsequently the defendant below offered the rest of the waybills which it had caused to be produced and filed, showing, in connection with those that had been offered by the plaintiff, all the shipments of cattle that were made by Manning from May 7, 1900, to June 26, 1901. When the plaintiff offered the waybills in evidence the record shows that the defendant’s attorney objected to them for the following reasons: “As irrelevant and immaterial, not the character of records authorized to be put in evidence, and that the petition does not state a cause of action.”
It is argued in this court that the waybills were not admissible because no foundation was laid for their introduction by showing why the originals were not produced, and because they related to transactions between ^Manning and the railroad company, and were “res inter alios acta.” But no specific objection of this sort was made to the waybills in the trial court. The objection, as will be observed, was of the most general character, and may have been construed by the trial judge as based principally, if not entirely, upon a supposed defect in the petition. Objections to testimony, as we have heretofore said (Burlington Ins. Co. v. Miller, 19 U. S. App. 588, 591, 8 C. C. A. 612, 60 Fed. 254, 257), ought always to be made specific when one intends to rely upon the objection on appeal, so as to challenge the attention of the trial court to the very point on which the objecting party intends to rely. Again, the error said to have been committed in receiving these waybills is not assigned in the manner required by rule 11 of this court (31 C. C. A. cxlvi, 90 Fed. cxlvi), and we feel disposed, in a case of this sort, to enforce the rule strictly. Furthermore, the defendant, by its conduct in producing the waybills and offering them in evidence as exhibits to Acton’s deposition, in effect admitted their reliability, and gave the opposite party just ground to believe that they would and might be used at the trial as competent testimony. Moreover, no one can doubt that these waybills, kept as they had been, were such persuasive evidence of the facts recorded that no one in the ordinary transactions of life would hesitate to act on the information which they contained. For all of these reasons we are of opinion that the objection made to the admission of the waybills ought not to be esteemed tenable by this court. In a recent case (Fourth National Bank of St. Louis v. Albaugh, Receiver [decided Feb. 23, 1903] 23 Sup. Ct. 450, 47 F. Ed.-), the Supreme Court remarked that “the whole tendency of decisions and legislation is to enlarge the admissibility of hearsay,
The remaining question to be considered is whether, at the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial court was justified in directing a verdict for the defendant or should have submitted the case to the jury. We have examined the testimony with much care, and have reached the conclusion that this question should be answered in the affirmative. As the case stood at the conclusion of the trial, the only question of fact concerning which there could have been any doubt or controversy was whether Manning had more than 482 steers, the number covered by the plaintiff’s mortgage, on his premises on February 20, 1901,-when the mortgage was executed. The only reasonable hypothesis on which the defendant below could assert that the 157 steers, which it caused to be shipped and sold, were not covered by the plaintiff’s mortgage, was that Manning had more thari 482 steers on his premises at the time last stated. It is not claimed, however, that the 157 steers formed any part of the 225 steers that were mortgaged to the George Adams & Burke Company on February 23, 1900, nor would the evidence afford any support to such a contention if it was made. The proof, taken altogether—that is to say, the testimony of Manning himself and the testimony of persons who were in his employ, and the waybills to which reference has already been made—if carefully analyzed, demonstrates very clearly, we think, that Manning did not have more than 461 head of steers on his place on February 20, 1901, and that the 157 steers which the defendant caused to be removed and sold formed a part-of that number, and were in fact covered by the mortgage. There was no substantial evidence, we think, such as would have warranted a jury composed of reasonable men in coming to a different conclusion, and if they had done so the trial court would have been warranted in setting the verdict aside. Under these circumstances, no error was committed in directing a verdict against the defendant company for the amount of money that it had received on the sale of the 157 steers, and the judgment below is accordingly affirmed.