Campbell Farms v. Wald

1998 ND 85, 578 N.W.2d 96, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 629, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 97, 1998 WL 203091
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1998
DocketCivil 970220
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1998 ND 85 (Campbell Farms v. Wald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell Farms v. Wald, 1998 ND 85, 578 N.W.2d 96, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 629, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 97, 1998 WL 203091 (N.D. 1998).

Opinion

MESCHKE, Justice.

[¶ 1] Andrew Wald appealed a judgment for Campbell Farms, Faulkner Farms, and Empire Cattle Co. (the Buyers) against Wald awarding damages and refund of the purchase price of an immature Simmental bull. We conclude the trial court should not have ordered partial summary judgment for the price of the bull, and we reverse and remand.

[¶ 2] On February 5, 1994, the Buyers bought Hero, a ten-month-old Simmental bull, for $14,506.50 from Wald, who has been raising cattle for over 40 years. Wald’s brochure for the sale of his bulls, including Hero, at Kist Livestock in Mandan contained a limited guarantee:

*97 1. GUARANTEES: Buyer must accept responsibility of getting bulls semen checked shortly before the breeding season and to make sure they’re active breeders. I cannot be held responsible for any problems after the breeding season.

The Buyers took Hero to Aabama. Beginning in March 1994, the Buyers had Hero’s semen tested frequently. In April 1994, the Buyers notified Wald that Hero’s semen was unsatisfactory. In an April 29,1994, letter to the Buyers, Wald replied:

Until we know for certain that he’s not a good semen producer — we will admit only that his semen output is unsatisfactory at this time and any interest/possible semen sales will have to be delayed or canceled.
* * * ⅝ * *
But, its probable that Hero needs more time!
******
If your not satisfied with my response ship Hero to me immediately (at my cost) when I determine that he’s not fertile (we should know by fall) I will refund your money without reservation.

The Buyers shipped Hero to Wald in July 1994.

[¶ 3] After the Buyers returned Hero, Wald gave him eight days 'of rest and placed him with 100 cows as a clean up bull after a sixty-day breeding cycle. ' Hero settled all eight cows that recycled. Wald had Hero tested by Nokota Genetics in Minot in October and November 1994. In a December 6, 1994 letter, Nokota Genetics reported:

We have collected and processed excellent quality semen on a Simmental bull known as [JWSR Hercs Pld Hero, stud code SM146, between 10-24-94 and 11-28-94, a total of 247 straws. The bull would be classified as a sound breeder in all regards to fertility.

[¶4] In 1995, the Buyers sued Wald for damages and return of the purchase price. The Buyers alleged Wald “warranted and represented ...' said bull was both a sound breeder and that said bull would produce sufficient quantities of good quality semen to be sold commercially.” The Buyers also alleged Hero “was never able to produce the quality or quantity of semen required,” and that they offered to return Hero, but Wald refused to accept his return or to repay the purchase price. Wald answered, alleging Hero was a sound breeder with excellent quality semen, and counterclaimed for Hero’s care after July 11,1994.

[¶ 5] The Buyers moved for summary judgment “on the basis that the good they purchased from [Wald] was nonconforming,” with affidavits asserting:

1.... We had planned to use the bull to impregnate cows and to produce semen to be sold.
2. The terms of the bull sale were set out in the sales brochure and orally by Wald. The written terms included a guarantee pertaining to the bull’s semen which set out that checking the semen before the breeding season would be the responsibility of the buyer....
8. At our direction, the bull’s semen was checked from March 25, 1994 to June 14, 1994, by Cottage Farm[ ] Genetics ... nine different times. Only one of those examinations produced good semen and the volume of that collection was small....
4. We attempted to impregnate cows with the bull seven different times with no success.
5. Wald was notified of the semen problem by us in mid-April 1994. Wald replied by a letter dated April 29, 1994, in which he admits the bull’s semen was unsatisfactory and he urged us to give the bull time to come around_ As described in paragraph 3, further examinations indicated the semen continued to be inadequate and therefore, we shipped the bull back to Wald in July 1994. He refused to refund our purchase price.

[¶ 6] The Buyers’ affidavits attached an undated letter from Wesly Klipfel of Cottage Farm Genetics in Tennessee that said:

In your desperation to have hoped he would come around, the bull spent over three (3) months here and at the end of that time with a weeks rest in between collection days was able to put up only 3S
*98 units of semen on May 24th which the quality was good.
In my seventeen (17) years of collecting semen and evaluating bulls it is easy for me to say that this bull was at very best slow maturing or poss[i]bly genetical[l]y inferior in his reproductive ability. In looking at just Simmental bulls the majority of 11 to 12 month old bulls would produce 2 to 8 times the sperm cells this mid-mature had produced.
⅜⅛ ⅝ >1* Sfc
This problem could also very well be one that was caused from a virus or injury during pubertal maturity and could turn around in 1 to 2 years, but is a gamble. Anyway it is viewed this bull 1 was not a normal sperm producing individual and should be recognized as such.

[¶ 7] Wald resisted the Buyers’ motion for summary judgment with his affidavit: (1) “During the past thirty years, a custom and usage has developed by the industry which results in selling yearling registered bulls instead of two year old bulls;” (2) “Cattleman purchasing yearling bulls put them on a growing and maturing program of light grain ration and pasture” and “a light breeding program;” (3) “Some purchasers at the end of a 60 day breeding cycle ... turn out the yearling bulls to settle cows that failed to breed back during the normal 60 day period;” (4) other purchasers will place a yearling bull “with approximately 10 to 20 heifers or cows during the breeding cycle of 60 days;” (5) “The preceding is consistent with the guarantee that buyer accepts responsibility of getting the bull semen cheeked shortly before the breeding season to make sure the bull is an active breeder. Yearling bulls are not mature enough to breed a large number of cows or become a semen factory;” (6) “The term ‘active breeder’ as appears in my guarantee, embodies the expected performance and use of a yearling bull as discussed previously;” and (7) “A registered yearling bull is only expected, commencing June 1 in the year he is purchased, to settle a few cows, do a lot of growing and maturing.” Wald also swore:

12. The [Buyers] informed the Affiant that after they received delivery of Hero in
Alabama he was immediately turned into a pen of cows. Hero appeared aggressive and the [Buyers] placed him in a stud program in Kentucky to gather large commercial quantities of semen for sale for artificial insemination of cows.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 ND 85, 578 N.W.2d 96, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 629, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 97, 1998 WL 203091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-farms-v-wald-nd-1998.