Glover v. Holman

6 Tenn. App. 178, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 178 (Glover v. Holman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glover v. Holman, 6 Tenn. App. 178, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

On May 10, 1926, complainants E. A. Glover and E. W. Youngblood sold and delivered to the defendants S. B. Holman and son, S. "W. Holman, 184 head of hogs for the-price of $1745. These hogs had been purchased by Glover and Youngblood in Louisiana, and were shipped to Union City, Tennessee, and unloaded from the stock car into the stock pen of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad of Union City, on Sunday, May 9th. The car contained about 210 head of hogs. Youngblood had called the complainants over the telephone on Sunday, May 9th, and informed them that he had these hogs for sale. On Monday morning, May 10th, the defendants Holman and son came to Union City and were met at the stock pens by Young-blood, and after some conversation between the parties, the defendants Holman and son purchased 184 of the hogs at the price of 12% cents per pound, and gave to the complainants Glover and Young-blood a cheek drawn on a bank of Fulton, Kentucky, for the amount of the hogs., and on that date loaded the hogs into trucks, where they *180 were taken to the farm of defendants near Fulton, Kentucky, on the afternoon of May 10th. The remainder of the car load of hogs, about thirty-two, were sold to a Mr. Cloyes. On Wednesday morning, May 12th, one of the hogs was found dead, and two others the following morning, and a number of the other hogs appeared sick and showed decided symptoms of cholera. The defendants stopped payment on the check before it had been paid. 139 of these 184 hogs died of cholera. The complainants Glover and Youngblood sued the' defendants on the chock. The defendants filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill, and in which they alleged that the complainants had warranted these hogs to be sound at the time the same were purchased, and that the hogs were unsound at the time the same were purchased; that they were then diseased hogs and infected with cholera; that one of the complainants, Youngblood, was a licensed veternarian; that'he knew or should have known from the appearance of the hogs at the time of the sale that some of them then had cholera, and that the other hogs had been exposed to cholera. The answer and cross-bill further alleged that cross-complainants only had one sow and four pigs on the farm to which these hogs were taken, and that this sow and four pigs became infected with hog cholera and died a few days after the diseased hogs were taken to the farm. The answer and cross-bill alleged that cross-complainants still had the remainder of the hogs in their possession and holding the same for cross-defendants; that the sale was fraudulent and void, and that cross-complainants were entitled to recover of cross-defendants for the cost and expense *of vaccinating the hogs, and feeding and caring for the hogs, and also for the value of the sow and four pigs to which the disease was alleged to have been communicated and from which they died, and to have the check cancelled.

The cross-defendants answered the'cross-bill, and denied that at the time of the sale they had any knowledge of any disease among the hogs; and denied that they represented that the hogs were sound; and denied that they warranted the hogs to be sound, and denied the material allegations of the cross-bill.

At the hearing of the cause the Chancellor found and so decreed that there was an express warranty as to the soundness of the hogs, although he states in his opinion filed with the record as follows:

“I am not at all convinced that any express warranty of soundness was made, but I think there is a preponderance of proof in favor of cross-complainant on this question, and that it must be held, as a fact, that there was an express warranty of soundness. ’ ’

The Chancellor further held and so decreed that by a preponderance of the evidence there was hog cholera among this lot of hogs at the time this sale was made. The learned Chancellor states on this *181 subject as follows: “There can be no doubt, upon the proof that some of these hogs had cholera at the time of the sale. And it follows that at the time of the sale all of them had been exposed to the infection. ’ ’ The Chancellor further found that by a preponderance of the evi-dance that such of the hogs as died within ten days after the sale, were infected at the time of the sale, and that under the warranty of soundness the cross-defendants would only be liable for the value of such of the hogs as were actually diseased or infected with the disease at the time of the sale, and that the proof showed only eleven of the hogs, of the value of $115.25, died within ten days from the date of sale, and allowed a deduction of that amount from the check sued on, and decreed a judgment in favor of original complainants for the net balance, the sum of $1629.75, and taxed one-half of the costs to the original complainants and one-lialf of the costs to the original defendants.

From this decree of the Chancellor the cross-complainants Holman and son prayed an appeal to this court, and the appeal has been duly perfected and errors assigned. The cross-defendants, Glover and Youngblood, have filed the record for error, and have assigned as error the finding of the court that, there was an express warranty of soundness of those hogs, and the action of the court in decreeing that under the alleged warranty cross-complainants were entitled to a credit of $115.25 as decreed by the Chancellor, and in taxing original complainants with one-half of the costs of the cause.

"VYe concur in the finding of the Chancellor to the effect that at the time of the sale the original complainants did not have any knowledge that any of the hogs sold to defendants were diseased, or that they had been exposed to cholera. While both S. B. and S. W. Holman testify that when they examined the hogs in the stock pen at Union City a few of them appeared to be limping, and called Youngblood’s attention to this. Yet, we think that by a decided preponderance of the evidence there was nothing in the appearance of the hogs that indicated that they were diseased. Dr. Youngblood is a veternarian, and he testified that he saw nothing in any of the hogs that indicated that they were diseased, or that they were infected with the cholera and that all of the hogs appeared to be in good condition. Mr. Nash, who was present at the time the hogs were unloaded on Sunday, and also Monday morning following, and who claimed that he fed the hogs, testified that all of the hogs appeared to be sound and in good condition. Mr. Cloyes, who bought about thirty-five head of these hogs, out of the same car and out of the same lot, testified that the hogs appeared to be sound and in good condition with the exception of one that had been crippled in shipping, and that another one died after ho had removed them to his farm because of having become heated, and that all of the hogs appeared to be sound and in good condition. At the time the defendants purchased these hogs they *182 desired to have a number of them cut out and not included in the sale, and that after some discussion, they were permitted to cut out all but 184 of the hogs, and cut out such of the hogs as they desired to have cut out.

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Related

Tallent v. Fox
141 S.W.2d 485 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 178, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-holman-tennctapp-1927.