Gilbert v. Kennedy

22 Mich. 117
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 22 Mich. 117 (Gilbert v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Kennedy, 22 Mich. 117 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Christiancy, J.

Kennedy, the plaintiff below, who was a farmer and drover engaged in the business of buying, selling and grazing cattle for market, had a lease of a farm known as the Pitcher farm, which he had hired for the year 1868 for the purpose of grazing cattle intended for sale, relying mainly upon their growth and 'increase in the meantime for the increase in their market value. He had bought cattle during the winter and early spring in reliance upon the use of this farm for their pasturage; and on the 30th of April, 1868, which was about the usual time for turning out such cattle to pasture, he drove sixty head of the cattle to the farm (which was several miles from his residence), and turned them in, but found ten head of defendant’s cattle had been- turned in by the defendant two days before, which were still there. Upon inquiry of the defendant why [125]*125he -had done this, the latter claimed to hayo entered into an agreement with the plaintiff giving him the right to pasture thirty-five head of cattle there for the season, and insisted upon his right and declared his intention of doing so.

Plaintiff denied any such contract or right. He admitted that some conversations had been had with him by the defendant, who was desirous, of obtaining such right, but insisted he had never consented to allow any of defendant’s cattle there without the consent in writing of John Pitcher, the lessor, and of his wife, — Pitcher being then in the State Prison at Jackson, — and he and his wife, as plaintiff insists, being opposed to allowing defendant to have anything to do with the farm, and, as plaintiff claims, the defendant having some time before made the attempt to get such assent and failed. The defendant, however, as shown by the evidence, claimed that plaintiff had assented to his pasturing cattle there without any such condition, and he also claimed that he had obtained the assent of Pitcher and wife, though not in writing.

The plaintiff, on the occasion above alluded to, declared his intention of turning off defendant’s cattle. Defendant declared, in substance, that he should turn them on again as often as plaintiff should turn them out, intimating that, as he lived nearer to the farm than the plaintiff, it would be more trouble to the plaintiff than to him, and that if any suit was to be commenced the plaintiff would have to commence it.

Plaintiff, having gone home and taken counsel, returned the next day and found that the defendant had removed some of the interior fences and used them to repair the outside fences, and that the ten head of cattle were still on the farm. Plaintiff turned them out. But when he went to the farm two days after, found that defendant had turned them in again. He again turned them out, and the defend[126]*126ant again turned them in, and on the 4th day of May turned in twenty-two head more, making thirty-two head, which continued there with the sixty head of the plaintiff's cattle (while the latter remained there), and were kept there during the summer.

Plaintiff, finding it useless longer to turn them off, and that his only remedy was to bring an action, commenced the present action of trespass on the 24th day of June, 1868.

The evidence strongly tended to show (though there was evidence on the part of the defendant to the contrary) that, though the pasture on the farm was sufficient for the sixty head of plaintiff's cattle, and if they could have had the whole feed that they would have gained largely in weight up to the 24th of June; yet, that with the addition of the thirty-two head of the defendant's cattle, the pasture was overstocked and the feed so eaten up and destroyed, that the plaintiff's' cattle actually lost largely, instead of gaining in weight, while he continued to keep them there, and, that they were also worth, in consequence, less per pound than they otherwise would have been. The evidence tended to show how much they had lost in weight, how much they would have gained with the whole pasturage, and how much less they were worth per pound than they would have been with the whole pasturage. It also tended to show that pasturage was scarce and high that season; that it is generally all engaged early in the spring; that plaintiff, finding his cattle failing, endeavored to procure pasture for them elsewhere, offering as high as six dollars per acre for some for the balance of the season after the 30th of May, but was unable to procure any in that region; that his own home farm was already sufficiently stocked, and he could not properly put any of these cattle upon it without turning them on to ground he [127]*127liad kept for meadows, and which, to prevent further injury as far as possible, he was compelled to use for pasture, and that on the 30th of May he took twenty-four head of these cattle from the Pitcher farm and put them to pasture upon his meadows for want of other pasture; that for the same reason, finding his cattle still failing upon the Pitcher farm, he took eleven more of them to his own farm about the 20th of June, and about the same time sold the balance, twenty-five head, at the Pitcher farm.

That a part of those taken to the home farm were sold there from the 20th to the 23d of June, a part of them were shipped to Painesville, Ohio, and sold for $70 per head about the same time; that they were weighed at Adrian and again at Painesville, and the weight at both places shown, as well as the market value; and that eleven head of the cattle taken to the home farm about the 20th of June were not sold till after the commencement of this Suit; that those put on the home farm, May 30th, had gained some before sold.

Evidence was also given tending to show the value of pasturage on the home farm, the market value of cattle of various weights and conditions at Buffalo, and that *these cattle were intended for the Buffalo market, their market value at home, and that the eastern market governed the prices in the home market, and that the plaintiff would not have sold the cattle at the times they were respectively sold, and in the condition they were, but for the lack of pasturage.

The evidence also tended to shovt that, by reason of the overstocking of the Pitcher farm by the putting in of defendant’s cattle, in addition to the plaintiff’s, the pasture was injured for the balance of the season after the 24th of June, and how much.

Among other causes of damage, the plaintiff was allowed [128]*128to show that his cattle were injured and their growth retarded by reason of defendant’s cattle being strangers to plaintiff’s cattle, causing them to fight and race, and the amount of damage from this cause.

The nature of the evidence was such that it is difficult to conceive how the defendant could have been mistaken upon the point, whether there was or was not an agreement on the part of the plaintiff for allowing the defendant’s cattle to be pastured on the farm, or how the jury, in finding against the defendant on this point, could at the same time have found that he acted in good.faith and not with the deliberate intention of committing a trespass and setting the plaintiff at defiance. If there was no such agreement, in fact, we can discover no evidence fairly tending to show that defendant could have honestly believed that there was; and we think all the evidence which tended to negative the agreement, tended equally to show that defendant Tcnew there was none.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Mich. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-kennedy-mich-1871.