52 Mo. App. 572 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
This was a suit commenced before a. justice of the peace to recover damages for the breach of a contract for the sale of a mule.
The plaintiff’s statement alleged two distinct and. separable warranties, and the breaches thereof, one that, the mule was sound, when in fact he was unsound, having a fatal disease of the lungs, and the other that, he was a good worker, when he was not. At the trial the evidence was adduced by the plaintiff to prove, and by the defendant to disprove, the first of the foregoing-allegations.
The court by its instructions for the plaintiff very clearly outlined to the jury what constituted a warranty in a case of this kind, and then left it to them to find from the evidence whether or not defendants had warranted the soundness of the mule to the plaintiff, and, if' so, whether there had been a breach thereof. Upon.
The plaintiff complains further of the action of the •court in receiving and rejecting certain evidence. The defendant, over the objection of the plaintiff, was permitted to ask Joseph Hersh, who testified that he had been a veterinary surgeon for twenty-five years, whether “if a mule of the age of five or six or even seven years, which had been penned up for several days, say at least five days, and which is in good flesh, is fat, is in such physical condition and spirits and liveliness that it requires two men to catch and hold her, that she is haltered and brought out, showing good spirits, and there is no physical indication in any way of any affliction of any kind, and is led away from the
'The plaintiff put a hypothetical question to J. B. Black, a veterinary surgeon, who was a graduate of Ontario college, Canada, which was to the effect whether or not, if five or eight hours after the mule was cut open its lungs were found black, his experience would enable-him to determine the condition of the mule on the day of the sale, which was the twelfth of the month. The uncontradicted evidence was that on the sixteenth or seventeenth of February the mule was cut up and used by a rendering establishment. The lungs of the mule then looked Hack. They were then thrown in the tank of the-rendering establishment. So that there is no evidence whatever of the color or condition of the lungs five or eight hours after the mule was cut up.
The facts assumed by plaintiff’s hypothetical case-were not within the limits of the evidence, and for that reason, if for no other, the trial court did not err in refusing to allow it to be submitted to the expert wit-mess for his opinion.
We can discover no grounds of error in the record which justify our interference with the judgment which must be affirmed.