Jackson v. McDonald

143 P.2d 898, 115 Mont. 269, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 72
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1943
DocketNo. 8347.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 P.2d 898 (Jackson v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. McDonald, 143 P.2d 898, 115 Mont. 269, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 72 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in an action for possession of certain horses which had been dealt for and purchased under circumstances giving rise to adverse claim of title by two different parties.

One of the parties, W. R. McDonald, the appellant herein, lived in Glacier county, Montana, where he was engaged in ranching and dealing in horses. In the fall of 1939 he was buying and sell horses to the government for the remount service; Galbreath, a horse buyer, was going to Canada to look for horses. McDonald arranged with Galbreath to purchase horses for him of the type he wanted for sale to the government. To facilitate the handling of any such transaction in Canada, it was arranged that the horses dealt for should be checked by J. S. Low, a business man at Cardston, and that Low should take care of drafts at the bank there for such horses as were selected. McDonald had had similar arrangements previously with Galbreath and Low to handle the purchase of horses. Under this arrangement, Gal-breath went across into Canada and dealt for the purchase of some horses from J. J. Bowlen, a rancher near Medicine Hat. In looking over the horses Bowlen was offering for sale, Galbreath found only some of them suitable for the remount service. Bowlen would not sell unless he disposed of the whole herd. Gal-breath dealt for all of the Bowlen horses. He drew two drafts on McDonald to cover the purchase price; one for $1,280, and an *272 other for something over $960, the exact amount not being made clear by the evidence. Bowlen says the reason for the two drafts was that the buyers were not prepared then to pay all of the purchase price; that one draft was drawn for $1,280 at sight, and the other smaller draft was to be paid later. Galbreath testified that the $1,280 draft covered the horses suitable for the remount service, and that the smaller draft was for the rest of the horses; that his business relations with McDonald were such that he could draw on him in his own deals, leaving the impression that he was not dealing altogether for McDonald. Bowlen knew Low and called him by telephone and arranged with him to hold and take care of the horses until they were paid for. All of the horses were shipped by freight to Low at Cardston. The drafts were sent to the Cardston bank. After inspection by Low the horses selected as suitable for the remount service were delivered to McDonald at the boundary line on October 16, 1939. Low at the same time presented a statement to McDonald for several items, including the draft for $1,280, as covering the Bowlen horses which were then delivered. McDonald paid the full amount called for by the statement, including the $1,280 draft item.

The remainder of the Bowlen horses were left in Low’s pasture at Cardston. They were a mixed lot and not such as McDonald had said he would buy. Galbreath nevertheless had dealt for them with the use of the drafts drawn on McDonald, and had represented to Bowlen that McDonald would pay. The record does not show that any information was conveyed to McDonald at the time concerning the purchase of this mixed lot, nor as to the smaller draft drawn on him. He had heard talk about these horses but had said they were not what he wanted.

The settlement with Bowlen for the amount covered by the smaller draft was delayed. Bowlen was pressing for payment, and was eventually taken care of by the horses being dealt off to Ira L. Jackson, the respondent herein. The price Jackson paid was $2,500. Out of this the amount owing to Bowlen was taken care of. The balance, so far as the record shows, was retained by Low to cover the import duty, cost of pasturing and other expense *273 of handling. The horses were driven across the line and delivered to Jackson at Peskan, Montana, the port of entry, on January 3, 1940, by Bowlen and Low.

Before dealing with Jackson, Low had called Bowlen by telephone and told him they had a deal whereby he would get his money. Bowlen came to Cardston and there talked with Jackson but appears not to have had anything to do with the deal other than to sign the bill of sale and deliver over certain pedigree papers with the horses and get his money.

The circumstance of Jackson’s dealing for the horses was to facilitate the transfer of money from Canada to the United States. He had recently sold out his interests in Canada, and had moved to the state of Washington. He dealt with Low to buy the horses for the price of $2,500 with the understanding that after they had crossed over into the United States a buyer would be found to take them off his hands and pay him the $2,500. In that way Jackson would effect the transfer of the money into the United States. The exportation of the horses into the United States under this deal was cleared by the Canadian and American customs officers, the horses being declared as property of Jackson.

After the horses were delivered across the line, they were left by Jackson at the Galbreath ranch, which is situated near the port of entry. Efforts were made to sell the horses but without any results. Jackson tried to sell them to McDonald but McDonald told him they were not what he wanted and that he was not interested. Several months elapsed with the horses remaining at the Galbreath ranch and with no further developments.

In the meantime McDonald, having heard more of the dealings between Galbreath and Bowlen, decided the horses were his. He brought suit against Low and Galbreath to get possession of the horses, claiming them as owner. Under claim and delivery proceeding the horses were taken possession of by the sheriff, Armstrong, and, no redelivery bond being filed by defendants, they were delivered to McDonald, the plaintiff in that action, Me- *274 Donald left the horses with Dave Yegen at his ranch. This was in the month of October.

Jackson, upon learning of the McDonald suit and the horses being taken, came to Montana and brought action against McDonald and sheriff Armstrong and Dave Yegen to recover the horses and for damages. The defendants answered jointly, denying Jackson’s ownership and alleging ownership in McDonald. The McDonald case was continued and held open by stipulation, whereby it was agreed that the judgment in the Jackson case should control in the disposition of the McDonald case.

The Jackson case went to trial in due course. It was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in judgment for the plaintiff, Jackson recovering possession of the horses and $500 damages. The defendant Yegen had died in the meantime and the action was dismissed as to him. The appeal is from the judgment.

The error specified is in the rendition of the judgment for plaintiff. The contention is that the title to the horses passed to McDonald when Bowlen first dealt with Galbreath, and “that the testimony in support of plaintiff’s ownership is so inherently improbable that it is not sufficient to justify the judgment. ’ ’

Jackson relies on the transaction he himself had with Low and Bowlen at Cardston where the horses then were. He there talked with Low and Galbreath, who had the handling of the horses, and they came to agreement upon a sale to him. Low telephoned Bowlen to come to Cardston to complete the deal, which he did.

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Related

Lurie v. Sheriff of Gallatin County
2000 MT 103 (Montana Supreme Court, 2000)
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165 P.2d 1004 (Montana Supreme Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P.2d 898, 115 Mont. 269, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-mcdonald-mont-1943.