Mullen v. Western Union Beef Co.

9 Colo. App. 497
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Colo. App. 497 (Mullen v. Western Union Beef Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullen v. Western Union Beef Co., 9 Colo. App. 497 (Colo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Thomson, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error to recover damages for loss of stock occasioned by the communication from cattle of the defendant to cattle of the plaintiffs of the disease known as splenetic or Texas fever. The defendant had judgment, and the plaintiffs have brought the case here by writ of error.

The complaint charges that about the 15th day of June, 1891, the defendant negligent^, wrongfully and unlawfully [498]*498shipped from Kimble county, Texas, a large number of Texas cattle infected with Texas fever; and wrongfully, negligently and unlawfully unloaded them, and turned them loose in the vicinity of a herd of the plaintiffs’ cattle, in Logan county, Colorado, and permitted them to run at large upon the range occupied by the plaintiffs’ cattle, and to come in contact and become mingled with the plaintiffs’ cattle, in violation of the quarantine rules, regulations and orders of the United States department of agriculture, and in violation of the quarantine rules, regulations and orders of the state of Colorado, by reason whereof the plaintiffs’ cattle, which had been sound and healthy, became infected with Texas fever, and large numbers of them died. A demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and the defendant filed an answer, which was, in so far as we care to consider it, a denial of the averments of the complaint.

The cause of action, as alleged in the complaint, was the loss of cattle of the plaintiffs, occasioned by the communication to them of Texas fever by cattle of the defendant, imported into Colorado, and suffered to run at large, in violation of the quarantine rules and regulations of the department of agriculture, and in violation of the quarantine rules and regulations of the state of Colorado. The negligence complained of was alleged to consist in these violations. The case was tried below and is argued here upon the theory that if the loss of the plaintiffs’ cattle was in consequence of disease communicated by the cattle of the defendant, its liability depends upon its acts witli reference to rules and regulations which it was legally bound to observe; so that no question of negligence generally, in the shipment and management of the cattle, is presented by the record. We may dismiss the question of violation by the defendant of the quarantine rules and regulations of the state of Colorado by saying that, upon sufficient evidence, it was settled by the jury in the defendant’s favor.

The plaintiffs introduced in evidence an order issued by Hon. J. M. Rusk, secretary of agriculture, as follows:

[499]*499“ Begulations Concerning Cattle Transportation.
“ United States Department oe Agriculture.
“ Oeeice oe the Secretary.
“Washington, D. C., February 5th, 1891.
To the Managers and Agents of Railroad and Transportation Companies of the United States, StocJcmen and Others:
“In accordance with section 7 of the act of congress, approved May 29th, 1884, entitled ‘ An Act for the Establishment of a Bureau of Animal Industry, to Prevent'the Exportation of Diseased Cattle and to Provide Means for the Suppression and Extirpation of Pleuropneumonia and Other Contagious Diseases Among Domestic Animals,’and of the act of congress approved July 14th, 1890, making appropriation for the department of agriculture for the fiscal year ending June 30th, 1891, you are notified that a contagious and infectious disease known as splenetic or Southern fever exists among cattle in the following described area of the United States: * * *. From the 15th day of February to the 1st day of December, 1891, no cattle are to be transported from said area to any portion of the United States north or west of the above described line, except in accordance with the following regulations: ” Here follows a series of stringent rules concerning the method to be pursued in transporting cattle from the infected districts, the purpose of which was apparently to prevent healthy cattle from coming in contact with the infection.

The plaintiffs then produced the following further order of the secretary of agriculture :

“ United States Department oe Agriculture.
“ Oeeice oe the Secretary.
“ Washington, D. 0., April 23d, 1891.
“ Notice is hereby given that cattle which have been at least ninety days in the area of country hereinafter described may be moved from said area by rail into the. states of Colorado, Wyoming and Montana, for grazing purposes, in ac[500]*500cordance with the regulations made by said states for the admission of southern cattle thereto.
“ Provided:
“1. That cattle from said area shall go into said states only for slaughter or grazing, and shall on no account be shipped from said states into any other state or territory of the United States before the 1st day of December, 1891.
“ 2. That such cattle shall not be allowed in pens or on trails or ranges that are to be occupied or crossed by cattle going to the eastern markets before December 1, 1891, and that these two classes shall not be allowed to come in contact.
“ 8. That all cars which have carried cattle from said area shall, upon unloading, at once be cleaned and disinfected in the manner provided by the regulations of this department of February 5th, 1891.
“ 4. That the state authorities of the state of Colorado, Wyoming and Montana agree to enforce these provisions.”

The territory described in both orders includes that from which the defendant’s cattle were shipped; and it is the rules relating to the isolation of cattle moved from infected districts, and more particularly the second proviso of the second order, which was claimed to have been violated by the defendant. It may be conceded, for the purposes of the case, that rules or regulations, made by the direction of a statute, have the authority of the statute itself; and that their violation is, in effect, a violation of the statute; but that such may be the case, they must be clearly within its terms. The effect to be given to the foregoing orders is dependent upon the provisions of the act referred to in the order of February 5th (23 U. S. Statutes at Largej p. 31). By section 2 the commissioner of agriculture was empowered to appoint agents, whose duty it should be, under his instructions, to examine and report upon the means to be adopted for the suppression and extirpation of pleuropneumonia, and to provide against the spread, among animals, of other dan[501]*501gerous, contagious and infectious diseases.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Colo. App. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullen-v-western-union-beef-co-coloctapp-1897.