Littlefield v. Clayton Bros.

194 S.W. 194, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1917
DocketNo. 1110.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 194 (Littlefield v. Clayton Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Littlefield v. Clayton Bros., 194 S.W. 194, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 344 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

This suit was brought by ap-pellees, Clayton Bros., against appellants, Geo. W. Littlefield and J. P. White, in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., to recover damages for breach of contract for sale of cattle. It was alleged that the plaintiffs contracted with defendants for the purchase of all calves born on certain ranches of the defendants during the year 1915 up to Sep *196 tember 15tb, and also the unbranded calves of 1914; that a written contract was entered into, but by mutual mistake the agreement to include the unbranded calves of 1914 on said ranches was omitted from the written contract, and by its terms only the calves born during the year 1915 were included. Plaintiffs further alleged that there were about 0,000 head of calves that should have been delivered under the terms of the contract, but that the defendants in fact delivered only 5,032 head, and that the defendants fraudulently concealed and refused to deliver a large number of the best of the calves, delivering only the “tailings” to the plaintiffs, and sought to recover $40,000 actual damages and also the sum of $40,000 exemplary damages. The defendants pleaded to the venue, as hereinafter more fully stated, and answered by general and special denials of the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition.

The jury having found that the provision for the sale of the unbranded 1914 calves was omitted by mutual mistake from the written contract, that the defendants failed to deliver some of the calves to which plaintiffs were entitled under their contract, and that plaintiffs were damaged thereby in the sum of $2,323, judgment was entered for the plaintiffs for that amount, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

Giving the verdict of the jury the effect to which it is entitled, as resolving the conflicts in the evidence, we find that the evidence establishes the following facts: The plaintiffs and the defendants, on the 12th day of July, 1915, entered into a contract in writing whereby the defendants agreed to sell to the plaintiffs all of the calves, with certain stated exceptions, and a specified cutback, the drop of 1915, up to September, 1915, on the Yellow House ranch, in Texas, and Pour Lakes ranch, in New Mexico, owned by the defendants. Delivery of the cattle was to be begun on October 20, 1915, and continued as rapidly as the cattle could be rounded up and deliveries made. The consideration to be paid for said calves was the sum of $30 per head for all calves delivered, $20,000 being paid in cash on execution of the contract, and the balance to be paid as the cattle were delivered under the contract. In the negotiations preceding the preparation of the written contract it was understood that the unbranded calves of the year 1914 on the said ranches, such calves being known as long age or winter calves, should also be included at said price of $30 per head, but by the mistake of the parties this agreement was omitted from the written contract. The defendants delivered under this contract 1,466 calves from the Pour Lakes ranch and 3,566 calves from the Yellow House ranch, for which the plaintiffs paid the agreed price of $30 per head. The defendants, without fraud, acting under their interpretation of the contract as not covering 1914 calves, did not deliver some of the long age calves to which plaintiffs were entitled under the contract ; the evidence suggesting that this number might be anywhere from 50 to 300 head. These calves, being older, were larger and for that reason worth more than the other calves, most of which were born during the spring and summer months, and plaintiffs sustained some damages by reason of the failure to deliver such calves. We will make such further statement of the pleadings and evidence as we deem necessary in connection with our consideration of the several assignments.

Plaintiffs in their petition had alleged that the defendants were guilty of fraud in concealing and not delivering the larger calves, and the jury found in answer to one of the special issues submitted that the defendants did not practice fraud in this respect. The appellants by their first assignment, assert that, since the jury found against the plaintiffs on this issue, judgment should have been rendered for appellants on the verdict of the jury. The gist of plaintiffs’ cause of action, as shown by the petition, is for breach of the contract in failing to deliver some of the calves. It was therefore unnecessary for the plaintiffs to allege or prove that the failure to deliver under the contract was fraudulent, and the allegations of fraud and the finding of the jury thereon may be disregarded as surplusage, in so far as the right to recover on account of the breach of the contract is concerned.

It appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs made ho complaint as to the delivery of the Four Lakes calves, and also that soon after the execution of the contract sued upon the plaintiffs had contracted to sell all the steer calves, to be delivered under the contract to one Elwood, who was to accept delivery, and who did accept delivery thereof, as the calves were delivered under the contract between plaintiffs and defendants. Appellants by their second and third assignments complain of the action of the jury in finding the amount of the damages sustained and the court’s refusal to give a peremptory instruction, because, as they allege, there was no evidence to show what effect the topping had on the Yellow House heifers alone, they being the only calves which under the evidence were shown to have been topped, if at all, to plaintiffs’ damage, and hence there was no basis for estimating any damages. The testimony offered by the plaintiffs gives estimates on the damage to a herd of 5,000 head of calves, resulting from taking out various numbers of the best calves, ranging from 25 head up to 250, so that, if the measure of damages as submitted was correct, which matter we will discuss hereafter, the jury did have a basis in the evidence from which to estimate the damages, and these assignments are not well taken.

The fourth assignment complains of the *197 charge of the court which limits the consideration of certain testimony offered for the purpose of impeachment as being on the weight of the evidence, by reason of the wording of the charge. While the charge might have been worded so as to avoid some of the objections raised to it, we do not think it reasonably appears that it was calculated to lead the jury to give any undue weight to the testimony referred to. State v. Hilsabeck, 132 Mo. 348, 34 S. W. 38.

The court’s definition of mutual mistake in the main charge might be misleading for the reason that it omitted the essential requirement of mutuality. The special charge requested by appellants and given by the court fully covered this omission, however, and the two charges, taken together, are not inconsistent, and we do not think the jury could have misunderstood the charge, and for this reason overrule appellant’s fifth assignment.

The sixth assignment asserts that the finding of the jury that the provision for the sale of the 1914 unbranded calves was omitted from the contract by mutual mistake is not supported by the evidence. In their statement under this assignment appellants quote certain testimony of one of the plaintiffs to the effect that he could not say whether the agreement to include the 1914 unbranded calves in the sale was made before or after signing the contract. This testimony, considered alone, would support this-assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 194, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/littlefield-v-clayton-bros-texapp-1917.