Bennett v. McGillan

28 F. 411, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 28 F. 411 (Bennett v. McGillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. McGillan, 28 F. 411, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295 (uscirct 1886).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a suit to recover a- balance claimed by plaintiffs to be due them from defendant upon the sale of a cattle ranch, with the outfit, fixtures, and cattle pertaining thereto, in the Indian Territory. This case was tried by the court without a jury, and depends mainly upon the legal construction to be given to the contract, rather than on any disputed facts.

The material facts, as they appear in the proof, are that, on or about the sixteenth of April, 1885, the plaintiffs entered into a contract with the defendant, whereby they agreed to sell to the defendant, for the sum of $400,000, their ranch, cattle, horses, wagons, mules, hogs, and ranch outfit, located in the Indian Territory, at or near the junction of the Arkansas and Cimaron rivers, more particularly described as follows:

“12,500 head of cattle, to be counted, and averaging1 in age and sex about as follows: 3,000 head of three, four, and five year old steers; 3,000 head of two-year olds, mixed; 5,000 head one-year old, mixed; 1,500 head of cows and bulls,—calves horn in 1885 not to be counted; 125 head of horses; and all the mules, wagons, harness, liogs, and ranch outfit, located on the said ranch, and used in connection therewith; and all tlieir right, title, and interest in and to a certain lease for 128,000 acres of land, known as the ‘ Cherokee Lease,’ dated October, 1883, and running live years from the da,he thereof, at a yearly rental of two and a half cents per aere; also all their right, title, and interest in and to the said lease for 127,265 acres of land known as the ‘Pawnee Lease,’ dated June 1, 1884, and running five years from date, at an annual rental of three cents per acre; and to deliver posses-, sion of all said property to defendant on or before the fifteenth day of July, 1885.”

Should the number of cattle delivered exceed 12,500 head, the defendant was to pay in cash the sum of $25 per head for such excess; and should the said number fall short of 12,500 head, plaintiffs were to credit defendant on the amount to be paid at the rate of $25 per head for such deficit. The sum of $400,000 for said ranch [412]*412and cattle was to be paid by the defendant as follows: The sum of $25,000 was to be paid in cash at the time of making said agreement; the sum of $75,000 was to be paid July 25, 1885, and for which the defendant was to give his negotiable promissory notes of even date with said contract, payable on the twenty-fifth day of July, 1855, with 8 per cent, interest; $66,000, to be paid July 1, 1886;. $66,000, to be paid November 1, 1886, — for which two last-named amounts defendant was to execute his negotiable promissory notes, bearing date July 15, 1885, and payable July 1, 1886, and November 1, 1886, with 8 per cent, interest per annum from the date of said notes; and the remaining $168,000 was to be paid by said defendant on the fifteenth day of July, 1885, by the conveyance to the plaintiffs, by deed of general warranty, free and clear of all incum-brances, taxes, and liens of every kind and character, of 84 acres of land in Crosby’s subdivision of the of section 5, township 37 N., range 13 E., situated in the county of Cook and state of Illinois.

The defendant paid the $25,000 called for by the contract to be paid at the time the contract was made, and gave his notes for the-$75,000 payable July 25, 1885, which were duly paid at maturity. It also appears that between the first and fourteenth days of July, 1885, plaintiffs delivered to defendant the ranch and ranch outfit, and property pertaining .thereto, and 4,854 head of cattle, and defendant, accepted the same; that plaintiffs were unable, by reason of losses, in the preceding winter, to deliver the full number of cattle called for by the contract; and that there was a deficiency or shortage in the cattle of 7,646 head, which, at the rate of $25 per head, made the sum of $191,150 to be credited the defendant on the purchase-price of $400,000; and as defendant had paid the cash payment of' $25,000, and given his negotiable notes for the $75,000 dtie July 25th, there was, after crediting the shortage of $191,150, only a balance of $108,850 to be paid plaintiffs. This balance, plaintiffs contended, should be included in equal time-notes, payable in July and November, 1886; but the defendant refused to give the notes, and contended that he was entitled to apply this credit of $191,150, first-,, in the extinguishment of the amount to be secured by the time-notes payable in 1886, and the remainder of this credit was to be applied on the payment to be made in Cook county land, and that he was-entitled to convey the entire Cook county lands to plaintiffs, and plaintiffs were bound to accept the same, and to pay him the sum of $59,150 in cash for said land. In other words, that the plaintiffs were bound to take the land at $168,000, and pay defendant the balance of $59,150 which would remain unpaid for the land by the delivery of the ranch and cattle. So that the controversy in the case is as to whether the plaintiffs were bound to accept this land at the-price fixed in the contract, and make up in cash the deficiency in the price to be allowed for it, or whether plaintiffs could insist that the credit for the shortage on the cattle should be applied, first, to ex[413]*413tinguish the payment defendant was to make in Cook county land, and then upon the amount to be secured by the time-notes due in July and November, 1886, thus leaving this balance of $108,150 due plaintiffs; and this suit is brought to recover this balance of $ 108,-150, on the ground that, defendant having refused to give his notes, it became at once a money demand.

It was conceded upon the trial that the plaintiffs were the owners of the ranch in question, and had thereon, in the fall of 1881, the full number of cattle specified in the contract; and that they supposed, in good faith, at the time the contract was made, that they would be able to deliver to defendants the full number of 12,500 head of cattle; but that, by reason of the severity of the winter of 1884-85, the plaintiffs’ losses of cattle were so great they were unable to deliver more than 4,854 head stated. From this large deficiency in the number of cattle, which I may say, from the proof, appears to have been unexpected on the part of both parties, has arisen the difficult question of law to be determined in this case. Upon the trial I admitted a large mass of testimony in regard to the preliminary negotiations, correspondence, and interviews between the contracting parties and their brokers, for the purpose of obtaining, if possible, some light upon the true construction to be given to the terms of the contract, in view of the embarrassing questions which are in controversy; but I feel compelled to say that very little, if any, light as to the construction to be given to the contract was obtained from this testimony. The proof satisfies me that the plaintiffs, in good faith, believed that they had the full number of cattle named in the contract, and would be able to deliver them at the time stipulated; and I have no doubt that the defendant expected at that time to receive that number of cattle, and to pay for them in the manner provided in the contract. That there might be a comparatively small surplus or excess of cattle over and above the number called for by the contract, or that there might be a small deficiency, is clearly indicated by the terms of the contract itself, and from the parol proof; but I have no doubt, from the proof, that neither party anticipated so large a shortage of cattle, or that any serious difficulty or question would arise by reason of such excess or deficiency.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. 411, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-mcgillan-uscirct-1886.