Overhulser v. Peacock

128 S.W. 526, 148 Mo. App. 504, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 637
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 526 (Overhulser v. Peacock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overhulser v. Peacock, 128 S.W. 526, 148 Mo. App. 504, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 637 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant a bay horse, May 18, 1909, defendant giving a' check for $162.50 for the price, but stopping payment of the check, an act which resulted .in the present case, brought to recover the price of the horse. The defense is the animal had an incurable disease called heaves, which fact was known to plaintiff at the time of the sale, but was unknown to defendant and was latent so as to be undiscoverable in the opportunity defendant had to examine the horse. As presented on the appeal this defense takes on a two-fold character, to-wit, as cause for rescission of the contract of sale by defendant on the ground of fraudulent concealment of the disease by plaintiff, and, second, as an implied warranty the horse was fitted for defendant’s purpose, which was to sell; in other words, was merchantable, when, in point of fact, it was not. The answer says the horse Avas diseased, unsound and worthless, as plaintiff knew at the time of the sale; though defendant believed it to be sound and free from disease and, before buying, carefully examined and tested it in reference to its soundness, but failed to discover the disease; that plaintiff, knowing defendant was under the impression the horse was sound, and knowing, too, defendant was buying to sell on the market, did not at any time before the sale tell defendant- the horse had the disease known as heaves, but fraudulently and deceitfully concealed from defendant said unsoundness; defendant discovered the horse had the heaves a day or two after the purchase and then offered to rescind the sale and return the animal; that plaintiff refused to rescind; wherefore it is averred defendant is not indebted to plaintiff in any sum. Defendant is and all his life has been a dealer in horses; buying, shipping and selling them. His home is in Iowa, but he is in the habit of buying in Missouri, and in Clark county. William Tucker is a livery man in Kahoka, in said county, and. he, too, had handled horses all his life; buying, selling, and inspecting them. [508]*508His barn in Kahoka was a headquarters for horse dealers and it was defendant’s habit when in Clark county to make use of the barn and to rely considerably on Tucker’s judgment in buying. Plaintiff is a mail carrier, whose route is in the county and some twenty-three miles long. He owned two horses, a gray and a bay, which he had long used in carrying mail over the route. The record suggests plaintiff resided in the village of Ashton, where Tucker and Peacock called on him with the view of buying his horses; or rather, they were under the impression plaintiff’s father owned the gray horse and asked plaintiff to ascertain if the horse could be bought from his father. Thereupon plaintiff notified them he owned the horse and would sell it. They bargained awhile about the gray horse and finally bought it, but during the negotiation they asked plaintiff if he would sell the bay horse. He replied in language testified by defendant: “Yes, I will sell him to you; but I don’t think you would buy him; he has had the distemper and it left his wind a little heavy, but he is getting better.” Tucker and defendant said they would be back in the afternoon to look at the horse and went at two o’clock. Plaintiff drove up with the bay horse hitched to a cart, showed them first the gray horse, then Tucker asked him to bring the bay out. They trotted the latter around a good deal, put a bridle on him and had him run about two hundred yards and back, and Peacock said he did not see anything wrong with his wind; that he seemed to be sound; discovered no indication he had heaves. Defendant put him in Tucker’s barn that night and in a day or so after the horse had been fed hay and bran, found he had the heaves and demanded plaintiff take him back. Such was defendant’s version of the sale. Tucker’s was about the same. He testified he and defendant ran the horse around the lot, asked plaintiff if his wind was all right; plaintiff said he had had the distemper, but defendant could wind him, and thereupon they ran him; did not [509]*509see any indication of heaves. The witness testified that putting a horse to feed on grass will reduce the heaving; but if he had only been on grass one day, that would not suffice to stop the disease and the horse “wonld have to be fixed some other way.” Tucker testified also he had known the horse for a good while and had tried to buy him. Peacock testified plaintiff told him the horse had been on pasture, but did not say how long; did not say he had been out only one night. A veterinary surgeon put on the stand by .defendant, testified heaves was an incurable disease and injured a horse very much; had the same effect on a horse as asthma had on a man; was not hard to detect unless the horse had been doctored; that the disease was occasionally caused by distemper ; putting a horse on grass would lessen the symptoms ; that if the horse had been on pasture and was then bridled and run a couple of hundred yards and did not show any puffing of the flanks, distention of the nostrils! or labored breathing, witness “would think the horse had been fixed — prepared for examination — meaning the heaves had been shut down so the symptoms would not show.” Plaintiff testified that after he had priced the gray horse to defendant and Tucker, they asked about the bay horse. Plaintiff told them the bay was not fit to sell or show; that defendant could not buy him, for he was not fit to sell. Tucker asked what the price would be if he was all right. Plaintiff said if he was all right, the price would be $200; but defendant could not buy him; had previously told Tucker the horse was not for sale; had turned the horse on the grass the night before. Tucker insisted witness bring the horse out and show him, but plaintiff said “there is no use, you wouldn’t buy him; I know you can’t buy him.” Tucker and defendant still insisted on seeing him and plaintiff then brought him out. They offered $150 and plaintiff asked $175. They said that was too much, considering the condition he was in — too much money for a heavy horse —plaintiff told them he had the distemper and it had [510]*510affected Ms wind; they ran him about the bam lot a couple of hundred yards or so and back, then looked him over again. Plaintiff could see he was thumping in the flanks, his nostrils were distended; could observe it at the time and it was caused by the distemper; the thumping and distention could easily be discovered when he was sold; afterwards when defendant wanted to rescind the sale, he admitted plaintiff had not misrepresented the horse. Some other testimony was given, conducing to prove plaintiff knew the horse had heaves at the time of the sale.

Complaint is made of the instructions to the jury. •The general theory of law on which the case was put to the jury was that it was the duty of the defendant to use ordinary care to discover any defect in the horse; that if he inspected the animal but failed to use ordinary care, and by inspecting carefully would have discovered Tie was afflicted with heaves, then.the defendant could not escape liability for the price, even though plaintiff knew at the time the horse had the disease; or unless defendant had agreed to pay substantially a sound price for the animal; further instructed that though fraud was not presumed, it need not be proved by positive testimony, but might be inferred from all the facts and circumstances in evidence. An instruction requested by ■defendant and given by the court with a modification which in no way changed its meaning, will ..perhaps exhibit the way the defense was presented.

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201 S.W. 602 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 526, 148 Mo. App. 504, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overhulser-v-peacock-moctapp-1910.