Continental Sheep Co. v. Woodhouse

256 P.2d 97, 71 Wyo. 194, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1953
Docket2552
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 256 P.2d 97 (Continental Sheep Co. v. Woodhouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Sheep Co. v. Woodhouse, 256 P.2d 97, 71 Wyo. 194, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1953).

Opinion

*199 OPINION

Blume, Chief Justice.

This is an action commenced on June 4, 1949, brought by plaintiff corporations to recover money from the defendant paid to him by mistake. Trial was had to the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs in the sum of $4,538.50. From the judgment so rendered the defendant has appealed to this court. There is involved in the action the further sum of $91 and the sum of $193.50 which sums were admitted to have been paid to the defendant by mistake and judgment for these amounts was rendered in addition to the judgment above mentioned. These items having been admitted will not be considered hereafter.

Plaintiffs in their second amended petition alleged that the respective corporations own their land and *200 sheep separately but that they are operated under one manager and the income of both corporations is divided equally and their expenses are similarly divided. It is further alleged that defendant overcharged the plaintiffs in the sum of $8,432.88, each plaintiff being overcharged in the sum of $4,216.44; that this overcharge resulted by reason of the following particulars:

“(a) Plaintiffs were charged and paid for 169.17 tons of hay at $46 per ton, amounting to $7,781,82, which hay was trucked from Pinedale, Wyoming, and was referred to as Pinedale hay * * * when in truth and in fact the defendant only delivered to plaintiffs approximately 33 tons of hay trucked from Pinedale between January 15, 1949 and January 25, 1949, resulting in an overcharge for such Pinedale hay in the sum of $6,263.82.
“(b) Plaintiffs were charged and paid for 305.975 tons of hay * * * which hay was of Eastern origin and was delivered by railroad at Rawlins, Wyoming, when in truth and in fact defendant only delivered at Raw-lins, Wyoming, to plaintiffs approximately 254.73 tons of such hay of Eastern origin on or about February 19, 1949, resulting in an overcharge therefore in the sum of $2,169.06.” The total overcharge as above mentioned was $8,432.88, of which each of the plaintiffs sought to recover from the defendant in their petition one-half of the money or $4,216.44. Defendant’s answer denies each and every allegation in the petition.

The court rendered an amended judgment in favor of the plaintiffs on October 6, 1951. The court found in its conclusions of fact that from January 1, 1949, to April 1, 1949, plaintiff corporations paid to the defendant, E. H. Woodhouse, the sum of $22,329.98 for 524.72 tons of hay; that defendant in fact delivered to plaintiffs only 424.72 tons of hay and that the agreed and *201 reasonable price of such hay so delivered was, the sum of $17,791.28; that there was an overcharge to plaintiffs by defendant for the hay in the sum of $4,528.50; that such overcharge was the result of a mistake on the part of the plaintiff’s manager and a mistake on the part of the defendant, E. H. Woodhouse, which said mistakes were coupled with and based upon certain of defendant’s errors, omissions and upon his improper keeping of records; that the evidence of the mistakes herein found by the court is clear and convincing. The conclusions of law and the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs was in accordance with the facts so found by the court.

1. Counsel for appellant argue that the judgment of the trial court is sustained at best by a mere preponderance of the evidence and that such preponderance is not sufficient in a case such as before us. They cite us to 1 C.J.S. § 55, pp. 737, 738, in which it is stated: “In view of the great danger of opening accounts which the parties themselves have stated, an account stated will not be set aside except on clear and convincing proof of fraud or mistake; and this rule applies particularly where the attempt is made many years after the settlement, * * * . The amount of proof required may very with the circumstances, however; and it has been held that stronger evidence is required to overcome the settlement where the balance is simply agreed upon, and that slighter evidence of fraud or mistake is required where the party impeaching the account had little knowledge of the transactions involved, than if he had full knowledge of the facts.” The text cites on the last point the case of Lee v. Reed, 4 Dana (Ky.) 109, which fully sustains it. In connection with the point as to what is clear and convincing evidence, we have been cited to a number of cases which, apparently are not altogether in har *202 mony. Thus counsel cite us to Good Milking Mach. Co. v. Galloway, 168 Iowa 550, 150 N.W. 710, 712, in which the court stated: “Evidence is for the purpose of conveying to the mind a knowledge of the existence or nonexistence of disputed facts. When the evidence is such that the mind readily reaches a satisfactory conclusion as to the existence or nonexistence of a fact in dispute, then the evidence is, of necessity, clear and satisfactory.” In the case at bar, the court made a finding that the evidence of payment by mistake was clear and convincing, and this finding seems to be in harmony with the Iowa case just cited.

It appears in this case that the payments on behalf of the plaintiffs complained of herein were made by C. A. Brimmer, Sr. He did not personally know the facts but he acted upon evidence deemed sufficient by him to warrant the payments to the defendant. His good faith is not attacked in any manner whatever. Nevertheless the fact is, as heretofore stated, that he had no personal knowledge of the amount of hay which was delivered by the defendant to the plaintiffs. He is an attorney at law with offices in the First National Bank Building in Rawlins, Wyoming, the same building in which J. C. Oliver, the accountant of the defendant, had his offices. And the defendant or his accountant must have known that Brimmer had no personal knowledge of the facts, and so the rule above mentioned, that slighter evidence of payment by mistake is required where the party paying the amount has no personal knowledge of the facts as mentioned in the case of Lee v. Reed, supra, appears to apply in the case at bar.

The question as to how much hay was delivered to the plaintiffs was, under the testimony in this case, a question of fact. The winter of 1948-1949 was very severe. The country at and about Rawlins is a sheep country. All or practically all of the owners of sheep *203 had insufficient hay to, take care of their sheep during the winter and were compelled to ship in some from Missouri and other eastern states and to get some from Pinedale and Saratoga. The hay coming from the eastern states came, of course, by railroad. The Pine-dale hay was delivered by one Mahaffey. The defendant Woodhouse purchased his Pinedale hay from Ma-haffey, and then distributed it to various owners of sheep including the plaintiffs, in this case. It is admitted herein that the plaintiffs paid the defendant for 524.72 tons. The court allowed the defendant the price for 424.72 tons, a difference of 100 tons. How the court arrived at that particular figure is impossible to determine from the record before us. Counsel for the defendant did not attempt to enlighten us on the subject, and the conjecture of counsel for the plaintiffs seems unsatisfactory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 P.2d 97, 71 Wyo. 194, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-sheep-co-v-woodhouse-wyo-1953.