McKee Livestock Co. v. Menzel

201 P. 52, 70 Colo. 308
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 5, 1921
DocketNo. 10,049
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 201 P. 52 (McKee Livestock Co. v. Menzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKee Livestock Co. v. Menzel, 201 P. 52, 70 Colo. 308 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause was tried to the court without a jury and [309]*309judgment entered below giving defendants in error an agistor’s lien to the amount of $6079.08 upon 304 head of cattle, and establishing the priority of that lien as against two recorded chattel mortgages on said property held by plaintiff in error. From that judgment the latter prosecutes this writ and asks the issuance,of a supersedeas. The parties occupy the same relative position here as in the court below. The clerk of the trial court was appointed as receiver, the cattle were sold, and the sum in controversy is now in the hands of the' clerk. The cause is fully briefed and both plaintiff and defendants request that it be finally disposed of on this application. The cattle in question belonged to the copartnership of B. Pepper & Co., of which Sam Pepper was the managing partner. Having apparently gone beyond his financial depth he disappeared leaving his creditors to satisfy their claims as best they could out of the tangible property of his firm. The co-partnership was made a defendant herein and defaulted. Plaintiff was given a judgment against B. Pepper & Co. for the total unpaid amount of its claim, i. e., $18,170.49, and defendants a judgment against B. Pepper & Co. for $6079.08. The receiver had in his hands $3497.89 over and above the costs and expenses of the receivership and the claim of defendants and that sum was ordered paid to plaintiff. To such portion of the judgment no objection is urged which requires our consideration. The sole question to be determined here is the priority of the claims of the respective parties to said $6079.08 remaining in the hands of the receiver.

B. Pepper & Co. were engaged in buying, feeding, and selling cattle. A portion of those in dispute herein were bought in November, 1919, with money advanced by plaintiff and secured by a chattel mortgage recorded November 19, 1919. The remainder were purchased in December, 1919, with money advanced by plaintiff and secured by a chattel mortgage recorded December 26, 1919. Both mortgages describe these cattle as located on “the Kennicott place.”

[310]*310Defendants contend that they were so located in pursuance of an oral contract made by Charles A. Menzel (representing all the lien claimants) with Sam Pepper (representing B. Pepper & Co.) in the latter part of October, 1919; that the Kennicott place was in the possession of Charles A. Menzel; and that, while there kept and fed, these cattle were in the possession of defendant Dorsey Gamier, as the agent of all the lien claimants.

Plaintiff contends that there is no evidence of such a contract; that the Kennicott place, during the time in question, was in the possession of B. Pepper & Co.; and that Gamier was merely the hired servant of B. Pepper & Co. and that his possession was theirs.

There is much evidence and argument concerning the transfer of these cattle to other places at later dates, their care and feed by other persons, their return to the Kennicott place; their removal by plaintiff, the shipment of a portion of them, the seizure and return of the remainder by defendants. All this, in view of what is hereinafter said, becomes immaterial.

Our Statute, sec. 4588, M. A. S., Rev. Ed., sec. 4013, R. S. 1908, provides:

“Any ranchman, farmer, agistor, herder of cattle * * * or other person to whom any * * * cattle * * * shall be intrusted for the purpose of feeding, herding, pasturing, keeping or ranching, shall have a lien upon such * * * cattle * * * for the amount that may be due for such feeding, herding, pasturing, keeping or ranching, and for all costs incurred in enforcing such lien.”

This statute is in derogation of the common law and must be strictly construed. Bailey v. O’Fallon, 30 Colo. 419, 420, 70 Pac. 755; Auld v. Travis, 5 Colo. App. 535, 539, 39 Pac. 357; Ellison v. Tuckerman, 24 Colo. App. 322, 326, 134 Pac. 163. Possession is essential to support the lien and that pod-session must be exclusive, Auld v. Travis, supra. No such lien exists in favor of one who is a mere hired servant of the owner. Sorrells v. Sigel-Campion Co., 27 Colo. App. 154, 171, 148 Pac. 279.

[311]*311Where the testimony is conflicting the judgment will not be reversed for insufficient evidence. Hallack v. Stockdale, 14 Colo. 198, 23 Pac. 340; Lanham v. Copeland, 66 Colo. 27, 178 Pac. 562. There is no evidence as to the alleged contract between Menzel and Pepper, under which the lien is claimed, save that of Charles A. Menzel. This consists solely of the statements by the witness as to what “the agreement was,” what cattle were “referred to,” whom Menzel “represented,” what “the understanding” was and what “the purpose was.” These were mere conclusions, repeatedly given, over repeated objections, and repeated demands for “what was said.” The witness detailed no fact and recited the substance of no conversation, from which either the trial court or this court could determine the correctness of his conclusions. The observance of the rule that facts, not conclusions, are to be given, is particularly important where, as here, the only other witness (Sam Pepper) is beyond the reach of the process of the court. Under such circumstances the testimony was no evidence. Furthermore, Menzel introduced in evidence a written acknowledgment (dated March 16, 1920) of his indebtedness and lien. It fixes no date for the alleged lien and mentions no other claim than the individual claim of Charles A. Menzel. It could in no way bind plaintiff and its tendency is to deny the alleged contract and the priority of the lien claim.

Pepper had the Kennicott place leased from the owner and sublet it to Charles A. Menzel. Menzel’s lease expired in February, 1918, while Pepper’s lease had still two or three years to run. Menzel had an oral cropping agreement for the season of 1919, under which one-half the hay went to him and the other half to Pepper. He had removed from the place in March, 1918. He claimed an oral extension of his sublease for so much of Pepper’s unexpired term as he desired. If any such existed it was in violation of Sec. 2662, R. S., 1908, and Menzel was not in possession under it.

On cross-examination the defendant Gamier, alleged agent for the lien claimants, and the only person who could [312]*312speak with authority as to his possession, testified absolutely and unequivocally that he was employed by Sam Pepper; that he was to get $60.00 per month for feeding and caring for the cattle; that he was doing other work for Pepper at the same time and being paid for it; that he acted by authority of Pepper; that he was under Pepper’s orders and directions; that Pepper was running the business and was his boss. Under the most palpable leading he gave some testimony to the contrary. Every particle of this was put into his mouth over repeated and vigorou's protests from counsel for plaintiff. The following are examples :

After the witness had covered the whole matter on direct and cross-examination an attempt was made to go over the ground again on re-direct. Objection being made counsel for defendants said: “If the court please, I would like to draw that out a little more fully, with reference to the fact that he himself employed these men, (other feeders whom witness had said were employed and paid by Pepper) and saw them, and arranged with them, and had supervision of the whole matter.

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Bluebook (online)
201 P. 52, 70 Colo. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-livestock-co-v-menzel-colo-1921.