General Mills, Inc. v. Clark

52 F. Supp. 244, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2122
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedOctober 21, 1943
DocketNo. 110
StatusPublished

This text of 52 F. Supp. 244 (General Mills, Inc. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Mills, Inc. v. Clark, 52 F. Supp. 244, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2122 (W.D. Mo. 1943).

Opinion

OTIS, District Judge.

Although more than six weeks have been consumed in this trial — by far the longest in our nineteen years of service — the case is, in outline, simple. The plaintiff during several years sold defendants, on credit, feed for turkeys. Finally a note was asked and given for a balance due. Plaintiff has sued defendants on the note. Defendants have pleaded “failure of consideration” and counterclaimed for damages alleged to have been caused by alleged inadequacy of feed. In a case so simple the parties have called more than a hundred witnesses whose testimony fills 5,449 typewritten pages. Included among the witnesses have been scientists of high attainments,- — from the University of Missouri, the University of California, the University of Minnesota, the University of Chicago, the University of Oklahoma and Michigan State (Agricultural) College. On that account the case has been, in our experience, unprecedented. In another respect also unprecedented. Leading counsel for plaintiff was William S. Hogsett. (Originally Honorable Rubey M. Hulen was counsel for plaintiff, but the case lasted so interminably that in the midst of it he was elevated to the federal judiciary.) Leading counsel for defendants was William G. Becker, ably assisted by Honorable John Barker, strategist par excellence. Messrs. Hogsett and Becker have exhibited such a mastery of the facts and law, of the sciences involved, of human psychology, and of the art of their calling, as we have not seen often and as has made us more proud even that we have been of the great profession of the law. Also worthy of mention is the fact that in this long trial not one heated or discourteous word has been spoken either to opposing counsel or any witness. (Now and then there may have been a lifted eye-brow or a smile of kindly incredulity; even they were almost benevolent.) In this case the velvet covering on steel gauntlets never was once removed. But we knew that under the velvet was steel.

The case was jury waived. Had the issues been submitted to a jury (the issues [245]*245were issues of fact chiefly) the jury would have retired, deliberated, returned with a verdict, “For Plaintiff” or “For Defendant.” No explanation, no elaboration. (When even an intelligent juror does discuss the verdict usually it seems less intelligent than otherwise it might have been thought to be.) Perhaps the judge, passing on the facts, would be wise to be as reticent. But we think counsel, who have waived trial by jury, are entitled to know by what reasoning decision of fact issues has been reached. The court may not convince counsel against whose client the decision has gone (never have we had that fortune), but something has been achieved if counsel are convinced that the case has not been decided arbitrarily, as by the toss of a coin.

Simple as is the case in general outline the chiefly controverted issue is simpler still. There was no real controversy that the note sued on was signed and past due, no real controversy that for four years defendants bought feeds from plaintiff in great quantities, no real controversy that the feeds bought and used contained no deleterious element or that every element they did contain was not nutritious to the turkey flock, no real controversy that plaintiff did not, at least in its literature, represent that its feeds were “complete,” that is, in themselves sufficient, without other supplement than grains, to nourish the individual turkey from its first emerging into this vale of tears until the fulfillment of its destiny under the Thanksgiving axe. The controversy was about vitamins.

Despite the words of “the Preacher, the Son of David, King in Jerusalem”, vitamins are something new under the sun. At least the word is new. Neither Shakespeare nor Milton used it; neither Samuel Johnson nor Noah Webster incorporated it in his dictionary. The word is new and knowledge of the thing is new, the thing has been always. Vitamins are essential to growth and life in men and in turkeys. And no feed for turkeys is, in itself, a “complete feed” which does not contain the vitamins. There is no controversy about that.

But did the feed sold by plaintiff contain the vitamins turkeys require? Plaintiff says, “Yes;” defendants say, “No.” Directed to the issue so made was almost all the testimony. The testimony was of two classes: (1) The testimony of scientists. (2) The testimony of turkey raisers. Every scientist and every layman who testified impressed us as endeavoring to tell the full truth of his knowledge. Of course, man for man, in our judgment, the testimony of the scientist is worth more than the testimony of the layman. (We would not say that the testimony of one honest scientist would outweigh the testimony of forty honest laymen.)

We shall remember all the scientists who testified in the case with pleasure and respect for their great knowledge and intellectual integrity. But the plumed knight, from defendants’ standpoint, was Dr. Hogan (Albert G. Hogan Ph. D., College of Agriculture, University of Missouri). Without his testimony the counterclaim had little to support it. But the testimony of such a scholar supports much. Among all the dramatis personae, Dr. Hogan stands out. None seeing him in the witness chair and hearing him testify could have any doubt that he is a real scientist, who, during long, laborious years, has devoted his fine talents to the acquisition and dissemination of truth, for truth’s sake alone. All his testimony indicated modesty concerning his own conspicuous services, respect for the views of others (although he might differ with them), frankness in testimony (he did not testify as one who weighs each answer before he makes it, to judge whether it will be helpful to a particular litigant), courage to maintain a position taken through conviction against the powerful assault of a cross-examiner of unequalled skill. Any university might well be proud to have such a man on its faculty.

Curiously enough, the witness who for us stands out among those called by plaintiff was a little girl, thirteen years of age, bright, alert, refreshing, charming. We have forgotten, as we write, what is her last name, her first name is Barbara. She raised a little flock of turkeys on plaintiff’s feed and on the witness stand related her experience. Barbara and her flock (even as David and his “smooth stones out of the brook”) may prove a match for giants.

For the Counterclaim

1. If the turkey feed which plaintiff sold defendant were deficient in essential vitamins, when fed according to plaintiff’s feeding program, that is a fact which would have real significance. So far as the counterclaim is concerned, the burden of proving that fact is on defendants. It must [246]*246be proved as facts are proved in courts of justice, not absolutely (nothing can be so proved), but with reasonably certainty. But it must be proved, not guessed at, not suggested merely, not the fruit only of speculation. And it must be proved as to the very feed defendants bought from plaintiff and fed their turkeys. All this was clear from the beginning to defendants’ highly competent counsel. They sought to discharge the burden by evidence which we divide in several parts.

The first part was made up chiefly of the testimony of Richard Clark, one of the defendants. The impression he made on us, as a man and citizen, was good, certainly as good as that of any greatly interested witness in any case. After many years of observation we do not hold human beings to the standards of archangels. (Even those standards are variable. See Michael v. Beelzebub, Paradise Lost, Bks.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 244, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-mills-inc-v-clark-mowd-1943.