The defendant began feeding one hundred and forty three-year-old steers about December 1, 1903. They were grade short horns, polled Angus and Herefords, taken from the pasture in good condition. Lie began feeding them blood meal in the latter part of the month, up to which time the evidence tended to show they were thrifty and doing well. Thereafter, though well cared for, they scoured badly, and this continued as long as the meal was fed, which was about until the first of March, and thereupon the scouring ceased. According to the evidence, the cattle did not increase in weight to exceed seventy-five to one hundred pounds each during the sixty days they were given the blood meal; whereas, without
I showed him where the Iowa Experiment Station had fed different bunches of steers with corn alone' and with different commercial food, аnd in showing him this
When to this evidence is added the circumstance that the agent was aware that defendant was without experience in the use of the meal, and was relying on his representations in making the purchase, it becomes evident that there was enough to carry the issue tо the jury. Hughes v. Funston,
The law does not • preclude the recovery of profits lost as the result of a breach of a contract having these as its object. Hichorn v. Bradley,
No consideration was given to the foregoing and other authorities, however, and we need not stop to determine whether, in view of the circumstances of the case the conclusion is to be approved. It is very evident that a showing of damages to stock due to a particular feed is .not involved in the uncertainties attendant upon the raising of a crop of barley, cabbage, potatoes, or cotton. . The testimony of what cattle like those of defendant on full feed ordinarily would increase was undisputed, as' was the evidence of what they in fact increased. It was shown that they had not scoured before eating the blood meal, that they did scour during the entire time it was fed to them, and that they ceased scouring when it was
V. Much is said in the argument of appellant concerning the general character of blood meal. We are not concerned in this case as to whether, as an article of food for animals, it is valuable or otherwise. Plaintiff was bound to furnish the commodity in compliance with the expressed warranty, if such there was, regardless of the character of the preparation generally, and this, as the evidence tended to show, it did not do.
Other matters argued, in view оf our conclusion, need not be considered.
The result is that the finding that the consideration failed is sustained by the evidence, and that the verdict, in so far as based on the counterclaim, is not so sustained. If defendant shall elect to file a remittitur of the judgment in his favor in excess of nominal damages of $1 within thirty days after the filing of this opinion, the judgment
Affirmed on condition.
