Housman v. Geiman

213 N.W. 19, 51 S.D. 214, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 198
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1927
DocketFile No. 5246
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 19 (Housman v. Geiman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Housman v. Geiman, 213 N.W. 19, 51 S.D. 214, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 198 (S.D. 1927).

Opinion

MISER, C.

Respondent recovered damages in the sum of $4,065 against appellant, in a suit brought for breach of warranty of 8 head of cattle purchased. In this opinion, respondent, Housman, is designated as H. and appellant Geiman as G. At a public auction held by G. on November 21, 1919, H. bought 9 registered' Shorthorn cows and heifers, whose names, registry numbers, and pedigrees were set forth in a printed catalogue used at said auction. There is no question as to' the animals so purchased being members of the royal family of 'Shorthorns. The question at issue, assuming the warranty to 'be as contended -by respondent, is whether they were tainted with tuberculosis at the time of sale; the complaint alleging that G. warranted them to be free from disease, and alleging that each and all of said cattle so warranted were not free from disease, but were tubercular. Eor the sake of brevity, Nos. 1 to 9, inclusive, will be substituted for the respective names of said cattle as they appear in plaintiff’s complaint. Eor these cattle H. paid prices ranging from $350 to $675 per head, aggregating $4,715 for the 9 head. N’o. 9, purchased for $550, was returned by H. to G., and the money refunded.

[216]*216The evidence of the various experts who> testified at the trial — the weight of the testimony and the credibility of the witnesses being for the jury, whose verdict for respondent indicates reliance upon the testimony of respondent’s experts — tends to show that tuberculosis is a common disease among cattle; that one animal may get it from another; that there is a short period of incubation after the germ find's lodgment in the system, of possibly 8 days; that, after infection, a tuberculin test will immediately disclose the existence of the disease by a rise of the animal’s normal temperature; that, if there be a rise of 2 or more degrees, the animal is considered tubercular and called a reactor; if slightly less than 2 degrees, suspicious; and, if a fraction of a degree, or none at all, healthy; that it is impossible to' tell by the appearance of an animal whether it has tuberculosis or not, unless the disease is well developed; that it is impossible to state definitely from an inspection of its carcass just how long an animal has had the disease; and that, naturally, the conditions under which an animal is kept have considerable to do with the rapidity of the development of the disease.

Inasmuch as there is no direct and positive testimony to the effect that any of the cattle sold by G. to H. were tubercular at the time of sale, and no test of the cattle was made until long after the expiration of 6o days from the date of sale, the jury must have found its verdict upon the following facts: At a sale held by H. on April 9, 1920, some of the cattle purchased from G. the previous November were offered for sale, together with a large number of other registered cattle. In order to get a permit to ship cattle sold thereat to be delivered outside the state, possibly 19 in number were tested for tuberculosis on April 10, 1920. Nos. 1 and 2, and perhaps 1 or 2 more of the cattle purchased from G. the November preceding, reacted to- the tuberculin test. H. himself, who testified to this effect, was not present at the test. The veterinarian who made the test did not know the cattle which had been bought from G., but he made a record of the test, which he handed to H. On the 17th or r8th of April, a week after the first test and after many of the cattle sold at H.’s sale had been taken away, a test was made of the 28 animals remaining in H.’s herd, exclusive of those tested' on the 10th. This test showed 10 reactors, 6 of which were not cattle purchased! from G. Of these [217]*2176, 2 were bulls owned by H. at the time he purchased G.’s cattle, and to which he had been breeding these cattle. One of the reactors at this test was animal Nk>. 8 of the cattle sold by G. to H. It is impossible to state from the record- whether the remaining 3 reactors on this test of April 17th were or were not cattle purchased from G. The testimony is uncertain as to whether, after the test on April 10th, H. segregated all of the cattle purchased from G., or merely those which that test proved tubercular; but, after the test on- April 17th, he segregated all of the cattle purchased from Q., some purchased from two- other sources, and some which he had at the time he purchased the cattle from G. In the following November, approximately a year after G.’s sale, H.. shipped 13 tubercular cattle to Sioux City for slaughter. Of these 13, the evidence shows 4, being Nos. 1, 3, 7, and' 8, to have been purchased from G. at the sale at which the alleged warranty was made. The source of the other nine is not disclosed. These 13 head were slaughtered on November 10, 1920, and inspected by veterinary inspectors for the United .States Bureau of Animal Industry. No. 7 was condemned as unfit for food purposes. Nos. I, 3, and 8 were ordered sterilized. The other 9 were found to be tubercular, but not required to be sterilized. The inspector, who inspected the carcasses, testified that it would be very reasonable to say, from the examination made of the carcasses of 1, 3, 7 and 8, that the animals had been infected for a considerable length of time, possibly a year; but that it would be absolutely impossible to-tell from the appearance and the lesions of this disease on the carcass how long the animal had it.

“It might be a few weeks or months, or it might be a year or more; for, naturally, the conditions under which the animal is kept would have considerable to do with the rapidity of the development of the disease.”

That, in his opinion, at least 1 of the 4 cows, being No. 7, had been infected possibly a year or more from the date of his examination, but it could not be so stated definitely. The other inspector, who based his testimony upon the record made at the time by the first inspector, stated as his opinion that No. 7 had been infected at least two years, and that Nbs. 1, 3, and 8 had been infected about a year. Assuming, without deciding, that the testimony of an expert, who, so far as the record discloses, knew [218]*218nothing of the conditions under which they had been kept, that Nos. i, 3, and 8 had been “infected about a year,” would justify the jury in finding that these cattle slaughtered on November io, T920, were tubercular when sold on November 21, 1919, and assuming'that the evidence would fully sustain a finding that No. 7 had been tubercular when sold, we have yet Nos. 2, 4, 5, 6, and 9 without any proof, competent or otherwise, that they were tubercular at the time of sale. No one knew it, and no expert gave it as his opinion, with or without foundation.

The depositions are not before us, nor does the record disclose when the evidence of respondent’s experts was taken; but animals numbered 1, 3, 7, and 8 were slaughtered after the suit was begun. Two others were alive and in Huron at the time the case was tried there; so that there was no reason, practical or otherwise, why the jury might not have had, in the absence of anything better, the expert opinion as to whether, on November 21, 1919, Nos. 1 to 9, inclusive, were tubercular.

Respondent cites us to Junkin v. Hargrove & Arnold, 196 Iowa 1387, 195 N. W. 217. In that case, the animal was slaughtered; a post mortem examination was made; and expert witnesses testified that it was their opinion that the animal was afflicted with tuberculosis at and prior to the time of shipment. In the case at bar, there is no more than 1 animal out of the 9 warranted, the testimony as to

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Related

Housman v. Geiman
252 N.W. 857 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
McMonies v. Geiman
219 N.W. 262 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 19, 51 S.D. 214, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/housman-v-geiman-sd-1927.