Buffington v. Fairground Sales Co.

402 S.W.2d 59, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 676
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1966
DocketNo. 24395
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 402 S.W.2d 59 (Buffington v. Fairground Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buffington v. Fairground Sales Co., 402 S.W.2d 59, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 676 (Mo. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

DEW, Special Commissioner.

Plaintiff sued to recover damages for breach of an alleged express warranty in the sale to him of 20 Hereford cows by the, defendant. The petition originally included as defendants Lawrence Merrigan, stockholder, and James Merrigan, stockholder, president and auctioneer, of the defendant corporation, and also copartners engaged in the trucking business at that corporation’s place of business. At the close of the testimony, the case was dismissed as to said copartners, leaving the Fairground Sales Company, a corporation, as the sole remaining defendant and which will be so treated and referred to as such in this opinion. Upon a trial to a jury, plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant for $4,000, from which defendant has appealed.

The petition alleged plaintiff’s attendance at a special cow sale advertised to be held on January 7, 1963; his purpose to acquire Hereford cows for breeding purposes limited to that breed; the representations made by the defendant’s auctioneer as to the breed of the cows, their age, and their being with calf, sired by a pure-bred Hereford bull; the failure of the cows delivered to plaintiff to conform to the identification records of those purchased, or to meet the [61]*61other representations referred to, and the consequent damage sustained by plaintiff.

Defendant by its answer denied the accusations pleaded by the plaintiff and alleged that the cows purchased by the plaintiff were not owned by defendant, but by a third party who had conveyed them to it as a marketing agent, without any warranties or representations.

The pertinent evidence adduced by the plaintiff tended to prove that he was a stock farmer, 27 years of age, married and living on a rented farm near Colo, Iowa, near the farms of his parents and uncle. He had had six years experience as a farmer and presently was operating on a partnership plan by which his landlord furnished the farm and some livestock, and plaintiff was to furnish an equal number of livestock and perform the necessary work and labor required in such an arrangement. The landlord had a herd of Black Angus cattle. Plaintiff desired to acquire and to supply pure bred Hereford cows with which to build up a herd of that breed which are usually larger animals. He planned in the future, to cross the Hereford stock with Angus to produce a still better type of stock for breeding purposes. Having seen a newspaper advertisement of a special sale of cows to be conducted by defendant on January 7, 1963, at its place of business near Maryville, Missouri, he, accompanied by his father, uncle and brother, drove to the sale, some 200 miles distant. There were between 1600 and 1900 cows to be sold at the sale.

Further evidence of the plaintiff was to the effect that he and his party sat close to the auctioneer (James Merrigan, president of the defendant) who offered for sale the herd of cows then in the ring; that the auctioneer said they were pure bred Herefords, pregnant with their second or third calves, all sired by a pure bred Hereford bull; that he had known the cows in the West when they were heifers, and that they were too good to be put in a fattening yard. Plaintiff asked if he could buy less than all of the group and was told he could buy 20 head “gate cut”. Plaintiff said he believed and relied on the above representations made by the auctioneer and purchased 20 head for $200 each, which were then herded from the ring. Plaintiff’s father and uncle corroborated the plaintiff in the foregoing testimony regarding the sale.

Plaintiff testified further that he followed the cows he had purchased to a nearby pen and, upon inquiry, he was told that he could hire Merrigan Brothers to transport his cows by truck to plaintiff’s home near Colo, Iowa. He then arranged to do so. Thereupon plaintiff went to the office of defendant, gave his check for $4,000 for the cows, received a health certificate for them containing their tag numbers, their breed as Herefords and the designation of the defendant as the consignor and plaintiff as consignee in the sale. Returning to the truck driver, plaintiff repeatedly offered to assist him in loading the cows in the truck but his assistance was repeatedly denied. Thereupon the truck driver directed plaintiff to a restaurant on the highway .'where the plaintiff and party could get food and where, he said, he would meet them later with the truck and get directions to plaintiff’s farm in Iowa. About 5:00 or 5:30 p. m. the trucker arrived at the restaurant in his loaded truck and was told how to reach plaintiff’s farm. Plaintiff and party proceeded ahead and later, about 10:00 p. m., stopped again for coffee and sandwiches, arriving at plaintiff’s home about 11:30 p. m. There he learned that the trucker had arrived, unloaded into a corral the cows he had brought, and left. Plaintiff herded them that night into a pen and fed them hay.

Within a few days plaintiff noticed one of the cows was in heat and not with calf. He reported this by telephone to Lawrence Merrigan, who said he would consult the records and call back. He did not call back. Later three more were noticed to be in heat and not with calf. Two of the cows were sold because of cancerous eyes, for $279. One of them had had a calf. One cow delivered her calf, which had [62]*62black body and white face. Plaintiff testified that a'Hereford cow bred to a Hereford bull, will produce a calf with a red body and white face whereas, if bred to a Black Angus bull, the calf will have a black body and a white face. Plaintiff again called and complained to Lawrence Mer-rigan of the developments and again the latter promised to examine his records and call back, which he failed to do.

There was proof that out of 20 cows received from the sale, only 16 had calves. The heifer calves were not kept as only two were Herefords. They were sold for $200 each. He had the cows bred later to an Angus bull and got 16 calves in 1964. Out of 17 of the cows tested by a veterinarian, it was found that the ear numbers did not correspond to the numbers on the health papers issued to the plaintiff. On a mouth test it was shown that out of 18 of the cows, four had no teeth at all, and were probably ten years old, and four had badly worn teeth, requiring the feeding of ground corn, rather than hay; two were probably five or six years old, one twelve and one ten, and the others eight or nine years of age. Plaintiff claims proof of damages in the amount of $4,950.

There was testimony that the cows purchased by plaintiff were delivered to the place of sale by one Ronald Emberton of Hamburg, Iowa, who was indebted to defendant in the sum of $19,997.12; that he had frequently shipped cattle to defendant for sale under other names as consignor and later corrected to show himself as such consignor. However, it was shown that after the sale on January 7, 1963, defendant issued a check payable to him for $21,277.23.

In short, the evidence adduced by plaintiff tended to show that the cows delivered to and received by the plaintiff from the sale did not conform to the representations of the defendant concerning the cows he had purchased and were, in fact, not the same cows purchased by him, and that they failed to serve the purpose for which he made the purchase.

In view of the disposition which must be made of the points here raised on appeal, it is sufficient to state that there was evidence on behalf of defendant that there were no guaranties or warranties made on the cows by the defendant’s auctioneer prior to the bidding at the sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
402 S.W.2d 59, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffington-v-fairground-sales-co-moctapp-1966.