Bowles v. Brannagan

60 F. Supp. 897, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2299
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedJune 16, 1945
DocketCivil Action No. 47
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 F. Supp. 897 (Bowles v. Brannagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowles v. Brannagan, 60 F. Supp. 897, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2299 (D. Neb. 1945).

Opinion

DELEHANT, District Judge.

For the defendant’s alleged sale, on or about June 6, 1944, to Nebraska State Hospital for the Insane, a state institution, at Ingleside, Nebraska, of one hundred eleven bushels, fifty-seven pounds, of number two yellow ear corn for a price $1.67 in excess of the maximum allowable price therefor, under Second Revised Maximum Price Regulation 346, as amended, issued under the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, as amended, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix § 901 et seq., the plaintiff sued under 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix § 925(e) to recover a judgment for fifty dollars and costs of suit. Upon the trial, admitting that the alleged violation was “neither wilfull nor the result of failure to take practicable precautions against the occurrence of the violation”, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix § 925(e), the plaintiff conceded that his maximum potential recovery was twenty-five dollars. The defendant denied his violation of the maximum price provision of the Regulation. The case has been tried to the court without a jury upon its merits.

The court now sets forth the facts proved upon the trial, noting the only instance in which there was any question even of the adequacy of proof.

The defendant was and is a farmer, residing now, and at the time in question, upon a farm owned by him and located eight and three-fourths miles south westerly from Hastings, Nebraska, and about seven miles southerly from the hospital. Early in June 1944, he was continuously in Lincoln, Nebraska, for a considerable period of time, undergoing a series of dental treatments. During his absence from his farm home on that mission, one William W. Maltman, the steward of the hospital, being in need of corn for immediate use at the institution, without any knowledge by, or notice to, the defendant, made an agreement with the defendant’s brother, also a farmer, for the purchase from the latter of some ear corn in a crib on the brother’s farm, in the general neighborhood of, but some distance from, the defendant’s farm residence. Promptly thereupon, Maltman sent some workmen from the institution to [898]*898get the corn, for whose purchase he had arranged. Confusedly they went not to the farm of the seller but to that of the defendant, and there, over the protest of his daughter, removed from his crib and took to the institution the quantity of corn involved, being all the corn the defendant then had. The daughter’s protest is the only fact in the case which the plaintiff questions, and, in respect of it, he states in his brief that there is no competent evidence of the protest. However, Maltman, while testifying as a witness for the plaintiff stated without objection that she did make such a protest. So, disregarding like testimony which was given by the defendant in his own behalf, it appears that the plaintiff himself introduced evidence of the protest. To be sure, the evidence of the protest on both sides was hearsay. But upon the trial no factual issue arose over the making of the protest and both parties seemed disposed to establish it. In that situation, the court finds that the protest was made though it is no more than an immaterial circumstance of a fairly common pattern with the other facts in the irregular procurement of the com. Once at the institution, the corn was was promptly ground and consumed, for the need of it had been urgent. The defendant, too, stood in sore need of the corn for livestock feed. He had not intended, and was never willing, to sell it, and, in fact, had not sold any of his corn for eight years, but had always fed it on his farm.

His dental treatment completed, the defendant returned to his farm and learned from his daughter that his corn had been taken by workmen for the institution. At his convenience, and in a few days (June is a busy month on southern Nebraska farms), he went to the institution and inquired, about the taking of his corn, of Maltman, who informed him that it had then been ground, and consumed by the hospital’s livestock. Though irritated by the incident, the defendant recognized that it was not deliberate, but quite inadvertent, and stated to Maltman that if he, Maltman, were resolved to take without permission any of the defendant’s grain, it would have been much more convenient if he had taken a quantity of oats that was located on another farm quite near the hospital on which the defendant had shortly theretofore resided; and that the defendant would have to move the oats to his residence though he could replace it by the purchase of oats much nearer his home, whereas the corn had been stored precisely where it was needed and would have been used. To which, Maltman replied that the institution also needed oats and he would be pleased to send workmen to get the defendant’s oats and to pay for them upon the basis of their weight and the market price current when they should be gotten. Neither party to the conversation then knew the precise weight of the oats, and though in the conversation Maltman told the defendant that the corn had been weighed upon its acquisition, he did not tell the defendant, and at the time of the conversation neither party to it knew, the precise weight of the corn.

The conversation resulted in an agreement by the defendant to settle the transaction regarding the corn upon the basis of the regulated ceiling price for the exact weight of corn taken, and to sell the oats to the institution upon the basis of their weight and market price at the time of delivery, which the institution was to accept in the bin. To facilitate and expedite payment and eliminate unnecessary travel, the defendant then signed, at Maltman’s request, a single completely blank voucher form for presentation through the state’s appropriate auditing channels, with the understanding that Maltman would finish it by inserting, upon his acquisition of the required information, the description of the corn with its weight and price at the prevailing ceiling price, which Maltman was to ascertain and neither party then knew with certainty, and of the oats with their weight and price at the prevailing market price.

That was the last the defendant did or heard about the matter until he received through the mail some weeks later a check from the State Treasurer of Nebraska for $243.24 without itemization or analysis of the units represented by it or any other comment. Assuming it to be for the correct amount, and the check being in fact for substantially the correct amount, he accepted it and converted it into cash.

Maltman, meanwhile, had caused the oats to be gotten and weighed and had correctly ascertained the market price thereof. In the utmost good faith, he undertook to ascertain the ceiling price for the corn, but instead of seeking that information at the local War Price and Rationing Board, went to the local federal AAA board offices to obtain it. There he observed on a bul[899]*899letin board a statement that the ceiling price of such corn per bushel was $1,015, regardless of where the corn was grown. Actually, with adjustments, the ceiling price for shelled corn was $1 per bushel; and this, according to the regulation and a stipulation of the parties upon the trial, was subject to a further reduction in the sum of two cents per bushel by reason of the fact that the corn was taken in the ear. So, the amount received by the defendant was about $3.91 (not $1.67, as pleaded) above the allowable maximum price for such corn. But the defendant was wholly unaware, not only of the error, but even of the precise payment he had received for the taking of his corn, since the payment for the oats was included with it in the single check.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F. Supp. 897, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-brannagan-ned-1945.