Standifer v. Sullivan

1911 OK 481, 120 P. 624, 30 Okla. 365, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
Docket1219
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1911 OK 481 (Standifer v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standifer v. Sullivan, 1911 OK 481, 120 P. 624, 30 Okla. 365, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 468 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This is an action for damages based on fraud and deceit. It grew out of a mule trade. The *366 case was tried in justice court and taken on appeal to the county court of Haskell county, where it was tried on April 13, 1909, and there was a verdict and judgment for defendant in error for $185 damages.

The facts briefly stated are: Defendant in error, plaintiff below, and hereafter called plaintiff, traded mules with plaintiffs in error, defendants below, and hereafter called-defendants, on July 22, 1908, at McCurtain, Okla. Plaintiff was a country storekeeper, living several miles in the country from McCurtain. He did some freighting with a span of mules he owned. His mules did not exactly match in either size or color. He wanted to trade his smallest mule for a match for his largest one. Pie and defendant Standifer got together, and negotiations began. Plaintiff had never traded horses in his life, and knew very little about live stock. He told defendants so. Defendants were engaged, ■at least part of the time, in dealing in horses and mules. It appears they were what is generally termed “horse traders.” When the negotiations were going on between plaintiff and Standifer, the other defendants, Smith and Ratteres, at different times appeared in the guise of bystanders, and in various ways encouraged plaintiff to make the trade; told him it was a good trade, etc. In horsetrading language they stood' by, and “boosted” the trade. It developed later that all three defendants were joint owners of the mule being traded. The plaintiff did not know this. He asked their advice and for an expression of their judgment in confidence, and they gave it freely, but did not disclose their interest. The trade was made. Plaintiff swapped mules, apparently with Standifer, in reality with all three. Plaintiff let them have a good mule worth about $150 and gave them $25 in cash to boot. The mule plaintiff got was a good looking mule. It was large, and in fair condition as to flesh, and appeared to be a valuable animal. The plaintiff explained his reasons for wanting to trade, and the kind of mule he wanted, and the nature of the work he wanted it to do. Defendants told him this mule would suit him they thought; that it was a “Jim Dandy.” Plaintiff started home with the mule, working him to the wagon. It *367 was with difficulty.he made it home. After going two or three miles, the mule had a “spell,” as the witnesses described it. They struck him with an iron rod, the size of a pencil, on the rump, and he fell down. Next day the mule was in such condition it could not be taken back eight or ten miles to town. The second day afterward plaintiff got it back to town, and tendered it to defendants, and demanded his mule and money back. This was refused. The mule lived for three or four months, and died. It appears that from before it was grown this mule had suffered with some terrible nervous disorder. And sudden sharp, loud noise near it would cause the mule to have some kind of nervous fit. A gunshot in close proximity, but not touching the animal, would cause it to fall like it was shot. A slight stroke with a weed on its rump would produce the same effect. Various previous owners testified as to this condition. No one knew what was the matter with it; they could only tell how it acted. The mule was worse than worthless. It was an added expense and care to its owner, without return of any kind of service. To a stranger upon even a -careful examination this defect might not be observable. This defect was latent.

The defendants bring the case here for review, and allege as errors:

“(1) Overruling motion for continuance.
“(2) Because the court erred in permitting evidence to go to the jury over the objections of defendants as to the defects of the mule in controversy, before it was shown by the evidence that said defects were known to the defendants.
“(3) Because the court erred in refusing to give instructions 1, 2, 4, 6, as requested by defendants.”

Other errors are alleged, but defendants have waived them by not presenting and urging them in their brief. We will dispose of the questions in their order.

The alleged error of the court in not granting plaintiffs in error a continuance is without merit. Even without the rule that the action of a trial court in passing on a motion for continuance is often largely one calling for the exercise of sound discretion, and will not ordinarily be reversed unless an abuse of discretion *368 appears, the motion does not appear to have been meritorious. The ground alleged was the absence of four witnesses. In the first place, proper diligence in trying to procure the attendance of these witnesses is not shown. A subpoena for only one of them had been issued prior to calling the case for trial. It is not shown when this was issued, nor what efforts were made to have it served, nor is it even shown that it was placed in the hands of the sheriff for service. An excuse is stated for not issuing a subpoena for the other three witnesses before the calling 'of the case for trial; it being that the movants did not know of their testimony sooner. If the parties did not know of these witnesses, they were certainly very careless. It is claimed that three of the absent witnesses were present when the trade was made out of which this controversy arose, and they were wanted to testify that plaintiffs in error did not in words guarantee the mule. This action had been tried months before in a justice court, and had been pending a considerable time -in the county court on appeal. The parties surely must have known the persons present when the' trade was made, and, if they did not, certainly any kind of diligence would have discovered them. The testimony of the remaining absent witnesses would not have been material.

There is another reason why the action of the court in this matter should not be disturbed. The three witnesses were wanted to testify that defendants did not guarantee the mule they traded. While the evidence of these witnesses on some points might have been material on the specific point urged, it would not have been, for the reason that they were not sued on any express guarantee or warranty, but merely upon the warranties implied by law. And the court instructed the jury fully that no express warranty had been proven or was even claimed against defendants. The specific point it is alleged the absent witnesses would testify to, not being in issue, their, testimony, so far as it is shown, would not have been material.

2. This allegation of error is based on the admission of evidence by the court regarding the defects of the mule. Defendants claim that this evidence was admitted “before it was shown *369 that defendants knew of the defects.” If they mean to raise a question merely as to the ordér in which the evidence was introduced, of course, the point does not require very serious consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 481, 120 P. 624, 30 Okla. 365, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standifer-v-sullivan-okla-1911.