Keegan v. Lenzie

135 P.2d 717, 171 Or. 194, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 38
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 135 P.2d 717 (Keegan v. Lenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keegan v. Lenzie, 135 P.2d 717, 171 Or. 194, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 38 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

*197 HAY, J.

In the month of May, 1940, Tom Boylen, Jr., was engaged in the sheep business, not only as a sheep raiser but also quite extensively as a trader. He had been in that business for a good many years. His headquarters were at Pendleton, Oregon. The plaintiffs were copartners and were likewise sheep raisers, as Avas one Patrick Charles. On May 15, 1940, the plaintiffs entered into a written contract for the sale and delivery to Boylen of their entire 1940 crop of mixed Lincoln crossbred lambs, comprising about 1,050 head, at a price of $8.40 per cwt. The lambs were to be delivered f. o. b. cars at the stockyards at Umli, Oregon, on or about September 5th to 20th, and were to comply with certain specified standards as to freedom from disease, etc. $500 Avas paid on the execution of the contract, an additional $500 on August 5, 1940, and the balance was to be paid on delivery of the lambs. On the same day, Patrick Charles made a similar written contract with Boylen for the sale of his 1940 crop of mixed Lincoln crossbred lambs, consisting of about 600 head. He received a down payment of $300, a further payment of $300 on August 5, 1940, and it was agreed that the remainder of the sale price should be paid on delivery.

On September 20, 1940, the plaintiffs and Charles, under their contracts, delivered to Boylen at Umli, Oregon, about 1,500 head of lambs. Boylen thereupon delivered to plaintiffs his draft in the sum of $4,318.46, and to Charles his draft in the sum of $2,120.34, in payment of the balances then due under their respective contracts. These drafts were signed by Boylen by his agent, R. E. McG-reer, and were drawn upon himself and payable through the Pendleton branch of the United States National Bank of Portland, Oregon.

*198 Umli, where the sheep were delivered on board railroad ears, is a small station of the Southern Pacific railroad in the Cascade mountains. There is no station agent. No documentary evidence of title was given to Boylen by the plaintiffs or by Charles, nor was any bill of lading procured by them for the lambs. Boylen shipped the lambs to himself at Crescent Lake, Oregon, and, at 7 o’clock p.m. on the same day, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs or of Charles, he called the defendant by telephone from some point in Oregon and offered to sell him 955 head of said lambs, delivery to be made at Toppenish, Washington. The defendant, speaking by telephone from some place in Washington, accepted Boylen’s offer of sale and, in so doing, acted in good faith and without knowledge of any defect in Boylen’s title to the lambs, or of the claims of plaintiffs or of Charles thereto. On September 21st, Boylen drew his draft on the defendant for the sale price of the lambs, which, on September 23d, was duly honored by the defendant. On Sunday, September 22d, Boylen made an assignment of his assets for the benefit of his creditors. He was completely insolvent and his affairs were extremely involved.

On September 23d, Charles passed Boylen’s draft through his account with The Dalles branch of the United States National Bank. On September 25th, the plaintiffs passed Boylen’s draft through their account with the same branch of the United States National Bank. Both drafts were forwarded to the Pendleton branch of the bank, and that branch returned them to The Dalles branch, with notations thereon, “unable to collect, contact drawee”. The drafts were received back by The Dalles branch on September 28th. On that day, The Dalles branch notified plaintiffs and Charles respectively that the drafts were unpaid.

*199 Shortly after the plaintiffs and Charles learned that Boylen’s drafts had not been honored, they traced the lambs and located the 955 head in possession of the defendant at Toppenish, Washington. They thereupon demanded the return thereof, which demand the defendant refused. It was thereupon agreed between the parties that the reasonable market value of the lambs sold by Boylen to the defendant was the sum of $4,794.55, and that, in the event that it should be determined that the defendant was liable to the plaintiffs and Charles in the premises, such sum should be considered in lieu and in place of the lambs, and should represent his obligation. It was further agreed that this action might be filed in the circuit court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Defendant thereupon sold the lambs to another person. Charles has assigned his claim to plaintiffs.

The plaintiff’s amended complaint alleges the facts substantially as above set forth. The defendant, for his first affirmative defense, alleges that plaintiffs and their assignor respectively accepted Boylen’s drafts in full and complete payment for their lambs, and that they presented the drafts for payment an unreasonable time after they had received them. For a second affirmative defense, he sets up the partial payments which plaintiffs and their assignor received of Boylen, and alleges that they voluntarily delivered the lambs to Boylen at Umli, Oregon, well knowing that he had resold or was about to resell them, and then and there gave him the right, or implied right, to deal with the lambs as his own, intending that the title thereto should pass upon delivery thereof; and that Boylen thereupon delivered his drafts to plaintiffs and Charles respectively, who accepted them as full and complete payment. For a third affirmative defense, he alleges *200 that, upon delivery of the lambs to Boylen, he, with the help and assistance of the plaintiffs and Charles, divided them in sundry lots for resale and reshipment by Boylen to various persons, including the defendant; that, within a few hours thereafter, Boylen telephoned to the defendant in the state of Washington from a place in the state of Oregon and offered him 955 head of the lambs for a price of $5,174.56, which offer defendant then and there accepted in good faith and Avithout knowledge of any defect or alleged defect in the title to the lambs, and paid Boylen the agreed price; and that the defendant, prior to the commencement of this action, sold said lambs to a fourth party and is no longer in possession thereof. For a fourth affirmative defense, the defendant alleges that the lambs sold by plaintiffs and Charles to Boylen weighed 95,700 pounds, and that the market value thereof on September 20, 1940, at Umli, Oregon, was $8,038.80; that the weight of the 955 head of lambs sold and delivered by Boylen to defendant was 57,078 pounds, and that the market value thereof was $4,794.55; that the plaintiffs and Charles have received from Boylen the sum of $3,074.62 “as partial payment on the 955 head of sheep sold and delivered by the said Boylen, to this defendant”, and that, if defendant is indebted to the plaintiffs at all, he is indebted only in the sum of $1,719.93 instead of $4,794.55.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, upon a stipulation of facts which was entered into by the parties, amplified by the testimony of the plaintiff, Charles Keegan. The court in due course made findings of fact, in Avhich it found generally for the plaintiffs, and found moreover that neither the plaintiffs nor Charges, prior to the date Avhen their checks *201

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Bluebook (online)
135 P.2d 717, 171 Or. 194, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keegan-v-lenzie-or-1943.