Dixie Stock Yards, Inc. v. Ferguson

4 So. 2d 724, 192 Miss. 166, 1941 Miss. LEXIS 19
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1941
DocketNo. 34738.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 So. 2d 724 (Dixie Stock Yards, Inc. v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixie Stock Yards, Inc. v. Ferguson, 4 So. 2d 724, 192 Miss. 166, 1941 Miss. LEXIS 19 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

*171 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

From a judgment in favor of the appellee for the purchase price or value of certain cattle sold and delivered by him to one G. C. Beavers, and which were thereafter carried to the place of business of the appellant, the *172 Dixie Stock Yard, Inc., and later sold through its auctioneer, the appellant prosecutes this appeal and assigns as error, among other grounds, the refusal of the court below to grant a peremptory instruction in its favor.

The declaration was in three counts, but the case was submitted to the jury only on counts two and three, and there is no cross-appeal. To determine whether the facts were such as to entitle the appellee to a recovery under either of the two latter counts of the declaration, it is necessary to state what the proof disclosed.

On the 30th day of October, 1939, and for some time prior thereto, the appellant was engaged in the business of selling livestock on a commission basis through its auctioneer at public sales held on scheduled days at its stockyard near Meridian, Mississippi, where the owners of such livestock would bring the same to be sold through the auction ring or at private sale, the commission being charged by the appellant in either instance. Its co-defendant, G. C. Beavers, against whom the suit was dismissed in the court below upon his plea of a discharge in bankruptcy, was engaged in the business of both buying and selling livestock. He was not employed by the Dixie Stock Yard, but went about over the country and purchased cattle and other livestock from the owners thereof for resale to whomsoever he pleased, and to a larg'e extent through the auction ring of the said Dixie Stock Yard or at private sale on its premises, with the right to reject any bid made to the auctioneer by members of the buying public if the owner was unwilling to accept the price offered..

The proof also discloses that between the dates of June 23, 1939, to November 7, 1939, inclusive, the appellant had honored numerous drafts drawn on it by the said G. C. Beavers in his own name in favor of persons from who he was purchasing cattle, representing the purchase price thereof, and he testified that appellant had never refused payment on any such draft until November 8, 1939, when it declined to pay the one given *173 by him- to the appellee for the cattle here involved, and which were purchased on October 30, 1939, at the home of appellee in Rankin County, Mississippi, the owner being given a customer’s draft for the sum of $423.50, signed by Beavers in his own name and drawn on the appellant, and which draft was deposited for collection at the Bank of Brandon in the due course of business.

Thereupon, the Dixie Stock Yard, at the instance and request of Beavers, caused a cattle truck operator, who hauled for the general public, at Meridian, to go to the home of the appellee and haul these cattle, consisting of twelve steers, to the stockyard of the appellant, where they were kept until the next day in a separate pen assigned to Beavers for his use, and where they were co-mingled with sixty-nine head of other cattle belonging to him, making eighty-one head of cattle in all, and which were then sold at public sale through the auctioneer of the appellant, the proceeds of such sale, less the commission, hauling charges and feed bill, being credited to the account of Beavers on the books of the appellant corporation.

On the next day after the sale, and at a time when Beavers had a credit balance with the stockyard in the sum of $855.57 as of the close of the auction day’s business, a local bank notified the office of the appellant that the draft for $423.50' in favor of appellee Ferguson was held by it for collection, but the same was not called to the attention of the manager of the stockyard until a week later, when payment of the same was refused by him and the draft returned to the Bank of Brandon unpaid. '

There was sufficient evidence to make an issue for the jury as to whether or not the appellant had notice before participating through its auctioneer in the sale and disposition of the appellee’s cattle, and of their delivery into the hands of innocent purchasers at the sale, that the purchase price thereof had not been paid, the defendant Beavers having testified upon the trial that the book *174 keeper of the appellant asked him before tbe sale if be bad any more drafts out for cattle and that be told him that be bad two, one for $400' and something and one for $100 and something, and it having been further testified to by the appellee Ferguson, and the witness Sandifer to whom the other draft of something more than $100 had been given for cattle, that they went with Beavers to see the manager of the appellant’s stockyard after the appellee’s draft had been returned unpaid and that Beavers then stated to the manager in their presence that he had stated to the bookkeeper before the auction sale, at a time when the manager was present, that these drafts were outstanding’ in favor of the appellee Ferguson and the witness Sandifer. Although Beavers was unable to recall as a witness at the trial that he mentioned the names of these two persons from whom he had bought the cattle represented by these two drafts, his testimony does disclose that the amounts of the drafts which he called to the attention of the bookkeeper in the presence of the manager were in the approximate sums of those given by him to said Ferguson and Sandifer, and there was no proof that there were other drafts then outstanding of those approximate amounts; and it was further shown that the manager of the appellant did not deny the statement of Beavers on the occasion of that visit when reminded by Beavers that he had given the bookkeeper such information at a time when he, the manager, was present, and before the sale. However, it was denied 'by the appellant at the trial that it had any knowledge of the fact that any cattle had been purchased from the appellee, and it was claimed that Beavers had four drafts outstanding instead of two on the day of this sale; that the appellant paid two drafts for him between the date of the sale of the Ferguson cattle at the stockyards on October 31, 1939, and November 8, 1939, the date on which payment of the Ferguson draft was refused. The record discloses, however, that at the time of the alleged notice to the appellant of the fact that the Ferguson and Sandi *175 fer drafts were outstanding on the morning of October 31, 1939, before the sale, there was only one other draft given by Beavers then outstanding, and it was for the sum of $1,269.22 in favor of Tom Riddell of Canton, Mississippi, for the purchase price of cattle, and Riddell had previously arranged with the appellant for its payment in a telephone conversation some two or three days prior thereto; and these cattle were likewise sold on the said 31st day of October, 1939. It was therefore for the jury to determine, provided the case could be properly submitted to it for decision under the declaration as drawn, whether the appellant got the impression that Beavers had reference to this Riddell draft when he informed the appellant of the fact that he had two drafts outstanding, one for $400' and something and the other for $100' and something.

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Bluebook (online)
4 So. 2d 724, 192 Miss. 166, 1941 Miss. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-stock-yards-inc-v-ferguson-miss-1941.