Colley v. Cox

266 S.W.2d 778, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 258
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1954
Docket7235
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 778 (Colley v. Cox) 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
Colley v. Cox, 266 S.W.2d 778, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 258 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

In this action for alleged breach of defendant’s common-law duty as a common carrier, plaintiffs seek damages for injuries to forty-six head of white-faced cows transported by defendant from the O’Bryan Ranch near Hiattville, Kansas, to plaintiffs’ farm near Jerico Springs, Cedar County, Missouri, a distance of seventy to seventy-five miles. Defendant appeals from an adverse judgment of $5,000.

Since the principal contention of defendant-appellant (hereinafter called defendant) upon appeal is that the trial court should have directed'a verdict for defendant, a review of the evidence is necessary. Of course, it is axiomatic that, at this state of the litigation, the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to plaintiffs-respondents (hereinafter called plaintiffs), according to plaintiffs the benefit of all favorable inferences arising from the evidence and disregarding defendant’s evidence except insofar as it aids plaintiffs’ case. Smith v. Siedhoff, Mo.Sup., 209 S.W.2d 233, 234(1); Williamson v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 363 Mo. 508, 512-513, 252 S.W.2d 295, 297(1); Sollenberger v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 356 Mo. 454, 462, 202 S.W.2d 25, 29(2).

Plaintiff, Ben Colley, is a farmer and has been engaged in the cattle business “practically all of my life”. Plaintiff, Garland Colley, is the son of Ben Colley, has been on a farm “all my life”, and in partnership with his father has dealt in livestock since 1946. On October 25, 1951, plaintiffs accompanied by Virge Duvall, a neighbor, and D. O. Wiles, a livestock commission man at the Joplin Stock Yards, drove to the ranch of Joe O’Bryan near Hiattville, Kansas. O’Bryan is a farmer and stockman, who handles several thousand head of cattle at his ranch each year. At this particular time, he had a herd of fifty-four head of white-faced cows in a pasture some twelve or fifteen miles northeast of his home. These cattle had been shipped by train from Texas to the O’Bryan ranch several weeks prior to October 25, 1951, had been unload *781 ed from a spur track into a pasture on the O’Bryan ranch, and were the only cattle in that pasture when plaintiffs went there.

They were described by witness O’Bryan as “a choice set of stock * * * Hereford cows”, bearing the brand “SMS” which “is recognized in cattle”—“the best we know of”. They were stock cows, not milk cows, and were handled on horseback. O’Bryan stated that he had no trouble with these cows during the time he owned them; that they were “not wild * * * not mean cattle in any way, shape or form”; that the herd was calm; and, that they were “easy and nice cattle to handle”.

O’Bryan was not with plaintiffs when they inspected this herd. Plaintiffs testified that they and neighbor Duvall alighted from their automobile (Wiles remained in the automobile because he had been sick); that they “walked around among the cattle” ; that they were “a good bunch of cattle”; that “there wasn’t any sick or we wouldn’t of bought them”; that the cattle were “in good condition”, none of them were sick, wild or vicious, and none of them had “any scars or bruises or banged-up places on them”; that, after inspecting these cattle in the pasture for about thirty minutes, looking at them “as closely as we cared to—we was right up next to them”, plaintiffs decided to buy them; and that, on the same day, they purchased the fifty-four head for $13,500.

Plaintiffs, accompanied by Duvall and Wiles, then returned to the Joplin Stock Yards where arrangements were made for defendant to transport forty-six head of these cattle in two trailers from the O’Bryan ranch to the Colley farm on the following Saturday, October 27, 1951. The remaining eight head were to be hauled by Garland Colley in his “bobtail” truck. Although disputed by defendant, Garland Colley testified that he and his father told defendant that these cattle were to be hauled to the Colley farm two miles east of Jerico Springs, Missouri.

When young Colley went to the Joplin Stock Yards about 8:00 A.M. on Saturday, October 27th, defendant informed him that the trucks had made a trip to Kansas City, but “that they would be out to the (O’Bryan) ranch when I got there probably”. Colley proceeded to the O’Bryan ranch where, as he said, defendant’s trucks did not arrive until 3:00 to 4:00 P.M. Witness Mayhue, defendant’s employee who drove one of them, thought that the trucks arrived at the O’Bryan ranch between 10:00 and 11:00 A.M. One of the two tractor-trailer units sent by defendant to the O’Bryan ranch was owned and furnished by D. C. Rook, who also operated out of the Joplin Stock Yards as a common carrier. However, the engagement to transport plaintiffs’ cattle was that of defendant, not of Rook; and, it is conceded that defendant’s obligations with respect to such transportation were those of a common carrier.

Garland Colley testified that, while waiting some five or six hours for the tractor-trailer units to arrive at the O’Bryan ranch on October 27th, he was “around the cattle during all of that time”; that they were in “excellent condition”; and, that none of them were sick, scarred or bruised. Jay Fry, an employee on the O’Bryan ranch for fifteen years, had “known” this particular herd for some two or three weeks and had fed them every day. He assisted in loading them on October 27th, stated that they were “in good shape”, and confirmed young Colley’s testimony that none of the cattle were scarred, bruised or “banged up”. “They were a gentle bunch” and “they loaded easy and nice”.

William Westoff, who sold cattle, for O’Bryan and had been in the cattle business “off and on all my life”, had been “acquainted” with that herd of cattle for about six weeks; and, although he did not.recall having seen them on October 27th, he had seen them the previous day and, in fact, practically every day they had been on the O’Bryan ranch. He described them as “choice white-face stock cows” and said that, on the day prior to their shipment, the herd “was in perfect condition”. He likewise expressed the opinion that these cattle were calm and quiet and had no vicious propensities.

*782 The only affirmative defense, pleaded in defendant’s,amended answer was.that “any injury suffered by (plaintiffs) in shipment of said cattle was all due to.the carelessness and negligence of the plaintiff when he failed to instruct the drivers where to deliver said cattle and the failure of (Garland Colley) to meet the drivers at the highway point near Fort Scott which-was designated by the plaintiff as the point of rendezvous”. In support of this affirmative defense, driver Mayhue testified that, after twenty-three cows had been loaded into ea-ch of the two large trailers and the. remaining eight cows had been loaded into Colley’s “bobtail”, Garland Colley “mentioned the 69 Cafe in Fort Scott right on the highway” and “that we would meet there and eat”, and that Colley told him “we are going to Jerico Springs—I will lead the way and show you where to take them”. Mayhue also said that he and Wilson, the other driver, waited at the “69 Cafe” in Fort Scott for young Colley until 6:30 to 7:00 P.M. According to Mayhue, he did not know where the cattle were to be taken other than that they were to be delivered “somewhere in the vicinity of Jerico”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 S.W.2d 778, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-cox-moctapp-1954.