McCurdy v. Aylor

170 N.W. 523, 41 N.D. 187, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 148
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 N.W. 523 (McCurdy v. Aylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCurdy v. Aylor, 170 N.W. 523, 41 N.D. 187, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 148 (N.D. 1918).

Opinion

Birdzell, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a new trial. The action is for the recovery of damages for breach of warranty in the sale of some sheep, and a breach of an alleged agreement to ship them properly. The action was tried in the district court of Traill county, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, assessing his damages at $275 with interest from January 24th, 1916, upon which judgment was entered. It appears that in December, 1915, the plaintiff and respondent negotiated with the defendant and appellant for the purchase of some ewes, and that during the course of the negotiations defendant described to the plaintiff some ewes he had for sale as follows : “I also have 146 Western ewes, bred to registered rams to begin lambing May 20th. These are twos and threes with some fours. They are all good ewes; I picked 300 from a flock of 600 when I bought them, and have sold 150 of them within the last two weeks. I am offering the balance at $6.50. They will weigh around one hundred pounds and will shear about nine pounds. . . . These prices are good for ten days.” Following the receipt of this letter, the plaintiff arranged to have the offer kept open until January 10th, on which date he went to the defendant’s farm, examined the sheep and bought them. In addition to the western ewes, he also bought some Shropshires, which are not involved in this action. Following this transaction, the defendant shipped the ewes to the plaintiff, billing them to Backoo, North Dakota. The plaintiff claims damages due to the alleged failure to line the cars with paper to protect the sheep from the inclemency of the weather. There is evidence that the ewes arrived in bad condition, due to the manner in which they were shipped; that some lambs were born en route; and that practically all of the ewes gave birth to lambs during January and February.

The appellants, upon this appeal, claim that the entire question of the plaintiff’s right to recover depends upon the existence of a warranty with respect to the time when the western ewes would lamb, and [189]*189tbe damages incident to its breach. A number of alleged errors occurring during tbe trial are assigned. They all relate to tbe admissibility of evidence and to the instructions of the court, and will be considered in tbe order in which they are argued by the appellant.

It is argued that the court erred in allowing the plaintiff to introduce in evidence a series of correspondence consisting of thirteen letters which passed between the plaintiff and defendant and which were written after the sale and delivery of the sheep; eight of them were from the plaintiff to the defendant, the remainder being written by the defendant. These letters were introduced during the cross-examination of the defendant for the purpose, as claimed by the plaintiff, of their effect upon the credibility of the defendant as a witness. It is claimed that the letters from the plaintiff to the defendant contained many self-serving declarations and that, for this reason, they should be excluded. It is true that in them the plaintiff stated and reiterated his claim for damages incident to the alleged breach or breaches of warranty. But it is also true that the whole series of correspondence must be read together in order that there may be fair understanding of the attitude assumed by the defendant toward the plaintiff’s claim. When the whole series of correspondence is read in connection with the evidence offered by the defendant, the evident purpose was to show inconsistency in the contentions of the defendant. When thus considered, the letters have not only a direct bearing upon the credibility of the defendant as a witness, but also tend to establish prior admissions contrary to his present attitude. Witnesses were brought forward by the defendant to testify that the condition of ewes which were to give birth to lambs approximately a month in the future could be readily determined upon inspection. This testimony could have no relevancy to the case if it were not introduced for the purpose of establishing that after the inspection of the ewes by the plaintiff on January 10th, the plaintiff could not claim reliance upon the previous express 'warranty, if such it was, that the ewes would lamb in May. It seems to have been the^thjgny^ of the defense, first, that the defendant’s offer did not contain imeio press warranty concerning this matter; and, second, if it be construed as amounting to an express warranty, the effect of it was overcome by the personal inspection of the plaintiff.

If the evidence of defendant’s witnesses is true and the defendant' [190]*190had the experience as a sheep man which he claims to hare had, the assumption of ignorance as to the condition of the ewes when they were inspected by the plaintiff on January 10th, which is repeated throughout the correspondence, is wholly unjustified. In view of this state of the record, we think the letters were admissible for the purpose for which they were received, and we note that, in the instructions given, the trial court expressly limited the evidence to the matter of credibility.

It is next argued that the court erred in allowing the witness, A. C. McCurdy, to testify from his knowledge and experience as a sheep man concerning the impracticability of saving any considerable percentage of lambs born during the winter season; that birth of lambs in cold weather has a bad effect on the wool of the ewe; and that he could tell from the appearance of the lambs whether they were scrub stock or well bred. The witness had testified to his experience as a sheep man, covering a period of practically three years’ employment by a man who had made sheep a business, during which time he had paid “more or less” attention to a study of the subject. It seems that the matters concerning which he testified were controverted and warmly contested during the entire trial, the plaintiff producing other witnesses who testified along the same line as A. 0. McCurdy and the defendant producing a number of witnesses who testified to the contrary. We are by no means satisfied that the witness, A. C. McCurdy, was properly qualified to testify as an expert. Yet, in view of the other testimony in the ease, and of the further fact that the jury must have understood fully the extent of his experience, we are satisfied that the admission of the testimony objected to does not constitute reversible error.

The witness, A. 0. McCurdy, testified to the condition of the sheep upon their arrival at Backoo. This was objected to on the ground of its irrelevancy. The plaintiff had testified to an undertaking upon fhe_part of the defendant to paper the cars, if necessary, to protect the 3hegy£jprn damage in transit; and in his complaint, the plaintiff claims damages for a breach of this undertaking. In view of this testimony and this claim, it was clearly proper to show the condition of the sheep upon the arrival.

The plaintiff and other witnesses testified to the difference in value between Western ewes bred to lamb in May and similar ewes which [191]*191would lamb in February, March, and April. There was clearly no error in allowing this testimony to be admitted. Neither was error committed in the introduction of the deposition of O. W. Roberts, wherein he testified to the weather bureau record showing the temperature on the days during which the sheep were shipped. The witness was shown to be in charge of the weather bureau in Bismarck, where such records are kept. This testimony is material and relevant as bearing on that part of the claim which is predicated upon the failure to properly ship the sheep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.W. 523, 41 N.D. 187, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccurdy-v-aylor-nd-1918.