McMaster v. Warner

258 P. 547, 44 Idaho 544, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 135
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1927
DocketNo. 4318.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 258 P. 547 (McMaster v. Warner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMaster v. Warner, 258 P. 547, 44 Idaho 544, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 135 (Idaho 1927).

Opinions

This was an action before the district court, sitting with a jury, on a promissory note due on or before January 1, 1920, for $3,000 with interest, and providing for reasonable attorney's fees in case of suit. The note was given by defendant to plaintiff in settlement for pure-bred cattle sold defendant. Defendant admits executing and delivering the note but denies there is anything due plaintiff, and in this connection sets up a counterclaim in the amount of $8,609.80, alleged as due defendant *Page 548 from plaintiff on account of an alleged breach of an implied warranty of a heifer sold defendant by plaintiff in January, 1919. Defendant asks judgment in the amount of the difference between the sum of the note and interest and the amount of the counterclaim.

The note with a computation of interest was introduced in evidence and a stipulation was made that in case of recovery by plaintiff, attorney's fees should be fixed by the trial judge. After receiving the evidence on the counterclaim, the jury upon motion was instructed that the evidence was insufficient to support the allegations of the counterclaim and to return a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of said note and interest. The court allowed $500 attorney's fees, and judgment for these sums was entered. Defendant's motion for a new trial was denied, and the case is here on appeal from said judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial.

Error is predicated upon the action of the trial judge in instructing the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff and denying defendant's motion for a new trial.

The evidence discloses that in January, 1919, and prior thereto, appellant Warner was the owner of a ranch near Buhl embracing three or four hundred acres of rather high priced land thought to be suitable for the breeding of pure-bred cattle, and that then and for some time previous respondent had been engaged in the business of breeding registered Shorthorn cattle near Twin Falls, Idaho. Appellant discussed with respondent the matter of entering into this business and it was recommended by respondent as more profitable on high priced land than grain farming. Appellant viewed respondent's cattle prior to the auction sale held on January 15, 1919, in company with respondent, and at that time a heifer named "Golden Lady" was recommended by respondent as a high class animal and one for which appellant should bid as high as $300, if he wanted any cattle at all. Some fifty head of cattle were sold in the auction ring on January 15, 1919. Appellant bought six at this sale, five of which had been consigned by respondent, and one *Page 549 by a third party. Among those purchased by appellant was this heifer, "Golden Lady," consigned to the sale by respondent, the purchase price being $285, all or part of this sum being included in the note. She was taken to appellant's place that day or the next.

The evidence shows she was well bred, well built and a high class heifer in apparent good health on the day of the sale. She was put in the yard maintained for pure-breds at appellant's place and was daily under the care of appellant's herdsman, or foreman. She remained apparently sound and healthy through the latter half of January, and through February, March and April. In May she dropped a calf which was sound and healthy. The heifer gave more milk than this calf could take during the first four or six weeks, and was milked out daily by the man in charge. Although under his supervision all this time, no lump or sign of lump-jaw was observed. In the latter part of the summer or early fall, a lump about the size of a walnut was observed on the right side of her jaw. This disappeared and therefore caused no alarm, but late in October it was discovered she had actinomycosis, or lump-jaw. Several other cattle belonging to defendant developed lump-jaw about this time but this heifer was the first of those infected to discharge pus. The latter part of October or the first part of November, the pus was cleaned from the fistula and medicine applied. At this time a scar about the size of a quarter dollar was observed near the fistula.

Later, in January, 1920, Doctor Erskine, a qualified veterinary surgeon, was called to treat defendant's cattle. He found this heifer affected with actinomycosis in the abscess form. He shingled the under part of her head and found a long thin scar between the jaw-bones about three or four inches long, He testified it had the appearance of a scar resulting from lump-jaw, but he stated it was practically impossible to state how old the scar was as scar tissue when formed changes but slightly. Others testified that this scar looked like a rather old one. *Page 550

On May 15, 1920, the heifer was shipped to Ogden and sold for beef. Appellant offered evidence of considerable damage to his cattle on account of lump-jaw, and also damage to his farm as resulting from his cattle becoming infected with lump-jaw. Owing to the view we take of this case, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the question of damages.

Mr. Wallace, who assisted in the treatment given the heifer in October, testified that he attended the sale in January as a spectator, and at that time, while respondent and other bidders were inspecting the heifer, he observed, as she came past him, that the hair on her jaw was rough and stood out, and that under it there was a lump or swelling as thick as two dollars and as big around as a quarter dollar in exactly the same place as the lump which they had treated. However, he did not examine the heifer.

The court had the benefit of the testimony of several veterinary surgeons of wide experience and considerable scientific research in the history and nature of the disease, actinomycosis, commonly called lump-jaw. Their testimony tends to show it to be an infectious, as distinguished from a contagious disease; that is, that the disease germ lodges in the tissues of the animal ordinarily in an abrasion in the tissue near the teeth, and as the germs multiply they set up an infection known as lump-jaw; that it does not enter the system and is not communicated directly in the manner most systemic diseases are; that the germ that sets up the infection is known as the ray fungus, and grows and is nursed on weeds, grains or grasses, usually in the hull or chaff of the seeds; that the germ is not easily destroyed; that the disease is supposed to be communicable from one animal to another usually by the dropping of the pus containing the germ upon the food taken into the mouth of other animals. Practically all the veterinarians agree that it has not been scientifically proved that the germ from one animal will infect another animal, and all of them admitted that some eminent authorities hold that the germ, ray fungus, loses its power of transmission as soon as it enters *Page 551 the animal's body on account of undergoing some form of involution.

In this case, the opinion of the experts is that the germ, ray fungus, whether grown upon a plant or coming from an infected animal, upon lodging in the tissues or in an abrasion may set up the infection known as lump-jaw. All the veterinarians agreed that the period of incubation after lodging is not known. However, in this case, none of the veterinarians ventured an opinion, or were asked an opinion, as to when the heifer likely became infected, whether before or after the sale, or whether it was probable upon the facts as shown in this case that in January, 1919, she was infected or then carried any ray fungus germs at all in any state of development.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 547, 44 Idaho 544, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmaster-v-warner-idaho-1927.