Sharp v. Osborne

300 P. 1004, 38 Ariz. 452, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 258
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1931
DocketCivil No. 3006.
StatusPublished

This text of 300 P. 1004 (Sharp v. Osborne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Osborne, 300 P. 1004, 38 Ariz. 452, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 258 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

The plaintiff, J. C. Sharp, alleges in his complaint that on September 6, 1928, he bought of the defendant, Chas. Osborne, fifty head of two and three year old steers, ten head of bulls- and stags, and forty head of cows, all Navajo Indian cattle, and paid therefor the lump sum of $2,000; that at the time he paid for the cattle he received a bill of sale from Osborne, but that Osborne had failed and refused to deliver the cattle to him; that by reason thereof Osborne is indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,000, together with legal interest from September 8, 1928.

Defendant answered and, in effect, admitted making the bill of sale of cattle, the payment to him of $2,000 as alleged, and also that he had not delivered the cattle described in the bill of sale to plaintiff. He justifies his failure to deliver the cattle on the ground 'that plaintiff had failed, according to his allegations, to keep and perform another contract between them dated June 18, 19,28. To his answer he attached a copy of the June contract. We give its substance only. Under it Osborne agreed to sell to Sharp Navajo cattle bought by him during 1928, of the kinds and at the prices hereinafter set out, and to deliver them free of charge on board the Santa Fe Railroad at the stations of Holbrook or Pinta, to wit:

“Rough steers at one dollar per hundred less than other steers.
“Dry cows 3 to 9 years old, at $5.00 per cwt.
*454 “Bulis & Stags, at $5.00 per cwt.
“2 year old steers and over at $7.00 per hundred or at $1.50 per hundred less than American twos and threes bring here this fall.”

Under this contract Sharp was to advance to Osborne $10 per head on 300 head, or $3,000, for which amount he was to be credited on the purchase price of said cattle in the final settlement, unless Sharp should refuse to accept and pay for the' cattle when properly delivered, in which case the $10 per head advanced was to be forfeited to Osborne. These' are the terms of the contract material to this case.

The breach of this contract by plaintiff is alleged as a defense in defendant’s answer as follows:

“That on the 21st day of September, 1928, and before the close of the buying season for cattle on the Indian Reservations where said cattle' were to be bought under the terms of said contract, plaintiff breached his said contract, and refused to further receive and pay for cattle bought and contracted for him by the defendant; and that at the time of refusal, the defendant had purchased from various people on the Navajo Indian Reservation cattle which under the terms of the contract would have yielded him a profit of $4,116.39 ($4,818.89 trial amendment), $2,116.39 more than the plaintiff had remaining of the $3,000.00-deposit with the defendant. That the plaintiff well knew that, the defendant had purchased cattle' for him under the terms of the contract, and that his breach of the said contract, was willful and without the consent of the defendant.
“That on the said 21st day of September, 1928, the plaintiff notified the defendant that he would proceed no further in accepting or receiving said cattle so bought for him under the terms of the contract, and for the' reason that the 21st of September 1928 was so far along in the buying season and sellers of cattle had already made arrangements with purchasers and other purchasers had made their arrangements with sellers, there was no market to which the said defendant could dispose of the cattle otherwise and *455 make Ms said profit hereinabove set forth and referred to.”

The same facts as those' alleged as a defense are set out by defendant in a cross-complaint, and damages prayed in the sum of $4,116.39 (trial amendment. $4,818.89).

The plaintiff, in addition to demurring generally to defendant’s answer and cross-complaint, filed a motion to make them more definite and certain by requiring defendant “to set out the names of each person or company or corporation from which the defendant had purchased any cattle on or before the twenty-first day of September, 1928,” also number and kind of cattle so purchased. He also filed a general denial.

Although the court did not pass on the demurrer or the motion to make more definite and certain, the defendant and cross-complainant filed the following paper, which he called a “supplement”:

“Supplement to Answer and Cross-Complaint.
“Comes now the defendant and cross-complainant by leave of' court first had and obtained and files this supplement to his answer and cross-complaint, giving-number of cattle mentioned in his answer and cross-complaint, classification of kinds, buying price, market value of same and his loss of profit, to-wit:”

(Here is set out what purports to be lists of cattle, under headings as follows: “Item 1,” “Item 2,” “Item 3,” “Item 4,” “Item 5” and “Item 6,” showing kind sold to plaintiff prior to September 21st, together with prices charged and credits allowed— all of which was outside of the issues made by defendant’s answer and cross-complaint.)

The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant in the sum of $2,235.50, upon which judgment was entered. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial upon several *456 grounds, and the motion was overruled. The appeal is from the judgment and the order overruling the motion for a new trial.

Before discussing the' assignments of error, we wish to call attention 'to the pleadings and the issues as they appear to us. The plaintiff’s cause of action is one to recover the purchase price of some cattle that he bought of defendant and paid for but did not receive; in other words, he is asking the defendant to return to him his $2,000, with interest, since the cattle he was to receive therefor were not delivered. The defendant admits plaintiff’s claim, but says he should not be required to return the $2,000 to plaintiff, because the plaintiff had on September 21st refused “further” to accept and pay for cattle bought and contracted for by defendant under the terms of their contract dated June 18, 1928, to defendant’s damage in the sum of $4,116.39, enlarged by trial amendment to $4,818.89. The breach is laid as of September 21; 1928, and consists, as alleged in the answer and cross-complaint, in a refusal “to further receive and pay for cattle bought and contracted for him by the defendant.” There is no allegation that defendant had delivered or offered to deliver to plaintiff on board the cars at the railroad stations of Holbrook or Pinta, at the prices named in the contract of June 18th, any cattle of the kind or character described therein. Under the contract of June 18th, plaintiff did not agree to take any and all kinds of cattle defendant might buy, but particular kinds, at specified prices, delivered on board the 'train at one of the above-named stations.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P. 1004, 38 Ariz. 452, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-osborne-ariz-1931.