17 Mo. 489 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a civil action, commenced by the plaintiff in the Circuit Court of Jackson county, against defendants, for wintering, feeding and taking care of cattle, undef the following agreement: “ Memorandum of an agreement entered into on second day of November, 1849, between David Waldo & Co., of Jackson county, Mo., and Samuel Stonam, of Clinton county, Mo. The said Samuel Stonam obligates himself to take of the said David Waldo & Co., two hundred and thirty-seven head of work steers or oxen, to be well wintered on corn and fodder, and delivered at such point in Jackson county as the said Waldo & Co. may designate, in the spring, at such time as they can do well on the prairie range; and the said Waldo & Co. obligate themselves to pay five and 50-100 dollars per head for every one delivered in good, thrifty order and condition; the said Samuel Stonam being liable for all steers that die from neglect or want of due attention, and for damages done by them, or such as escape; but not liable for any that die from accident or unavoidable causes. It is understood between the parties that said cattle are to be kept in such manner as to be in saleable condition, suitable for a trip to Santa Fé,
his
“ SAMUEL h STONAM.”
mark.
Plaintiff, in his petition, states that the true number of oxen received by him of defendants under the contract, was 232 head, and of this number 112 died whilst in the plaintiff’s possession, of disease, and without any fault of plaintiff; and states also, that plaintiff took all proper care of the oxen delivered to him, according to his contract, and on demand, returned to the defendants the oxen remaining alive, 120 head, and asks for judgment for reasonable compensation for his services, and for medicine, corn, fodder and salt given and fed to the 112 steers that died, valued at $616, and asks also for judgment for $5 50 per head for the 120 oxen returned to defendants.
Defendants, in their answer, admit the contract, and say plaintiff received of defendants the whole number of oxen mentioned in the contract, to-wit, 237 head, and deny that plaintiff wintered and took care of the oxen as required by his contract; but on the contrary, that plaintiff fed, salted, wintered, watered and attended to said oxen so negligently and carelessly, that 126 head died and were wholly lost to defendants, and by which defendants sustained damage, and for which they ask judgment against plaintiff; they also deny that the oxen, or any of them, were diseased. Defendants admit the return of 120 oxen, and deny that any of them were kept and attended to, as required by the contract, or that they were returned in the condition required by the contract; but on the contrary, after the first of April, and when they were still poor
On the trial, it was proved that plaintiff, Stonam, under the contract, received from defendants 232 head of cattle. It was also proved, that of this number, and whilst in plaintiff’s possession, 112 died. It was also proved, that the remaining 120 head in the month of May, on demand, were delivered to defendants. Plaintiff then gave evidence conducing to show that he fed and took care of the cattle as required by the contract; and also gave evidence conducing to show that those that died, died of disease ; and also evidence conducing to show, that the 120 head returned to defendants, were in thrifty order and condition, saleable, and suitable for a trip to Santa Fé. The defendants then gave evidence conducing to show, that plaintiff did not feed and take care of the cattle delivered to him, as required by the contract; but on the contrary, neglected them ; and also conducing to show that the cattle that died, did not die from disease or accident, but died by reason of plaintiff’s negligence and carelessness. Defendants also gave evidence conducing to show that the 120 head returned to them by plaintiff, Avere all of them poor and unthrifty, and that none of them were in thrifty order and condition, and none of them in saleable condition, or suitable for a trip to Santa Fé, at the time specified in the contract, or at any other time whilst in plaintiff’s possession.
The following points were raised on the evidence. It was proved that the cattle received by the plaintiff from defendants, were taken from a large lot of oxen of defendants, which had the same fall crossed the plains from Santa Fé, and that Greer, the witness, had, at the same time with the plaintiff, received out of the same lot 230 head to be wintered for defendants, and that Leggett, a witness, at the same time, bought of defendants, from said lot of cattle, twenty head.
On the examination of said witnesses, defendants propounded
Plaintiff asked the court to give the jury the following instructions :
1. That if they believe from the evidence, that plaintiff properly and regularly fed, watered and salted the oxen received by him under the contract, and that the defendants, by their agents, received or took a portion of such oxen out of his possession about the first of May, (either with or without his consent,) before the time said cattle could dq well on the prairie range, then they must find for plaintiff, at the rate of five dollars and fifty cents per head for the oxen so taken or received; and if they further find that another portion of said oxen were delivered to, and received by said defendants, they must further find for plaintiff at the same rate for such oxen.
2. If they believe that the plaintiff properly and regularly fed, watered and salted the cattle received by him under the contract, and that, notwithstanding sudh attention, part of such cattle died from disease, and not from any neglect on plaintiff’s part, then they will find for plaintiff, at the rate per head as aforesaid, for such oxen as died from such disease as aforesaid, up to the time of such death.
1. That by the contract between the parties sued on, and in proof, plaintiff was bound to keep the cattle delivered to him by defendants, in such manner as to be in saleable condition, suitable for a trip to Santa Fé early in the following spring, by the first day of April of that spring, and to return them in good thrifty order and condition; and by said contract, defendants were liable to pay plaintiff for every one of said cattle so delivered and returned in good thrifty-order and condition, five dollars and fifty cents a head ; and if the jury believe that said cattle were not kept by plaintiff in such manner as to be in saleable condition, suitable for a trip to Santa Fé by the first of April in the then following spring, and that said cattle were not then in good thrifty order and condition, hut on the contrary, said cattle, all the time they were in plaintiff’s possession, were in a bad, and unthrifty condition, and by plaintiff were kept in such a careless and negligent manner as not to he in a saleable condition, or suitable for a trip to Santa Fé by the first of said April, and during the whole of said spring, then in such case, defendants are not bound to plaintiff for the sum agreed on per head, but only for such sum and compensation as plaintiff reasonably deserved to have, after deducting from the same such amount of damages as defendants sustained by reason of such failure, carelessness and negligence of plaintiff.
2. That defendants by the contract sued on, and in proof, are liable and bound to plaintiff to pay him only for such of the cattle delivered by defendants to plaintiff as plaintiff returned to defendants or their agent, in good thrifty condition, in a saleable condition, suitable for a trip to Santa Fé ; and if said cattle and none of them were in such condition, by the first of said April mentioned in said contract, and were not in such condition at any time in the spring of that year, then, in such case, the jury must find for defendants.
4. That defendants are not bound by the contract sued on, and in proof, to pay plaintiff for feeding and taking care of any of the cattle that died in plaintiff’s possession, before such cattle became in suitable condition for a trip to Santa Ee, and before the same were returned and delivered to defendants or their agent.
5. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the cattle, as well those that died as those that survived, delivered by defendants to plaintiff, were, during all the time, and up to the time they were delivered and returned to defendants’ agent, in the month of May, 1850, in an unsaleable condition, and in an unsuitable condition for a trip to Santa Eé, and in such condition by reason of the negligence and want of due and pro-' per care of the plaintiff, then and in such case, the jury must find for defendants.
The court gave-the instructions numbered one and two,, asked by plaintiff, and defendants excepted. The court also gave the instructions three and five, asked by defendants, and refused to give instructions asked by defendants, numbered one, two and four; and to the opinion of the court, in refusing said instructions one, two and four, 'defendants also excepted. The court also gave to the jury the following instruction : “ The court instructs the jury that the plaintiff was bound by the contract read to them in evidence, to feed the cattle well on corn and fodder during the winter, and to attend to them well, to salt them regularly and sufficiently, and to give them plenty of water, so as to have them in good thrifty order and condition by the spring, and in a saleable condition, suitable for a
To the giving of this instruction, defendants also excepted. The verdict of the jury was for the plaintiff for $>800. The defendants made their motions for a new trial and in arrest, which were overruled by the court, and the defendants excepted and appealed.
From the above very full statement of the facts of the case, and of the instructions given and refused to be given, and of the rulings of the court in refusing to permit certain questions to be propounded to, and answered by the witnesses, .Green, Leggett and Clarkson, it becomes important for this court to consider the proper construction of the contract between the parties, and the relevancy of such proposed testi.mony.
Now, it is the opinion of this court, that there must be a delivery under this contract to Waldo & Co., of the oxen, before the obligation rests on them to pay; and, unless Waldo & Co. have received, either by themselves or their agents, the cattle from Stonam elsewhere, the delivery must be in Jackson county. The delivery, too, must be of steers, in good thrifty order and condition. Then, for the delivery of all such steers, in good thrifty order and condition as shall be made to Waldo & Co., in Jackson county, in the following spring, and for all such as the said Waldo & Co. shall receive from said Stonam elsewhere, they are bound to pay said Stonam the agreed price of five dollars and fifty cents per head.
It may be considered important in the further trial of this case to state, that it is competent for the defendants to recover the damages, if there be any, which they have sustained by the negligence and carelessness, if there be any such, of the plain
The judgment of the Circuit Court is, therefore, reversed and remanded, with directions to proceed therein, in accordance with this opinion ;