Drumm-Flato Commission Co. v. Edmission

87 P. 311, 17 Okla. 344
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 87 P. 311 (Drumm-Flato Commission Co. v. Edmission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drumm-Flato Commission Co. v. Edmission, 87 P. 311, 17 Okla. 344 (Okla. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Hainer, J.:

The first error assigned and argued by the plaintiff in error is that there is no substantial evidence in the record to support the verdict. This contention cannot be sustained. A careful reading and examination of the entire record fully convinces us that the plaintiff! established his cause of action by a clear preponderance of the evidence and that the general verdict and the answers to the special questions submitted are abundantly sustained by the evidence.

In the former opinion of this court, Chief Justice Bur-ford, in passing uuon this question, uses the following language :

“Treating the contract as valid and enforceable, does the evidence show a sufficient compliance or effort to comply with it on the part of Edmisson? As against the demurrer, the evidence shows that he delivered to the company 1,710 head of these cattle, and then rounded up and held out 350 additional head, and tendered them to the agent of the company. This was all that he was required to do by the agreement, and was all he could do under the conditions existing. The company took and appropriated the 1,710 head, but declined or at least failed to accept the remainder offered, and *347 subsequently directed G-ober to seize all be could find, which he proceeded to do, and turned them over to the commission company or accounted to them for them. We think this evidence sufficient to entitle the pLaintiff to a judgment in his favor. What the amount of the damage is, must be left to the jury."

Jn the second assignment of error it is urged that the court erred in rejecting the books of account kept by the defendant, showing the number of Edmisson cattle sold by the defendant in December, 1899. The contract, which was the basis of this action, contained the following provision:

“That said R. C. Edmisson, the second party, hereby agrees to deliver to Drumm-Flato Commission Company nineteen hundred (1900) head of cattle as they run on the range, (provided the same can be found to make this number of head) of various ages and on which said Drumm-Flato Commission Company hold a chattel mortgage."

Pursuant to this contract, the defendant company, in the latter part of November, sent its agent, Bryson, from Kansas-City to the plaintiff’s ranch in Woods county, Oklahoma, to gather, count and ship the cattle to Kansas City. It further appears that Bryson, the agent of the company, employed several men to assist him in gathering the cattle on the plaintiff’s ranch, in which work they wrere engaged about eight days.

The plaintiff testified that he and the company’s agent; Bryson, together with a number of persons employed by Bryson to assist him, rounded up 1710 head of cattle, and that that number of cattle were counted and tallied through a gate west of the plaintiff’s house about three-quarters of a mile. That the cattle were counted at that place in the presence of Bryson, Black, the Bollman Brothers, Ed Edmisson *348 and himself. That after the cattle were counted, Bryson placed them in what is known as the Harrington and Roberts pasture. He states that the count was made by himself and by Black, who was employed by Bryson. That the count was correct, and was satisfactory to Bryson, who made a memorandum thereof in a book of account, and turned the cattle into -the Harrington and Roberts pasture.

Edmisson further testified that on the day that Bryson shipped the cattle from Curtis, he, Edmisson, gathered three or four hundred head of cattle in addition, for the purpose of taking care of them until Bryson, the agent of the defendant company, could return and receive the balance of the cattle under the contract. That he went to Bryson and informed him that he was reader to deliver the balance of the cattle. That Bryson stated that he would return to receive the balance of the cattle as soon as he made that shipment. Black, the employe of Bryson, clearly corroborates the testimony oí Edmisson, and testifies that he assisted in gathering the cattle and rounding them up, and that the count took place at the gate, in the presence of Bryson, as testified to by Edmisson; that 1710 head of cattle were counted: that he and Brysori and Edmisson compared counts, and they agreed as to the correctness of the number, to-wit: That there were 1710 head of cattle; that after the cattle were counted, they were delivered to Bryson, and then they were turned loose until the next morning in the Harrington pasture, when they were again rounded up, and driven by Brj^son and his employes to Curtis station.

Bryson, on this point, testified, in substance, that about four days after the contract had been signed in Kansas City he went to the plaintiffs ranch, and employed several men to *349 gather the cattle. That it took about eight days to gather and round up the cattle. That he did not count the cattle at the gate, as testified to by the plaintiff and his witnesses, but that they were counted in the stock yards at Curtis; and that according to his count at Curtis, there were 1556 head, including cows and calves.

The court permitted the' defendant to show the number of cattle that were shipped at various times from Curtis, Oklahoma, including these cattle in controversy, as well as former shipments, and also permitted the employe of the defendant company at the stock j^ards at Kansas City, to testify as to the number of cattle that were received at that point; but excluded the testimony of .Burnett, the bookkeeper of the defendant company, as to what the books showed in reference to the number of cattle that were received under this contract, and as shown by the scale, tickets of Eooney.

Bryson also testified that while he was gathering and rounding up the cattle he made various counts, and made a memorandum of the same; and that the actual count took place at Curtis station, and that he made a memorandum of it in his book at the time. The defendant did not attempt to offer these memorandums in evidence, or to show that the entries in the books at Kansas City were made therefrom, but attempted to show the number of cattle that were received, as shown by the scale tickets that were delivered by Eooney, the employe of the company at the stock yards in Kansas City, to its bookkeeper, Burnett. Manifestly, the memorandum that related to the transaction as to the number of cattle that were delivered by Edmisson to the agent of the company, was that kept by Bryson where the count took place, at the point of the delivery of the cattle. Had such a memorandum *350 been entered upon the books in Kansas City, it would have been clearly competent, as it related to the transaction and was a part of the res gesiaa.

In this connection, it must be borne in mind that the contract did not provide where the cattle should be delivered, and was wholly silent upon that question. The presumption of law, therefore, was that the cattle were to be delivered where they were located at the time the contract was entered into.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 311, 17 Okla. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drumm-flato-commission-co-v-edmission-okla-1906.