Hancock v. Shook

100 S.W.3d 786, 2003 WL 1453521
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 18, 2003
DocketSC 84509
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 100 S.W.3d 786 (Hancock v. Shook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hancock v. Shook, 100 S.W.3d 786, 2003 WL 1453521 (Mo. 2003).

Opinions

PRICE, J.

I.

Glen Hancock appeals a verdict in his favor of $12,500 against William and Ruth Shook, doing business as Barnes Feed Store. Mr. Hancock’s dairy herd ingested feed purchased from the Shooks that was contaminated with a toxic mold. Mr. Hancock sought $600,000 in damages resulting from losses to his herd and decreased milk production. The judgment is affirmed.

II.

A. Background Facts

Glen Hancock is a dairy farmer and was a regular customer of Bill and Ruth Shook, owners of Barnes Feed Store. In March 1992, Mr. Hancock purchased feed from the Shooks and fed it to his milking herd. Mr. Shook admitted that this feed was contaminated with aflatoxin.1 Four days of milk production2 totaling nearly 36,000 pounds was dumped because of unhealthy levels of aflatoxin in the milk. Mr. Hancock explained that not every cow reacted the same way to the contaminated feed, but that much of his herd reacted poorly. There were three aborted (miscarried) calves immediately after feeding the contaminated feed and Mr. Hancock culled3 126 cows because of aflatoxin-related problems. Finally, Mr. Hancock claimed that overall milk production decreased for a number of years because of the large amount of culls and continuing health problems relating to the ingestion of afla-toxin.

B. Procedural History

Pre-Trial

Prior to trial, the court made a number of rulings, including a decision that Mr. Hancock could not testify that he knew the problems in his herd were caused by afla-toxin-contaminated feed, even though he had traveled to look at another herd with a known aflatoxin problem.

The Trial

Mr. Shook was called by Mr. Hancock and testified that he knew of other incidents of aflatoxin-contaminated feed at local mills. In fact, the Shooks had purchased an aflatoxin test kit in February 1992 at least partly due to knowledge of other incidents of aflatoxin in the area. However, the Shooks had not tested any feed when the contaminated feed was sold to Mr. Hancock. Mr. Shook testified that he was aware that some local mills were testing for aflatoxin in March 1992, but he said, “many were not.”

There was some dispute during the testimony of Dr. Mozier, Mr. Hancock’s veterinarian, as to whether he could show that the three abortions occurred after the aflatoxin-contaminated feed was fed to the Hancock herd. Dr. Mozier produced a series of “tickets” from visits to Mr. Hancock’s farm in March 1992. The three abortions were represented on ticket number 14158, which was partially dated “03/ _/92.” Ticket number 14134 was dated [791]*791“03/13/92.” When asked what this would suggest, Dr. Mozier testified that he assumed the three abortions occurred after March 13, 1992, because the ticket number for the incomplete date was higher than the March 13 ticket. However, when cross-examined, Dr. Mozier testified that the ticket numbers would not necessarily be in sequence and, therefore, he could not be certain that the abortions occurred after the aflatoxin incident.

The trial court allowed juror questions as a regular aspect of the trial procedure. The court and the attorneys reviewed the submitted jury questions at sidebar and discussed the appropriateness of each question. The attorneys were allowed to object if they felt a question should not be asked. The court sometimes refused to ask a question and sometimes altered the question from that submitted in order to make the question more understandable.

Following Dr. Mozier’s testimony, a juror submitted this question: “[I]s there any way to figure out the doses — the date of the farm visit with the three aborted cows?”

THE COURT: I assume you two would have figured this out by now if there was some other way to find out the date with this witness.
MR. GAMMON [Mr. Hancock’s attorney]: Well, you can ask him. He might -
THE COURT: I’ll ask him.

When proceedings returned to open court, the following transpired:

THE COURT: Doctor, I have a couple of questions from the jury.
Do you know of any other way to figure out the date of the farm visit with the three aborted cows than what we’ve already asked you about here today?
THE WITNESS: I can certainly try to. I may have a way by finding the blood samples in that particular day, and I might be able to find that record. I can do that this evening at the office. I might be able to find out that way.

Dr. Mozier subsequently sought out and discovered other records that confirmed that the abortions occurred after the afla-toxin incident. When Mr. Hancock sought to recall Dr. Mozier to testify to this new information, the following discussion ensued:

MR. GAMMON: ... because Dr. Mo-zier answered the juror’s question by saying yes, I think there may be additional records and I can look at them, Dr. Mozier did that subsequently .... He’s not available this morning. I believe we need to go ahead and close our ease. I’ve offered two alternatives.
One, that we would stipulate to the information he gave me which is that there is a record, a written document, that shows that it was collected on the farm on March the 14th, which would have been the day of that visit.
He did testify he remembered the day very specifically, and the visit, but he did not remember what day it was. But this record shows that that date was March the 14th.
I’ve offered to bring him tomorrow to testify to that fact. I also have represented that I expect him to be here tomorrow, for rebuttal. And my position is that her experts have seen these same tickets and testified that it appears to them that this was after March the 13th. And I’m going to ask them about that and thus it will be a proper question for rebuttal in any event.
THE COURT: ... the issue really comes down to not whether the juror asked a question, because it wasn’t like something that you hadn’t asked and Ms. Jackson hadn’t crossed him on. The issue really is would I allow you in [792]*792any trial to reopen — to hold open your evidence and bring back in evidence that he later went out and found because of cross-examination.
MS. JACKSON: And there’s another thing ... these records were all requested in discovery. We requested all of the veterinary records, including lab reports. And that wasn’t produced. We’ve never seen that record. I didn’t have any experts testify that this call was made after the incident. That was the question they were asked by Mr. Gammon that assumed this. But we’ve never seen that record, it’s never been produced. And it’s a little late now to pull it out [as] some kind of smoking gun just because I impeached their expert and they’re trying to rehabilitate him and rebut their own testimony.
THE COURT: ... I probably won’t let you call this witness. There was no agreement that he could go out and look for this ticket—
[[Image here]]
THE COURT: You did not disclose it in the request for production of documents first.
. MR.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.3d 786, 2003 WL 1453521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-v-shook-mo-2003.