Bicknell v. Owyhee Sheep & Land Co.

176 P. 782, 31 Idaho 696, 4 A.L.R. 897, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 116
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 P. 782 (Bicknell v. Owyhee Sheep & Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bicknell v. Owyhee Sheep & Land Co., 176 P. 782, 31 Idaho 696, 4 A.L.R. 897, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 116 (Idaho 1918).

Opinion

BUDGE, C. J.

This is an action for the alleged conversion of certain sheep. The cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of respondents for the amount prayed in the complaint. This appeal is from the judgment entered on the verdict.

It appears that the appellant J. L. Gray was president and manager and S. D. Phillips, secretary, of the Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, Limited, at the time of the transaction involved herein. Some time prior to July 3, 1914, Bicknell had a conversation with Phillips, concerning the sale of the company’s 1914 crop of lambs. At that time Phillips thought they would sell the lambs to another party. Bicknell wanted [699]*699a chance to buy them if the other deal should not be consummated. On July 3, 1914, Bicknell, learning that the lambs, or part of them, were being shipped at Rogerson, called Phillips on the telephone, inquired if the lambs were sold, and was told they were not, but that the company was making a shipment, which was then being loaded. Bicknell wanted to buy them and offered $3.50 per head. Phillips asked $3.60. Bicknell offered to “split the difference” and take the lambs that were being loaded, together with those that were still on the range, at $3.55 per head. This price was satisfactory to Phillips, but he said he would have to take the matter up with Gray, the company’s manager. Shortly thereafter, Gray called Bicknell on the telephone, and it was agreed that he should take the lambs at $3.55 per head, f. o. b. Rogerson. There were about 4,325 head in the shipment which was then being loaded, Bicknell agreeing to accept Gray’s count. The remainder of the lambs, on the range, were to be delivered on or before September 10, 1914. There is a dispute in the evidence as to what notice was to be given for the delivery of the latter. The shipment then being made had already been consigned by appellant company to Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, commission brokers at South Omaha. The shipment was not reconsigned, but was allowed to stand under this consignment at Bicknell’s suggestion. After the terms had been agreed upon they were repeated between Gray and Bicknell over the telephone, the latter testifying that during the conversation he wrote them down ón one of his contract forms. Bicknell was to send the contract to Rosenbaum Brothers & Company for appellants, and to send a draft for $5,000 to be held to apply on the last shipment, the intervening payments to be made out of the proceeds of the sale of the lambs on the market. Bicknell’s testimony is to the effect that during the telephone conversation, and after the agreement for the purchase and sale had been completed, he told Gray he would have one of his men take charge of the sheep when they reached Minidoka; it 'would be impossible for him to get a man there in time to take charge of them at Rogerson; and that Gray stated it [700]*700would not be necessary for Bicknell to send a man, that he and Phillips were going to Omaha anyway, and would be glad to take the sheep there for him, without charge; whereupon it was agreed between them that Bicknell should pay Gray $25 to cover their personal expenses in consideration of Gray’s accompanying the sheep for Bicknell from Rogerson to Omaha. That this was the agreement is borne out and corroborated by the testimony of both Phillips and Gray. While the latter’s testimony is somewhat contradictory to Bicknell’s, under all the evidence the jury was justified in finding that such was the agreement. While en route with the sheep, on the way to Twin Falls, Gray stated to Crouse, a witness for respondents, that he and Phillips were going on through with the lambs and that they were taking them for Bicknell. When they reached Montpelier, Gray stated to Azeuenaga, a witness for respondents, that he had sold the lambs to Bicknell. At Laramie, Gray told Widoe, a witness for respondents, that he had sold the lambs to Bicknell and that he wanted to get out of the contract.

After the telephone conversation between Gray and Bicknell, the latter wrote Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, advising them that he had purchased these lambs and instructing them to use their own judgment in regard to the sale thereof, inclosing a draft for $5,000 and a draft to be filled in for whatever Gray’s count should, amount to at $3.55 per head, plus $25 expenses, and also inclosed the contract to be delivered to Gray.

When Gray and Phillips reached Omaha with the lambs, Rosenbaum Brothers & Company turned the contract over to Gray, who refused to sign the same, for the reason, as he stated, that the contract provided that the lambs on the range were to be delivered on or before September 10, 1914, at the option of the buyer, but that according to his understanding the contract should have provided for ten or twelve days’ notice. He refused to accept the $5,000 draft, wired Bicknell that he was returning the contract because it was not as agreed upon, and sent him a letter, inclosing the contract, and setting out his objections thereto.

[701]*701Rosenbaum Brothers & Company notified Bicknell that appellants refused to sign the contract, for the reason that it was not properly drawn in regard to notice of delivery. Bicknell instructed them to withhold all of the proceeds over and above the $3.55 per head, plus $25 expenses.

The lambs were sold by Rosenbaum Brothers & Company for $25,701.37, which was alleged in the complaint to have been the reasonable value of the lambs, and which allegation of value is admitted by failure to deny the same in appellants’ answer. Payment was made to the appellants on the basis of $3.55 per head, according to Gray’s count, plus $25 expenses, a portion of the payment being made to creditors of the Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, including Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, under instructions from appellants. The balance of the proceeds, after deducting expenses, freight and commissions, amounting to $7,050.92, was retained by Rosenbaum Brothers & Company, who declined to pay the same to either party, pending the result of this litigation.

While appellants’ brief contains many specifications of error, the controlling question in the ease is: Was there a delivery of the 4,325 head of lambs by appellant Owyhee Sheep & Land Company, Limited, to respondents, at Rogerson, Idaho, on the third day of July, 1914, and an acceptance of the same by respondents? If there were no such delivery and acceptance, respondents’ case must fail under appellants’ plea of the statute of frauds, to wit: Rev. Codes, sec. 6009, for it is conceded that there was no written contract. If, on the other hand, there were such a delivery and acceptance, respondents should prevail under the record presented to us, for in that event the statute of frauds would have no application. The law is well settled that delivery and acceptance of property sold under an executory contract of sale takes it out of the statute of frauds. (Coffin v. Bradbury, 3 Ida. 770, 95 Am. St. 37, 35 Pac. 715.)

While there is authority to the effect that the same person cannot act as agent of the seller to negotiate the sale and as [702]*702the agent of the buyer to receive and accept the goods (Caulkins v. Hellman, 14 Hun, 330, 47 N. Y. 449, 7 Am. Rep. 461), the prevailing modern rule, and the one applicable to the facts before us, seems to be that: “Although the goods remain in the possession of the seller, yet there may be a receipt by the buyer if the seller ceases to hold as owner and agrees to hold as the bailee of the buyer with his consent.” (20 Cyc. 250; Devine v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 782, 31 Idaho 696, 4 A.L.R. 897, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bicknell-v-owyhee-sheep-land-co-idaho-1918.