Diamond a Cattle Co. v. Tschirgi

181 F.2d 991, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2734
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1950
Docket13954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 991 (Diamond a Cattle Co. v. Tschirgi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diamond a Cattle Co. v. Tschirgi, 181 F.2d 991, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2734 (8th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The appeal is by the defendants from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, in a diversity, case, tried without a jury, for the balance due under a pasturage contract, and also from an order dismissing the defendants’ counterclaims.

The contract involved was in writing, made in 1938, for the pasturage by plaintiff, on his ranch, in Montana, of from 2,-500 to 5,000 steers, for defendant Diamond A Cattle Company, “during the season, of 1938.” A grazing fee of 50 cents a month per head was provided for, payable quarterly, “to be computed from the day cattle are unloaded at Wyola (Montana) until the day they are loaded for shipment.” Shortly .after the signing of the contract, the parties agreed, as evidenced by correspondence between them, that some,heifers *993 and some yearlings also were to be accepted by plaintiff, “upon the same terms,” except that the grazing fee for the heifers was to be only 40 cents a month and that for the yearlings 35 cents a month.

The trial court found — and on the evidence the finding cannot be held to be clearly erroneous- — that the arrangements for adding heifers and yearlings to the cattle pastured were merely modifications of the original agreement and did not constitute separate and independent contracts, as defendants contended.

The principal question on the appeal is as to the correctness of the trial court’s construction of the following provision in the contract: “ * * * M. H. Tschirgi (the plaintiff) agrees to pay for all cattle losses (from all causes whatsoever) in excess of 3% per year * * * and is to be paid by Diamond A Cattle Company for all cattle delivered in excess of 97% of the cattle received * * *. It is understood that the price to -be paid- for cattle over and under the 3% stated above shall be $45.00 per head. Payment‘for these cattle shall be made when final delivery under this contract has been made.”

The grazing fees due plaintiff had all been paid. This suit was to recover the sum of $5,445, under the provision just quoted, for having redelivered to defendants, when the final shipment of cattle was made, 121 head more than the number for which plaintiff claimed to be accountable, after crediting himself with a cumulative loss allowance of 3 per cent per year: The contract had remained in operation from 1938 to 1944. Shipments of cattle were of course made to market from time to time, as defendants directed, and similarly additions were periodically made to those being pastured. Always, however, there was a carry-over from year to year, so that at no time prior to 1944 could it be said that “final delivery under this contract has been made.”

It was defendants’ contention that the contract did not permit of a cumulative loss-allowance of 3 per cent per year, but that on the contrary it unambiguously provided for only a flat deduction of 3 per cent from the total number of cattle received for pasturing, even though they were left with plaintiff for longer periods than a year. On the basis of such a flat deduction only, there was no overage of cattle in plaintiff’s final redelivery, and plaintiff would not have been entitled to any recovery.

The trial court refused to adopt that view of the contract. On the language contained in the provision as a whole, we do not feel that we are entitled to hold that no room existed for construction, nor in the light of the nature of the contract, the situation involved, the varying expressions used in the contract provision, and at least some evidence of seeming recognition before dispute, can we say that the interpretation made by the trial court was improper.

It is true that part of the language of the provision, when read baldly and out of context, says simply that plaintiff is “to be paid * * * for all cattle delivered in excess of 97% of the cattle received.” But while this clause, when thus isolatedly read, does not expressly contain the qualification “per year,” it is proper to note that plaintiff’s reciprocal liability, under the preceding coordinate clause of the sentence, is for “all cattle losses in excess of 3% per year.” Though this fact alone could not be said to indicate intended equivalency in the two obligations, the subsequent sentence in the provision fixing the amount per head to be paid by either party does expressly treat the calculation for both as being on the same basis, in speaking of “the price to be paid for cattle over and under the 3% stated above.” Since the only place where the figure “3%” expressly appears or —to use the language of the provision — is “stated above” is in the phrase “3% per year,” in the first portion of the sentence coordinately dealing with the matter of both overage and underage, the trial court was not without reasonable ground for holding that such, was its intended reference and that the implication was inherent that the phrase “per year” therefore had application throughout the sentence.. .

The seasonal aspect or significance of -the dealings involved is further pointed to *994 in the expression used iri thé contract w-ith reference to the receipt'of the initial cattle, “during the seas'on of -1938.” Again; there was ' some evidence that' 'a sum'fttary had been sent defendants in 1943, showing deductions mádfe'by plaintiff of 3 per cent per year, to which defendants indicated no objection at the time that the basis or method of calculation Was improper. Also, under date of December. 28, 1944, plaintiff sent a similar summary for the whole contract period, with ■ deductions cumulatively computed as before, to which defendants again voiced’no disagreement .when the tabulation was received or when they thereafter cleaned-up the 1944 grazing fees on February 13, 1943.. And finally, when plaintiff acknowledged receipt, of the grazing check and said, “Incidentally, we should like to know how the shipments for the respective years as shown on the summary which we enclosed with our letter of December 28, 1944, checked with your records for those yearsj” and “We should like very much if you would check this matter up and advise us at your convenience,” defendants’ general manager replied, under date of March 23, 1.945, — still without any claim of misconstruction — “I am glad to be able to tell you that our respective records coincide perfectly except perhaps for a day’s difference in the shipping date.”

All of this constituted at least some evidence of recognized or accepted construction, to which the trial court could properly give consideration in determining whéther the phrase “per year” was intended and understood by the parties to have application to the' calculation of- overages, the 'same as it clearly did on plaintiff’s liability for underages. ■ And on all the factors involved in the situation, it can hardly here be declared that the trial court was clearly in error in the view it took,- that the determination of both overages and underages was intended to be on an annual basis with only payment of the amounts thereof deferred until the contract had been executed. Defendants’ first contention must accordingly be ruled against them.

The second contention for reversal is that the court erred in not holding that the claim for overage, or at least a part of 'it, was barred by So.Dak.Code 1939, § 33.0232, sub. (4) (a), imposing a limitation of 6 years upon • contract actions.

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Bluebook (online)
181 F.2d 991, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-a-cattle-co-v-tschirgi-ca8-1950.