Green v. Norsworthy

135 So. 713, 17 La. App. 548, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 213
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1931
DocketNo. 4069
StatusPublished

This text of 135 So. 713 (Green v. Norsworthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Norsworthy, 135 So. 713, 17 La. App. 548, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 213 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

McGREGOR, J.

This is a suit involving the ownership of a mule which, at the time of the trial, was between three and one-half and four years old. The ease involves purely a question of fact. The plaintiff and the defendant are farmers who live a few miles apart in the lowlands of Morehouse parish. In the year 1927, the plaintiff was the owner of a mule colt that was born in the month of May of that year in the hills whence the plaintiff had driven his stock to protect them from the high water. As soon as the water receded, he brought the colt home with its mother, where it stayed until the spring of 1928, when he put it in his pasture, about three-quarters of a mile from ■ his home. In July of that year, he turned it out of the pasture on to the range away from its. mother. During the rest of 1928 and all of 1929, the colt was never brought home and was separated from its mother, [549]*549though the plaintiff testifies that he was very proud of it and took special pains to see it as often as he could while it was in the woods.

In February or March, 1930, the plaintiff hired two negro men, Jeff Morgan and Frank Robinson, to gather up all his work stock that was still out on the range. Some few horses and mules were driven up, and among them was a young mule that had never been broken to the plow. Plaintiff and his negro tenants identified this animal as the colt that he had turned out on the range in July, 1928. As it was large enough and old enough to work, the plaintiff had it broken to the plow and used it in making his crop that season. It was never turned out again, but was kept on plaintiff’s, premises.

Some time soon after the overflow of 1927, another mule colt was born in that same community which was the property of a negro by the name of Albert Briley. From the evidence, it is apparent that Briley kept in closer touch with his colt than the plaintiff did with his, for the reason that he kept it with him from the time it was born until he sold it in 1930. About the latter part of January, 1930, Briley sold his colt to the defendant, who kept it. up until about the middle of March when he turned it out with a roan colt. From that time the defendant never saw it any more until about the latter part of January, 1931, when he found a young mule on plaintiff’s premises which he identified as being the colt he had bought from Albert Briley about a year before and had turned out. This was the same young mule that Jeff Morgan and Frank Robinson had driven up for the plaintiff, and which he identified as being the colt which he turned out in July, 1928. So that the plaintiff and defendant were claiming the same colt.

When defendant found the young mule in the plaintiff’s field and decided that it was the same one that he had bought from Albert Briley the year before, he at once took the matter up with the plaintiff, and endeavored to convince him that it was his by taking several persons to him to testify to the fact. Negotiations were carried on for several days, but the plaintiff was as firmly convinced that it was his mule as the defendant was that it was his, and he, therefore, refused to surrender it. The defendant decided to assert his rights to what he believed was his property and took the mule out of plaintiff’s field and carried it to his own premises. Being unwilling to acquiesce in this move on the part of the defendant, plaintiff brought this suit to assert his ownership of the mule, and had it seized under a writ of sequestration. Defendant then - had the mule released from seizure by giving bond. On trial in the lower court, there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff declaring the mule tc be his. From that judgment, the defendant has appealed.

OPINION

It is apparent from the evidence that there were two mule colts in the neighborhood of plaintiff and defendant that were about the same age and looked so much alike that it was difficult to tell them apart. Evidently one of them either died or strayed .away or was stolen. At least it disappeared, as. the whereabouts of only one is known, and it is claimed by both the plaintiff and defendant. Cases of this kind are always difficult, 'especially when both parties are as honest in their convictions as we believe both of these litigants [550]*550are. It is incumbent always upon the plaintiff to make out his. case by a preponderance of the evidence.

ANALYSIS OF TESTIMONY

Jeff Morgan, a negro tenant of the plaintiff, testified that he helped Frank Robinson drive the colt up after it had been in the woods away from its mother from July, 1928, until February or March, 1930; that when it was turned into the lot where its alleged mother was, it ran to her and appeared to recognize her and acted as a young colt would act toward its mother. He testified that he knew the plaintiff’s colt from the time it was born, saw it all along during the time it was in the woods, and that both at the time that he and Frank Robinson put the mule involved in this case in plaintiff’s lot, and at the time when defendant took possession of it, he recognized and identified it as being plaintiff’s colt that was born in the hills during the overflow of 1927. Sarah Smith, a negro woman, testified that she knew the mule in controversy from the time it was born until it was taken from its mother tq be weaned in July, 1928; that she never saw it any more then until it was. put in plaintiff’s lot in 1930, as above set out, and that as soon as it was turned in the lot it showed that the effort to wean it had been unsuccessful; that it recognized its mother and ran to her as a young colt would do. She, too, testified that she recognized and identified it at the time of the trial as the plaintiff’s colt that was born in the hills during the overflow of 1927. The plaintiff himself testified that he had seen his colt enough from the time that it was born until the time this mule was put in his lot to be able to recognize and identify it as the one that was born in the hills during the overflow in 1927. That is all the testimony introduced by the plaintiff to show that the mule in dispute is his. Dr. J. V. Jones, a veterinarian, testified that the mule in question was between three and one-half and four years old and that it .could not be any younger than three and one-half years. J. Y, Smith and Tom Miller testified that they made crops on Mr. Henry Gates’ farm in 1928 with Albert Briley, and that they know that he moved there in the fall of 1927 and that his colt was not born until about the middle of May, 1928. They appear to be absolutely positive of this fact. If Briley’s colt was not born until during May, 1928, then at the time of the trial it would have been less than three years old, and, under the testimony of Dr. Jones, the mule in question could not be Briley’s colt. Besides himself, plaintiff produced two witnesses only who identified the mule in question as. being his colt. He produced two others who swore that Briley’s colt was less than three years old, and, as stated above, Dr. Jones, the veterinarian, testified that the mule in controversy was at least three and one-half and possibly four years, old. The above is a complete review of all the plaintiff’s testimony.

On the other hand, the defendant produced eleven witnesses besides himself. To begin with, it is proved beyond doubt and admitted that Albert Briley did own U mule colt, and that he did sell it to defendant in January, 1930. Albert Briley himself testified that his colt was born during the crop season after the overflow of 1927 on Mr. Bowes’ place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 So. 713, 17 La. App. 548, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-norsworthy-lactapp-1931.