Coburn Cattle Co. v. Small

88 P. 953, 35 Mont. 288, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 76
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1907
DocketNo. 2,381
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 P. 953 (Coburn Cattle Co. v. Small) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coburn Cattle Co. v. Small, 88 P. 953, 35 Mont. 288, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 76 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the district court of Yalley county in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum of $812.39.

The plaintiff alleged in its complaint that it was a corporation engaged in the business of raising cattle and was in the occupancy of grazing lands in the county of Chouteau; that in the year 1903, it was the owner of a herd of cattle, and during that year the cattle owned by it had been maintained, herded, and grazed in the vicinity of its ranches within the limits and boundaries of Chouteau county; that it did not own, use, or occupy any ranch property or grazing land in Yalley county, and did not, during the year 1903, herd, keep, or graze any of its cattle within the limits or boundaries of Yalley county; that its officers and agents were familiar with the boundary line of the two counties named, and at divers times during the year 1903 it sent its employees into Yalley county for the purpose of driving back any of its cattle that might have drifted into Yalley county, or which might have entered said county from any point or direction; that during the months of May, August and November, 1903, it caused its employees to ride the ranges in Valley county, adjacent to the boundary line between Chouteau and Yalley counties, and at all points on the ranges in Yalley county to which its cattle might have strayed, for the purpose of gathering said cattle and returning.them to their accustomed ranges in Chouteau county, and that at the times named some of its cattle were found on the adjacent ranges in Yalley county, and the cattle thus found were returned to Chouteau county; that at none of the times named was any greater number than sixty head gathered and returned, and that the aggregate number thus found and returned during the entire year did not exceed one hundred and eighty head, and that there were not at any one time in Yalley county during the year 1903 more than sixty head of its cattle, and that on the first Monday in March of that year no cattle belonging to it were in Yalley county; that such cattle as were in Valley county during the [290]*290year 1903 were there without the knowledge or design of the respondent, and were there casually, accidentally, and temporarily, having strayed there in storms or while grazing, or through causes unknown to it, and at no time during said year were the cattle running at large in Valley county.

It was further alleged that the respondent in the year named did not give in, or furnish to, the assessor of Valley county any list or statement under oath, or otherwise, of cattle possessed or controlled by it in said county on the first Monday of March, 1903, nor was such statement required by the assessor, but that the assessor wrongfully and unlawfully assumed to assess as its property and as subject to taxation in Valley county three hundred head of stock cattle, at the valuation of $6,600; and that the board of equalization of Valley county thereafter wrongfully and unlawfully raised the number to'thirteen hundred head, at the assessed valuation of $28,600, and that the assessor caused to be entered in the assessor’s book of Valley county for the year 1903 the number of cattle last named, at the valuation fixed, and the assessment-book with that entry was delivered to the county clerk; that the county clerk compiled and entered in the assessment-book the sum to be paid by respondent as a tax and delivered the assessment-book to the county treasurer, S. C. Small; that the sum entered as a tax was $706.42, which sum was thereafter collected from it under protest. It was also alleged that the cattle so assessed in Valley county were assessed in Chouteau county, and that taxes on account of such assessment were paid by it in Chouteau county for the year 1903; that, on account of the payment of the sum named to the treasurer of Valley county, the said county and. its treasurer were indebted to it in the sum of $706.42, and. for this sum, with interest thereon, a judgment was asked.

The appellants in their answer denied that the respondent’s cattle were kept, maintained, herded, or grazed in the yieinity of its ranches or within the limits and boundaries of Chouteau county, and denied that its cattle were not kept, herded, and grazed in Valley county. They likewise denied that the re[291]*291spondent caused its. employees to gather its cattle and return them to Chouteau county, or that the total number gathered was as stated by it, or that it did not have cattle in Valley county on the first Monday of March, 1903. They also denied that the cattle in Valley county belonging to the respondent were there temporarily, or because they strayed there during storms, and denied that the cattle belonging to the respondent in Valley county were not running at large there. The answer admitted the assessment by the county assessor and the increased assessment by the direction of the county board of equalization, but denied that these assessments were wrongful or unlawful. There was also an admission that the taxes were collected under protest, and a denial that the cattle assessed in Valley county were assessed in Chouteau county for the year 1903, or that any taxes for that year were paid to Chouteau county on the cattle assessed. There was an affirmative allegation in the answer that during the year 1903 up to and prior to the first day of June of that year there were thirteen hundred head of stock cattle belonging to the respondent, kept, herded, grazed, and ranged by it in Valley county, and that the value and worth of said cattle was the sum of $28,600. The respondent filed a replication denying this affirmative matter.

The cause was tried to a jury, and fourteen interrogatories were submitted to it to be answered, nine of which were answered. There was no general verdict submitted or returned. The interrogatories submitted covered all of the issues involved. Some of the interrogatories answered, and those which were not answered, are as follows:

“ (2) In what county was the accustomed range of the plaintiff’s cattle in the year 1903? Ans. Chouteau and Valley.”
“(7) In the year 1903, did a portion of plaintiff’s cattle range in Valley county with its knowledge and through the ordinary methods observed by it in the handling of its cattle? Ans. We cannot agree.
“ (8) On the first Monday in March, 1903, were there in Valley county thirteen hundred head of stock cattle belonging to [292]*292plaintiff running at large in said county? Ans. We cannot agree.
“(9) If you say there were thirteen hundred head of stock cattle running at large in Valley county at the time specified, were they so in Valley county with the knowledge of plaintiff, and in the ordinary method of conducting their business for the purpose of grazing in said Valley county and fitting them for market ? No answer.
“ (10) When the plaintiff turned out its cattle on the public range near its home ranch in Chouteau county in the years 1901 and 1902, did it know that in the ordinary movements of those cattle, a portion of them would find their way into Valley county? Ans. Yes.
“(11) Did said cattle, the cattle mentioned in the preceding question, get into Valley county and run at large there so that on the first Monday in March, 1903, there were thirteen hundred head of such cattle in Valley county? Ans. We cannot agree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 953, 35 Mont. 288, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coburn-cattle-co-v-small-mont-1907.