Cochran v. McGeorge

54 Pa. Super. 456, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 16, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 130
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Pa. Super. 456 (Cochran v. McGeorge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran v. McGeorge, 54 Pa. Super. 456, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This is an action of assumpsit brought to recover the amount of two promissory notes, dated August 16, 1904, each for $300, one due November 1, 1906, and the other November 1, 1907, interest on both notes from date. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment thereon in favor of the defendants and the plaintiff appealed.

On August 16, 1904, the plaintiff, Lew W. Cochran, and one A. W. Green, sold and delivered to the defendant, Robert R. McGeorge, a stallion represented to be the Hackney Stallion, Louis Bischof 106, for the price of $1,000, The sum of $400 was paid at the date of the sale and the remaining $600 was secured by the two promissory notes above referred to. Before the suit was brought the interest of A. W. Green in the notes was sold and transferred to Lew W. Cochran, and, therefore, he sued in his own name and there is no question raised as to his right to maintain the suit. The case was put at issue in the usual manner in an action of assumpsit.

As a part of the transaction of the sale and delivery of the horse, the following quoted guaranty was delivered to the defendant, Robert R. McGeorge, and the serious controversy in the case arises under said guaranty.

“This certifies that we L. W. Cochran & A. W. Green, of Middlefield, Ohio, have sold the Hackney Stallion, Louis Bischof 106 to Robert R. McGeorge of New Galilee, Pa., on August 16, 1904 for One Thousand Dollars.
“And we also guarantee the above named Stallion to get 60% of all breeding Mares in foal, provided said Stallion is properly cared for and exercised and in a healthy condition and said Mares are returned regularly to be tried and bred; provided, that if said Stallion does not fill the above guarantee after a fair trial, said Cochran & Green agree to furnish said purchaser another Stallion of equal value, and said purchaser agrees to accept said Stallion in satisfaction of this contract. Provided, however, that the Stallion returned has been well cared for, [459]*459has not been sold and is returned to said Cochran & Green at Middlefield, Ohio, by April 1,1906 sound and in as good condition as when sold.
“It is further agreed that no representations, guarantees or contracts shall in any way be binding upon said Cochran & Green, except as set forth in this instrument of writing and signed by said Cochran & Green.
“It is further agreed that in case of death from any cause save neglect of purchaser said Cochran & Green agree to furnish said R. R. McGeorge another horse of any other or same breed on either farm and the value of same to be Fifteen Hundred Dollars. The same guarantee to follow any horse chosen, to fill this guarantee.
“ Cochran & Green Robert R. McGeorge ”

We have examined the testimony, the rulings and charge of the court and the arguments of the learned counsel and our conclusion is that the case was properly tried and carefully submitted to the jury and that the record does not disclose reversible error.

The first, second, third and fifth assignments raise the important question as to what is meant in the guaranty by the words “Breeding Mares.” The contention of appellant’s counsel is that there was no. evidence that the mares bred to this stallion were breeding mares, that is, mares which had been known to produce foals; that this raised a legal question which the court was bound to decide in favor of the plaintiff because the defendant failed to prove that the mares bred to said stallion were known to have produced foals. The learned court below took, we think, the proper view of this question and submitted to the jury to say whether or not the mares bred to said stallion, during the two seasons which McGeorge kept the horse as a breeder, were, within the meaning of the guaranty, breeding mares. We cannot see that this was a legal question to be determined by the court. A common expression among horsemen is that a mare has been bred [460]*460to a stallion, meaning that she was served by that stallion for the purpose of getting her with foal. Suppose a man raises a herd of young mares with the expectation of raising colts, and when they reach the proper age has them served by a stallion and although not one of them has yet produced a colt, it is highly probable that horsemen would speak of them as breeding mares. The meaning of these words may vary in accordance with the connection in which they are used and therefore the court could not legally decide the question. The guaranty in that respect reads: “And we also guarantee the above named stallion to get 60% of all breeding mares in foal, provided said stallion is properly cared for and exercised and in a healthy condition, and said mares are returned regularly to be tried and bred.” As to the care of the horse and returning the mares to be tried and bred there was ample testimony.

In this connection, in the guaranty, the word “bred” is used with the meaning that the mares are to be tried and served. We think there is sufficient evidence in the case to warrant the court in referring to the jury what was meant by the words “breeding mares,” and it is evident that the jury took the view that the meaning was mares served by said stallion for the purpose of getting them in foal. That a man would pay $1,000 for a stallion, for breeding purposes, and keep, exercise, advertise and care for the horse and be bound not to breed any mares to him except such as had already produced colts seems to us, as it probably did to the jury, an absurd construction of the written guaranty. In this connection there is positive evidence that this stallion failed to get sixty per cent of the mares bred to him in foal and in fact only got about twenty-four per cent of the mares served by him, during the two seasons, in foal. We do not think the question we have been discussing was one for experts but that a jury of the county was fully competent to determine that question. Under all the evidence in the case it appears quite evident that the jury found that the horse was not what he was guaranteed to be and that the defendants [461]*461paid all that he was worth, to wit, $400, when they purchased him.

The fourth assignment of error arises as follows: “Q. State what the horse was worth to you at any time for the purpose for which he was sold to you, at any time between the time you bought him and April 1, 1906?” This was objected to for the reason that there is no proper averment in the affidavit of defense as to the market value of the horse contracted for and the market value of the horse purchased. The court permitted the witness to answer and sealed a bill for plaintiff. The answer was “he was worth $150.” The action being in assumpsit and the pleas non assumpsit, set-off, coverture of Alice M. McGeorge at the time of contract and special matters set out in affidavit of defense, we do not think the court erred in allowing the question to be answered, notwithstanding the reasons stated in the objections. The defendants had paid $400 on the horse, and if because of his failure to fill the guaranty he was not worth more than that sum we think the defendant was entitled to prove that fact under the pleadings. The issue was made up under the Procedure Act of May 25, 1887, P. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. Super. 456, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-mcgeorge-pasuperct-1913.