254 F. 785 | 5th Cir. | 1918
We think the court properly ruled that the petition, as it was amended, disclosed a cause of action, and was not subject to the exception or demurrer interposed to it. It fairly appears from the averments that the action of the bank in delivering to Wertz the bills of sale mentioned was effective in bringing about the wrongful disposition of some' of the mules by Wertz, which resulted in the loss by Winfield of those mules, or the value of them. Whether it was or was not legally necessary for Wertz to have possession of such bills of sale to be enabled to sell the mules they represented, so long as his conduct was controlled by the understanding that it was not safe for him to dispose of the mules without having in possession the bills of sale given to Winfield, the conduct of the bank in delivering those instruments contrary to instructions properly might be regarded as proximately contributing to the loss caused to- Winfield by Wertz’s wrongful disposition of some of the mules. The question whether the wrongful delivery of the bills of sale had the effect attributed to it was one of fact.
Several of the mules died while they were in the possession of Wertz. As a result of a suit brought by Winfield, he recovered 26 of the mules which were not sold by Wertz.
“That if they believed that Winfield sent to the bank bills of sale for the mules, with instructions not to deliver them to Wertz, except as Wertz paid for each mulo, and that, contrary to these instructions, the bank did deliver the bills of sale to Wertz, and that Wertz was accordingly able to sell certain of the mules, the jury should then find a verdict for the plaintiff for the number of mules disposed of by Wertz at the rate of $60 per head, and should also allow the items of attorney’s fees, $300, and court costs of $149.75.”
There was no evidence of the value of the mules sold when the bills of sale were delivered to Wertz, or when he disposed of those mules. The instruction quoted improperly assumed that their value at those times was what Wertz had agreed to pay for them. To sustain a recovery based on the bank’s delivery of the bills of sale having the effect of enabling Wertz to sell some of the mules without paying for them, it was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove the value of the mules sold when they were wrongfully disposed of.
Reversed.