Pring v. Udall

31 P.2d 1113, 95 Colo. 23, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 16, 1934
DocketNo. 13,177.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 P.2d 1113 (Pring v. Udall) 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
Pring v. Udall, 31 P.2d 1113, 95 Colo. 23, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 254 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holland

delivered the opinion of the court.

We will refer to parties hereto as plaintiffs and defendant, or as Udall, Greer and Pring.

This action was brought by Udall and Greer, as co-partners, to recover a balance claimed to be due from Pring under a contract for the purchase and sale of cattle, dated August 8, 1928, at Phoenix, Arizona.

*25 .Udall and Greer were copartners in a cattle business in Apacbe county, Arizona. In July, 1928, one McDermott, representing himself as agent for E. A. Pring of Colorado Springs, Colorado, interviewed Udall relative to the purchase of cattle from the partnership for Pring. McDermott examined the cattle on the partnership ranch of Udall and Greer, and offered Udall eight and one-half cents a pound for 820 steers, which was accepted by Udall, provided he received a written contract of sale. McDermott drew a draft on Pring for the purchase price of the cattle. Pring refused to honor the draft until he had “something to show what he was paying for.” Mc-Dermott then drew the contract involved in this action, with Udall as vendor and Pring as vendee, mailed same to Pring at Colorado Springs, Colorado, and attached sight draft for $4,000, which was paid by Pring after seeing the contract. McDermott handed Udall the contract which he had signed as agent for Pring, together with the $4,000 which Pring had paid, and the contract was then signed by Udall. When the cattle were gathered at the ranch, they were inspected by McDermott, and then driven to Pinta, Arizona, where they were to be weighed and shipped as per contract. Pring, in a discussion with Udall, McDermott and one McPherson, made the objection that there was a deficiency in the number of native steers that were called for in the contract, whereupon it was agreed between Udall and Pring that $500 would be deducted from the contract price. After some of the cattle were weig'hed, Pring claimed that the scales were not correct. To settle this complaint, it was agreed that the cattle would all be weighed then and there, and again at Eaton, New Mexico. Pinta weights totalled 456,965 pounds. The next evening the cattle arrived at Eaton, and it was found that there were no scales at Eaton. Udall wanted to hold up the shipment, and Pring* proposed that the cattle be weig’hed at Pueblo, Colorado, and if weights were not satisfactory to Udall, the cattle would be put on pasture at Masters, *26 Colorado, for a fill and rest, and after they were in like condition as when originally weighed at Pinta, they would be again weighed and settlement made on such weights. Udall returned to Arizona and then wired Pring demanding payment on Pinta weights, because, on account of the long trip to Pueblo, there would be large shrinkage shown by Pueblo weights. This telegram was received by Pring in Pueblo before the cattle were weighed.

The cattle were weighed in Pueblo and totaled 422,550 pounds or 34,415 pounds less than the Pinta weights, which, it is claimed by plaintiffs, was shrinkage on account of 650-mile haul. For this difference, at eight and one-half cents per pound, plaintiffs were awarded a jury verdict' plus interest.

Pring sent Udall a check based on Pueblo weights, but stopped payment on account of an existing chattel mortgage on the cattle, which was later released and the check paid. Udall notified Pring that he expected settlement on Pinta weights, but agreed with Pring in January that a test shipment be made in the spring to determine the shrinkage on a haul from Pinta to Pueblo. In May, Pring, at the Udall ranch, selected cattle for such a test, weighed the cattle near Pinta and shipped them to Colorado Springs, where they were reweighed, showing an average shrinkage of 45 pounds per head. Pring made no settlement on this agreed basis, and in November he selected 21 more steers, shipped them to Pueblo, and found a 32-pound shrinkage. He again refused to settle and was sued by plaintiffs for the difference between the original Pinta weights and the weights at Pueblo. The jury found against Pring- and assessed plaintiffs’ damages in the sum of $3,105.73. Pring claims error and submits same under three heads as follows: (1) There was no contract between plaintiffs and defendant upon which defendant was liable; (2) there was an accord and satisfaction between plaintiffs and defendant, as a matter of law, and the court erred in submitting the question *27 of accord and satisfaction to the jury; (3) refusal of the court to give the following instructions:

“Defendant’s Bequest No. 1: You are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Bobert McPherson of McPherson Brothers, bought the cattle in question from the plaintiffs, and that the defendant, E. A. Pring, was the banker in the transaction, your verdict should be for the defendant.

“Defendant’s Request No. 4: You are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that there was no shrink in the cattle, after the same had been fed and watered at Baton and Pueblo at the time said cattle were weighed at Pueblo, your verdict should be for the defendant.”

As to the first contention of no contract on which defendant was liable, defendant claims there was no agency proved whereby McDermott had authority to sign the contract, and that the contract was abandoned. He insists that the evidence fails to show that he ratified the contract after its execution. Defendant raised no objections to the instructions upon which this question was submitted to the jury, which found against him. A careful consideration of the preceding statement of the case dissipates the contention of no agency and no ratification. On the contract, prepared by the agent and submitted to defendant “showing what he was paying for,” the defendant paid $4,000, and on the terms of the same contract, he later paid $21,348.75, to the use of Udall, for balance on the cattle, as figured by defendant on contract as per Pueblo weights. The ratification of the contract is so clear and conclusive as to admit of no argument. The original contract was not abandoned as claimed by defendant. If it was, what became of the money paid thereon? The two payments remain as made on the contract as executed. The deduction of $500 on account of shortage of native steers was not in any sense a new contract or abandonment of the old, it was a modification. Throughout the transaction, the price per *28 pound remained as fixed by; tbe contract, the difficulty culminates in the number of pounds to be paid for. Any new.arrangements concerning the deal were concerning plans to ascertain a satisfactory agreement about the disputed- .question of weights, and this question was always between Pring the defendant and plaintiff Udall. So far as Udall is concerned, the evidence shows that the original sale stood throughout the deal. Thus falls defendant’s claim of abandonment of contract. To sustain an abandonment claim or a novation, defendant had to and does admit a valid original contract; he cannot maintain inconsistent positions. In one breath he denies a contract, and in the next says it was abandoned: He did not produce a word of testimony to show a new contract agreed upon by Udall, or the validity of same, if made, and there was no showing as to disposition of the dealings under the old contract or a substitution of a new contract as fixed by the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.2d 1113, 95 Colo. 23, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pring-v-udall-colo-1934.