Quaney v. Tobyne

689 P.2d 844, 236 Kan. 201, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 37, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 398
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 26, 1984
Docket56,328
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 689 P.2d 844 (Quaney v. Tobyne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quaney v. Tobyne, 689 P.2d 844, 236 Kan. 201, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 37, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 398 (kan 1984).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Prager, J.:

This is an action brought by the sellers against the buyer to recover damages for breach of an oral contract for the sale and purchase of 285 steers. The plaintiffs are J. Martin Quaney and his sons, William E. Quaney, and James Daniel Quaney, farmers and cattlemen residing in Osage County. The defendant, Lowell Tobyne, is a farmer-rancher and feed lot operator who resides in Washington County, Kansas. In this *202 action, plaintiffs sought to recover the difference between the price which defendant agreed to pay for the cattle and the price received for the cattle when sold by plaintiffs after defendant Tobyne refused to take delivery of the cattle on the agreed delivery date.

The factual circumstances in the case are not greatly in dispute and essentially are as follows: The plaintiff, Martin Quaney, and the defendant, Lowell Tobyne, had both been engaged in the buying and raising of cattle for many years prior to the transaction between them, although they were not personally acquainted. Approximately two or three days prior to August 15, 1982, Tobyne telephoned Quaney and inquired if he had any cattle for sale. Quaney told him that he would have some cattle for sale and described the type of cattle, the approximate weight, the number of cattle for sale, the location of the cattle and the price that he was willing to accept for the cattle. Quaney and Tobyne then arranged to meet the following Sunday at the pasture where the cattle were kept in Wabaunsee County. On Sunday, August 15, 1982, Martin Quaney and Tobyne met at the pasture as agreed. Also present were defendant’s son, Dwight Tohyne, and Delmar Haufler, a friend of the Quaneys. The parties drove into a large pasture where 260 cattle were kept where they viewed the cattle. There was a smaller pasture where 25 cattle were kept, but the road to this pasture was in poor condition due to a recent rain, and Tobyne declined Quaney’s offer to drive to that pasture to view the other cattle. From the testimony, it appears that Tobyne told Quaney that he was satisfied with the cattle and if the other 25 were of the same type as the 260 he had observed then he did not need to see them.

According to plaintiffs’ evidence, while the parties were in the pasture, Quaney and Tobyne agreed that Tobyne would purchase 285 cattle at a price of 650 per pound. The weight of the cattle to be used as a basis to determine the price was to be determined when the cattle were taken out of the pasture and weighed at either the St. Marys sales barn, or the Manhattan sales barn, whichever one Tobyne would use. No weight shrinkage would be allowed. Tobyne agreed that he would contact the manager of the pasture, Oliver Hess, in order to arrange for rounding up and loading the cattle for which Tobyne agreed to be responsible. Tobyne was to load the cattle on or *203 before October 1, 1982, since Quaney’s lease on the pasture expired October 10, 1982.

There was testimony that this was a typical sales transaction involving cattle and, when the parties left that day, there was nothing further to be decided regarding the sale of the cattle to Tobyne. Tobyne agreed to send an $8,000 down payment to Quaney at a later date, since he did not have the money with him that day. Tobyne also stated that he would prepare and deliver to Quaney a written contract at the same time he sent the down payment. The written agreement and down payment were never delivered by Tobyne.

At the trial, there was testimony of another cattleman that the customary practice in buying and selling cattle in the area'was by oral agreement. Plaintiffs’ evidence was undisputed that, at the time the oral contract was made, several other persons were interested in buying plaintiffs’ cattle. Martin Quaney testified that, on August 15, 1982, he told Tobyne that there were other persons interested in purchasing the cattle, if Tobyne did not want them. According to Quaney, defendant assured him that he would take the cattle. On that same date, when Martin Quaney arrived home from the pasture following his meeting with Tobyne, there was a cattle buyer awaiting him who was interested in the cattle. Quaney told him that the 285 steers had been sold so they discussed the sale of other cattle. Quaney testified that cattle prices inci'eased for a period during August and September but plaintiffs did not try to sell the cattle to anyone else. On August 19, 1982, Martin Quaney was involved in an automobile accident and suffered severe injuries to his back and neck. As a result of those injuries he was hospitalized until the early part of September, 1982. The operation of the Quaney farm and ranch was left in the hands of his two sons, Williaxn E. Quaney and James Daniel Quaney. Several times dui'ing the later part of August and during the month of September, William E. Quaney and James Daniel Quaney contacted Tobyne by telephone and inquired about the down payment. Each time, Tobyne made some excuse why he had not delivered the down payment to them. On September 23, 1982, Martin Quaney talked to Tobyne who told him the same things he had told the two sons. In none of these conversations did Tobyne state that he was not buying *204 the cattle or that other terms of agreement were necessary before he could buy the cattle.

Oliver Hess, the manager of the pasture, testified that several days prior to September 23, 1982, Tobyne discussed with him the arrangements for Tobyne to pick up the cattle that he had bought from Quaney. According to Hess, Tobyne told him without equivocation that he had bought the cattle. On September 23, 1982, and again on September 30, 1982, Tobyne discussed with Hess the arrangements for rounding up and loading the Quaney cattle. Hess and Tobyne agreed that the date for loading the cattle would be October 2, 1982. Hess made written notes on these conversations on the dates they occurred.

On October 1, 1982, Tobyne telephoned Martin Quaney and told him that he was not going to purchase the cattle. Tobyne never did tell Hess that he was not buying the cattle, and Hess was waiting at the pasture to load the cattle for Tobyne when Quaney notified Hess that Tobyne was not going to buy plaintiffs’ cattle. The Quaneys subsequently sold the cattle to another party but received only 59.50 per pound. The Quaneys then filed this action to recover their damages for breach of the oral contract. In response thereto, Tobyne denied in his answer the existence of an oral sales contract and raised as an affirmative defense the statute of frauds (K.S.A. 84-2-201). Essentially, it was defendant’s position that the parties had never had a meeting of the minds on the sale and purchase of the cattle, and that no binding contract was to come into existence until a formal, written agreement had been prepared and signed by both parties. Defendant maintained that he and the Quaneys were complete strangers, knew very little about each other, and first met face-to-face on August 15, 1982, the date plaintiffs claimed the contract for the sale of the cattle was made.

The defendant filed a motion for summary judgment based upon the defense that the statute of frauds (K.S.A. 84-2-201

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
689 P.2d 844, 236 Kan. 201, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 37, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quaney-v-tobyne-kan-1984.