6 N.M. 44 | N.M. | 1891
This is an action in trover brought by the appellee, David C. Pryor, in the district court of Colfax county, to recover of the appellant, the Portsmouth Cattle Company, the sum of $9,000 damages as the value of three hundred head of cattle, alleged to be the property of the plaintiff, and to have been unlawfully taken by the defendant company, and converted to its use. The defendant pleaded the general issue. The cause was tried to a jury, at the April term, 1886, of the district court of Colfax county, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $3,000. Defendant thereupon moved for a new trial upon the following grounds: - That the verdict is unsupported by the evidence; that it is contrary to the weight of evidence; that it is contrary to the instructions of the the court; that it is excessive; that there was no proof of a demand or refusal before suit; that the court erred in admitting upon the trial certain testimony over defendant’s objections; that it erred in refusing to give certain instructions asked by defendant; that it erred in giving certain instructions excepted to by defendant; and lastly, that the verdict is against both the law andthe facts. And thereupon, by agreement of parties, the venue was changed to San Miguel county, where on the third of December, 1886, the motion for a' new trial was overruled, and judgment entered upon the verdict. A bill of exceptions was thereafter settled and signed, and defendant took Ms appeal from such, judgment to this court, where the same has since been pending. The principal facts in the case may be briefly stated as follows: In the winter of 1880, the plaintiff, David C. Pryor, contracted with the Pryor Brothers of Colorado, for the purchase of four or five hundred head of cattle of a certain grade and quality, to be delivered to him on his range in Colfax and Mora counties New Mexico. In the fall of 1881, Pryor Brothers drove their cattle from Colorado to Mora county, in this territory, and turned them loose upon the common or open range. That of the number so driven down, four hundred head were segregated from the herd, and tendered to plaintiff in accordance with Ms contract. That all of the cattle so turned over to him did not suit him. That they were not such as he had agreed to purchase. That in consequence he only accepted one hundred and eighteen of the number, which he branded in his individual brand, the ‘‘Comet,” and the remaining two hundred and eighty-two head he put into a brand called the “3P,” thinking and determining that they should go back to the Pryor Brothers as they were not the kind of cattle he liked. A few days afterward he wrote to one ’of the Pryor Brothers in Colorado that he had not received the kind of cattle that he wanted. Of those that he had put into the 3P brand, fifty werq cows, and two hundred and thirty-two were steers, ranging from two to three years old. Plaintiff at this time, and up to the fall of 1882, was in the employment of Pryor Brothers. In the same year Pryor Brothers sold their-cattle in New Mexico, but not those bearing the 3P brand, to Underwood, Clark & Company, who transferred their purchase to the defendant, the Portsmouth Cattle Company. In September, 1883, plaintiff was employed as supervisor or manager of their cattle by the defendant company. In the month of October following, the defendant company shipped under charge of plaintiff, four hundred head of steers from Raton, in Colfax county, to Kansas City, Missouri. This shipment was consigned to commission men in the name and for the benefit of Pryor Brothers, it being part of the contract between them and Underwood, Clark & Company, at the time the former sold the cattle to the latter, that Pryor Brothers were to market the beeves, and apply the proceeds towards the payment of notes given for a balance due on the purchase. In this shipment plaintiff saw from thirty-five to fifty or sixty steers in the 3P brand. He made no claim at that time to anyone for the value of these steers, nor did he assert any claim of ownership. Por the first time, in the fall of 1884, one year after this consignment, plaintiff demanded payment for such cattle in the 3P brand as the defendant company had used or disposed of, but he is not certain whether he asked pay for all in that brand on the range. His reasons for not claiming such cattle were that he thought his brothers had sold them, and he says: “I wrote to him, and he never paid any attention to it, and I was charged with the cattle.” He supposed, at the time, that his brothers, or one of the Pryor Brothers, had sold them to Underwood, Clark & Company. His testimony on this very important question is: ‘ ‘Question. State your name and residence. Answer. My name is David Pryor, and I live in Colorado. In 1880, up to 1883,1 have lived in this county, anda portion of the time in San Miguel county. In 1882 I worked on this range, in this county and Mora county. In the fall of that year I received from my brother— He brought one hundred head of cattle from Colorado to New Mexico; in the fall of 1881, it was. I received four hundred head of cattle, which as my property I was to place in my individual brand. Up to this time I had no brand in Colfax or Mora counties. These cattle which my brother sent me were not the kind of cattle in the bill that I liked, or he agreed to let me have. So I branded out of the four hundred head what I wanted, in my individual brand, which was the Comet 2 Y’s, and a bar directly behind it; Y’s pointing toward the head, one inside the other, and the bar directly behind it; and then the remainder of these cattle, which amounted to two hundred and eighty-two head, that I branded, I put in three P’s, thinking and determining that they should go back to Pryor Brothers, as they were not the kind of cattle I liked. A few days after which time I wrote to one of my brothers — the one in Colorado, I think — that he had not sent me the kind of cattle I liked. Q. Well, how many cattle do you swear were in that herd in Eaton, with the 3P brand on them? A. I think I can swear there were thirty-five. Q. That is as near as you can come to answering the question, is it? A. Yes, sir; I think it is. Q. (By a juror.) Did I understand you, you never sold the 3P brand at all? A. Never sold any 3P brand. Q. What has become of them? A. I don’t know. Eedirect examination by Mr. Breeden: Q. Now, Mr. Pryor, this last answer of yours, as to how many cattle you saw — state fully about the number of cattle you shipped up there, — the three P cattle. A. I stated in the first statement that I could swear as many as thirty-five, and in the next statement I said I could swear there was thirty-five. I would like to state, that being my property at that time, or should have been, I noticed them closer than I did other cattle. Q. Is that all? A. There was something else I omitted to state. The reason I didn’t claim those cattle was because I thought my brother had sold them, and I wrote to him, and he never paid any attention to it, and I was charged with the cattle. Q. (By the court.) As I understand you, you supposed your brother had sold them. A. Yes, sir. Q. And when you came to settle for them, they had been carried into your account with them? A. Yes, sir. Q. (By Mr. Breeden.) You supposed that your brothers had sold them with other cattle that they had sold? A. I supposed that he had sold them to Underwood, Clark & Company. I had very little dealings with my brothers for two or three years. I didn’t see them only for a little while at a time. I had never seen the bills of sale, or contracts to Underwood, Clark & Company. Q. When you ascertained that your brothers had not sold that brand, what did you do? A. Why, I called on Mr. Holmes for a settlement in Kansas City. Q. Why did you call on Mr. Holmes? A. Because I knew he used some of the cattle, and I knew that they were claiming the brand. Q. Did you claim that Mr. Holmes got them? A. No; but the Portsmouth Cattle Company, through Mr. Holmes. Q. Then you called on Mr. Holmes as the manager of the Portsmouth Cattle Company? A. Yes, sir.” He further on states that he had never had a bill of sale for the 3P brand of cattle, and never called on Pryor Brothers to settle with him for the price of the cattle as sold by them, for the simple fact that they didn’t sell them.
The evidence fails to disclose any other dealings or transactions between him and the Pryor Brothers in respect to these cattle; no new agreement; no further delivery; no other acceptance; in fact, nothing except the persistent refusal of plaintiff to recognize the two hundred and eighty-two head as his own until the fall of 1884, when he discovered that Pryor Brothers had him charged with the four hundred head. It does not appear that even then he assented to the propriety or legality of such charge, that he agreed to pay it, or in any way rendered himself liable to Pryor Brothers for the value of the rejected animals. In the fall of 1883 plaintiff was an employee of defendant, working on the same range; assisted in collecting and shipping for the defendant about four hundred head of cattle for sale to the Kansas City market; recognized in the number so shipped thirty-five, fifty, or sixty, in the 3P brand, a part of the two hundred and eighty-two rejected by him; saw them sold for more than $1,000; never asserting any claim to the animals or their price until a year thereafter, when he found that Pryor Brothers had him charged with all the cattle sent him three years before. During this period of three years he had believed, must have believed, that these 3P brand cattle were not his, for the simple reason that he had never accepted them. Then, there was no sale of these animals recognized by plaintiff during this period. The whole tenor of his conduct is in line with that theory. It is unreasonable, if not absurd, to suppose that any man of common sense would stand silently by, and even assist the perpetrators, while from one to two thousand dollars’ worth of his property is being sold, and the proceeds taken by others. And what reason does he give for his strange conduct? He thought that Pryor Brothers had sold them to Underwood, Clark & Company, and that the cattle had subsequently been transferred by them to the defendant. Would he think this if he regarded himself as the purchaser — as the owner of the animals? There was no sale of the four hundred head in the fall of 1881, unless both parties assented. Plaintiff’s conduct shows that he did not assent, and it further shows that until the fall of 1884 he believed that Pryor Brothers had recognized the legal effects of such dissent. Aside from this, there is no proof of any subsequent consummated sale of these animals, nor of any ratification of prior negotiation in reference thereto. ' Hence we find that at the time of the alleged conversion the plaintiff was not the owner of the property, and therefore had no right of recovery, and the court below erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial.