Sharp v. Sturgeon

75 Mo. App. 651, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 485
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Mo. App. 651 (Sharp v. Sturgeon) 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
Sharp v. Sturgeon, 75 Mo. App. 651, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 485 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Biggs, J. —

This is the second appeal in this case (66 Mo. App. 191). In the former, opinion the subject-matter of the controversy is fully stated. In order to properly understand the various assignments, it will be necessary for us to make a full statement of the facts as presented at the trial of the case. On the [656]*656twenty-eighth of February, 1889, the defendant Sturgeon purchased from plaintiffs, through Dillon Brothers, a Perdieron stallion named Peco. The parties signed a written contract of sale. In describing the horse the contract contained the following: “Dillon Register, 210, N. F. D. H. 1430; P. S. B. A. 1615; P. S. B. F. -.” It is conceded that the words “Dillon Register” refer to a private register of French draft horses which was kept by Dillon Brothers, who were importers of such horses; that the capital.letters N. F. D. H. stand for National Register French Draft Horses; that the letters P. S. B. A. stand for Perdieron Stud Book of America; that the letters P. S. B. F. stand for Perdieron Stud Book of France, and that the number opposite each was intended to represent the number under which Peco was registered in the respective books or registers. The purchase price of the horse was $1,100, for which Sturgeon executed two promissory notes, one for $600 and the other for $500. The defendant Renner signed the notes as surety. The note for $600 was paid. Sturgeon refused to pay the other, upon the ground that in making the sale the plaintiffs, through their agents, Dillon Brothers, warranted that the horse was registered in the Perdieron Stud Book of America and in the Perdieron Stud Book of France, whereas he was not registered or entitled to be registered in either of them. Thereupon the plaintiffs instituted this suit on the note for $500. Sturgeon set forth in his answer the contract, pleaded the warranty and its breaches, and averred that the horse was worth the amount he'agreed to pay for him, if he had been registered as represented, and that without registration in the French and American books he was only worth $200. He asked judgment by way of counterclaim for the difference between the actual value of the horse and the amount which he had already paid. The [657]*657plaintiffs replied that the portions of the contract referred to were matters of description merely, and were not intended as warranties.

On the former appeal we ruled that oral evidence of what was said at the time the horse was purchased and of the custom of the trade (if there was such a custom) was admissible for the purpose of showing the meaning of the recitals in the contract. On a retrial evidence as to the conversations between Sturgeon and Dillon Brothers, and the representations made by the latter as to the registration of the horse, were admitted in evidence. The testimony of Sturgeon tended to prove that Dillon Brothers represented and warranted that the horse was registered in all of the books mentioned in the contract, whereas he was not registered in the Perdieron Stud Book of France; that he was not properly registered in the Perdieron Stud Book of America, nor was he entitled to registration therein, and that his name only appeared in an appendix to the Perdieron Stud Book of America, which fact was of no consequence and added nothing to the value of the animal. His evidence also tended to prove that without such registration the horse would have to be handled as a grade horse and would probably be worth $200 or $300. The defendants introduced no evidence of what the horse would have been worth if not registered in the French book only. The theory of the defense at the trial seems to have been that the animal was not registered nor entitled to registration in either book, and in the examination of witnesses on the question of value their attention was directed solely to the value of the horse if not registered at all. * * * Sturgeon also read in evidence the rules of the.American Perdieron Horse Breeders Association entitling an animal to registration in the Perdieron Stud Book of America. The [658]*658rules were adopted in 1888, and eligibility to entry was based upon one or more of the following rules, to wit: First. “Any stallion or mare previously recorded in the Percheron Stud Book of France. The original certificate of registration must accompany the application in all cases under this’rule.” Second. “Any stallion or mare whose sire and dam are recorded in the Percheron Stud Book of America, the application to be accompanied by the affidavit of the breeder.” Third. “Stallions or mares, the produce of five top crosses of sires, recorded in the Percheron Stud Book of America, etc.”

After the adoption of these rules a book which was designated by the Association as Volume IV of the Percheron Stud Book of America, was published in 1888. This is the book referred to in the bill of sale of the horse.

The evidence offered by the plaintiffs tended to prove these facts: In making the sales the recitals in the contract were intended as matters of description and not of warranty, and that as a matter of fact they made no representation that the horse was registered in the Percheron Stud Book of France. It was conceded that the horse was not registered in the Percheron Stud Book of France, and he could not have been for the reason that there was no such book in existence at the time Peco was imported from France. The horse was imported by Dillon Brothers in 1881, and the Percheron Stud Book of France was not started until 1883.

The present American Percheron Horse Breeders Association was first established in Chicago in 1874, under the name of the Pereheron-Norman Horse Breeders of America. The association published its first book in 1878, and entitled it “Vol. I PereheronNorman Stud Book.” Later on a second volume was [659]*659published under the same title. In 1$84 a third volume was published and it was,designated as “Vol. Ill National Register of Norman Horses.” Under the rules in force when these volumes were published any draft horse imported from France was entitled to registration, whether the animal had a pedigi’ee or not.

Previous to 1884 (when the French Association was established) no attention was paid to the pedigree of horses imported from France-. Peco was registered in 1884 in the second volume under the number 1615. He was registered without pedigree, and was entitled to registration by reason of his importation. In 1888 the American Association published volume IV and entitled it “Perdieron Stud Book of America.” The names of all horses which were registered in the earlier volumes and those which were registered after the publication of volume III were carried into volume IV.

In one part of the volume the names of all horses having pedigrees were entered, and in another part which-was designated as “the appendix,” the names and numbers of horses having no pedigree were entered. As Peco had no pedigree his name and number were placed in the appendix.

The names of over one half of the horses in the book are found in the appendix. The only reason for the separation of the two classes of horses was to get the book into as small a compass as possible. In the registration of horses having pedigrees probably five or six registrations would cover a page of the book, whereas the- names of thirty or forty horses without pedigrees could be registered on a single page.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sharp v. Sturgeon
66 Mo. App. 191 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Mo. App. 651, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-sturgeon-moctapp-1898.