Horse Springs Cattle Co. v. Schofield

9 N.M. 136, 9 Gild. 136
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1897
DocketNo. 738
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 N.M. 136 (Horse Springs Cattle Co. v. Schofield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horse Springs Cattle Co. v. Schofield, 9 N.M. 136, 9 Gild. 136 (N.M. 1897).

Opinion

BANTZ, J.

In a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage upon certain cattle and real estate of the Horse Springs Cattle Company one George Smith, its president, was appointed receiver, on the stipulation of the parties. This stipulation, which was signed by Smith for the company, authorized the receiver to round up such cattle as could be marketed, and dispose of them at public or private sale; the contract for the ' sale of such cattle to be first submitted to the court for approval, or to receive the written assent of Schofield, representing the mortgagee. Under that stipulation, an order of court was made March 28, 1894, authorizing Smith, as receiver to gather the cattle, and contract for the sale of the mortgaged property “to the best advantage;” such contracts to be submitted to the court for approval, unless assented to in writing by Schofield. Acting under this order, a number of cattle were gathered from time to time, and sold by the receiver. On January 16, 1896, the receiver, Smith, made an application for leave to sell the remainder of the cattle then on the range for $7,000, range delivery. In this application the receiver represented that it would be to the interest of all parties to accept the offer of $7,000. which he had received; that it was impossible to state how many cattle there were, but he did not believe there were one thousand head; that a sale upon the range would save considerable expense; and that he had submitted the proposition to complainant, Schofield, who was willing it should be accepted. On the same day an order of court was made reciting that the cause came on to be heard on this petition of the receiver, and that complainant, by his solicitor,' appeared, and consented to it. The receiver was authorized to accept the offer, and report his doings to the court. On April 4, 1896, a motion was filed by the Horse Springs Cattle Company, praying the court to set aside the order authorizing Smith to make the sale for $7,000, upon the following grounds: 1. Said order was improvidently made, and without notice to or knowledge of the defendant, the Horse Springs Cattle Company, or the attorneys, solicitors, officers, directors, or stockholders thereof. 2.' There was at the date of said petition, and order a much greater number than one thous- and head of cattle belonging to defendant, the Horse Springs Cattle Company, and branded “Z. P.,” in the charge of said receiver, upon the lands or ranches of said defendant company. 3. The amount of $7,000, alleged to have been offered to said receiver for said Z. P. cattle, is a wholly inadequate and insufficient price for the same, and said cattle could have been, and can now be, readily sold for a much greater sum in cash than $7,000.

At the time this motion was filed, no report had been made by the receiver as to his action under the order, but in a report which appears to have been sworn to on April 20, 1896,. the receiver reports that on January 17 he sold the cattle to one H. A. Hayes for $7,000, cash, had received payment therefor, and had paid over the purchase money to Schofield on the mortgage debt.

On October 27, 1896, the court required the company to-give bond in the sum of $15,000, conditioned that in the event the sale should be vacated the cattle shall realize on resale such sum in addition to $7,000, as will be sufficient to pay costs of resale and costs of receivership from January 16, 1896. The cause was referred to an examiner, to take proofs as to the-number and value of the cattle, and all material facts in regard to the sale. The examiner took a large mass of testimony, and on June 7, 1897, the court heard the case on the testimony so-taken, and found that defendant had failed to establish any of the grounds set forth in its motion, and the motion was overruled. Final decree has been entered. The question was-brought here on appeal.

motion to set aside: findings of chancellor: JUmá'terihslerrors: Sdvañtag”abIe The testimony upon this motion was taken by an examiner, so that on appeal this court acts on the same information possessed by the court below. Oral testimony was not usually delivered by the witnesses before the chancellor, and hence the rule that on appeal the whole case on the law and the facts is considered, and, so far as it is essential to a proper-decision, an examination of the evidence will be made. 2 Fost. Fed. Prac. 8474; In re Neagle, 135 U. S. 42. It is undoubtedly true tliat weight should be given to the findings of the* chancellor, coming, as they do, on appeal, clothed with the presumption of correctness in their favor, and that mere differences of opinion upon doubtful questions of preponderance-of evidence would not justify us in overturning them. Loring v. Atterbury (Mo. Sup.), 39 S. W. 773; Richardson v. Payne (Ky.) 30 S. W. 879. We are not required to determine in. this case how far an appellate court will review findings in such cases. In this case the proofs tended to establish the grounds alleged in motion, or some of them, and no testimony was produced to the contrary. These proofs the court below-was not at liberty to disregard, except so far as they were discredited in themselves or by other testimony. The appellant introduced some six witnesses, who were more or less familiar-with the company’s cattle upon the range, and who estimated the number at from one thousand three hundred to two thousand head. The valuation put upon these cattle was about $10.25 on board of cars at Magdalena, at a cost of less than $1 per head. Some of this testimony as to number and value was-not entitled to much weight, but some of it was given by-credible witnesses, qualified to estimate the number and testify to value and such testimony was not incompetent. It was the best and only way, under the circumstances, by which the court could ascertain the truth. The-receiver, Smith, merely estimated the number in his report,, and says that it was “impossible for him to state how many cattle remain on said ranch,” but did not “believe” there were-more than one thousand head. It was upon that representation by the receiver, and upon the representation as to the best price-obtainable (about $7 per head), that the court authorized the-sale. We think that the evidence shows that the receiver, Smith, unduly underestimated the number of these cattle, and that to allow this sale to stand for $7,000, would result in-a loss to the mortgagor of at least $7,000, if not-a much larger-sum. It was argued iu favor of the purchaser that it was the duty of appellant to be vigilant, and, after vesting discretion in the receiver by the stipulation of March 24, 1894, to sell at private sale, complaint could not be heard now. But, even though thé parties and the court had given the receiver the widest-latitude of discretion, if the court should become advised that, either from mistake or other cause, the receiver was disposing •of the property at a sacrifice, it would become the duty to stay his hand. The stipulation, however, directs Smith to “round up such cattle as can be marketed,” and these were the cattle he was authorized to dispose of at private sale, cattle of a definite number, actually gathered. It did not authorize him to sell at private sale all of the company’s cattle, unnumbered and scattered over the range; and it may not ‘be unfair to assume that appellant trusted to the stipulation as the limit •of its consent: "We do not, however, regard the stipulation -as the material thing, the important thing being that, if the receiver was abusing his authority, it was the duty of the court to interpose.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.M. 136, 9 Gild. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horse-springs-cattle-co-v-schofield-nm-1897.