Stiefel v. Witherspoon

124 N.E. 507, 71 Ind. App. 192, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 183
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1919
DocketNo. 10,058
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 507 (Stiefel v. Witherspoon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stiefel v. Witherspoon, 124 N.E. 507, 71 Ind. App. 192, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 183 (Ind. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

McMahan, J.

— This is an action instituted by the appellee against appellants to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by reason of a breach of warranty in the sale of certain cattle alleged to have been diseased. The cause was tried by the court. There was a special finding of facts and conclusions of law.

The facts as found are in substance that on and prior to October 14, 1915, appellants were partners engaged in buying and selling stock; that on said date they sold seven head of yearling steers to appellee, and warranted them to be sound and free from all diseases except slight colds due to shipment. Appellee relied on said warranty and paid appellants $266.47 for the steers, which were of equal size and valúe, and, if they had been sound as warranted, would have been worth said sum.

On October 21, 1915, the appellants sold appellee nine yearling heifers, and warranted them to be sound and free from disease except a slight cold due to shipping; that appellee relied upon said warranty and purchased said heifers, paying therefor $272.22, the heifers being of equal size and value, and, if they had been sound and free from disease as warranted, would have been worth $272.22. At the time appellee [194]*194purchased said steers and heifers, he owned a farm and herd of twenty head of good marketable cattle, which were all healthy and free from disease, and then worth $650; that the appellee, believing said steers and heifers were free from contagious and infectious disease, turned said steers and heifers into the pasture with his twenty head of healthy cattle, where the same intermingled and were fed together. At the time when appellants sold said cattle to appellee, some of the steers and some of the heifers were affected with a contagious disease known as “hemorrhagic septicemia. ’ ’ On October 25,1915/ one of the heifers died, on appellee’s farm, of said disease. Appellants paid appellee $30.20 on account of the loss of said heifer. On October 28 another one of the heifers died of said disease; that if said heifer had been sound and healthy as warranted, it would have been worth $30.24. One of the steers died of said disease October 20. If it had been sound and healthy as warranted, it would have been worth $38.07. One of the heifers died July 9, 1916, the cause of her death not being shown by the evidence; that each of said cattle so purchased from appellants by appellee either had said disease at the time of the purchase, or contracted said disease from contact with the other cattle so purchased; that the said steers which did not die, having become infected with said disease, were at the time of said purchase worth only $114.21; that appellee paid appellants $228.42 for said steers which did not die; that said heifers so purchased from appellants, and which did not die of said disease, were at the time of the purchase, on [195]*195account of being affected with said disease, worth only $105.84; that appellee paid appellants $211.68 for said heifers which did not die; that, because of the mingling of said purchased cattle so affected with said contagious disease with appellee’s herd then on his farm, the entire herd became infected with said disease; that appellee, in an effort to cure said disease, employed a veterinary surgeon to treat said cattle, and spent extra time and labor both by himself and hired help in looking after and caring for said cattle; that, by reason of plaintiff’s herd of twenty cattle having contracted said disease, they depreciated in value from the sum of $650 to $325, said sum being their respective values before and after being infected with said disease.

By the sixth conclusion of law the court stated that the appellee was entitled to recover from appellants $613.36 as damages arising from and growing out of said breaches of warranty. The seventh conclusion is to the same effect. The other conclusions of law are nothing more than conclusions of fact, and were fully stated and covered by the special finding of facts, and require no further consideration.'

The errors assigned are: (1) That the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; (2) that the court erred in each of its conclusions of law; and (3) that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. The only errors assigned that require any consideration are those challenging the correctness of the conclusions of law, and the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial. The gist of appellant’s contentions is that the damages assessed and fixed by the court are not such.as the law authorizes in cases of this [196]*196kind. Appellants claim that the measure of damages ■ in cases of this kind is the difference between the value of the cattle in their diseased condition and their value if they had been as warranted; that the complaint does not allege facts, and that no facts are found authorizing the conclusion that damages should be allowed on account of the steers and heifers that were not sick at the time of the purchase, or for damages to appellee’s herd of twenty cattle.

Appellants argue that the probability of. the herd, of twenty cattle being infected was not referred to in the sale of the steers and heifers, that the damage to the herd was not such as naturally arises in the usual course of things, and that the possibility of infecting the herd was not referred to in connection with the .sale, and warranty.

■ The gist of the 'first paragraph of the complaint is that the appellant sold appellee the seven steers, and warranted them to be sound and free from disease; that appellee, relying upon said warranty, purchased •them; that said steers, when purchased by appellee, were not sound and free from disease, but were unsound and sick with a contagious disease from which one of them died two weeks later; that the remainder were, by reason of the diseased condition, worthless; that appellee at the time of said purchase was the ■ owner of a herd of cattle which were sound in health ■and free from disease, and which he was pasturing on his farm, which appellants then knew; that ap.pellee informed appellants at the time of said purchase that he expected and intended to turn said steers in with said other cattle, and that he had no other suitable place for them, all of which was known -to appellants when they sold the steers to appellee; [197]*197that appellee, not knowing that the steers were infected with a contagious disease, and relying upon the representations and warranty- of appellants, intermingled the steers with his herd of well cattle, and that the said herd contracted said disease from contact and association with said sick steers, and by -reason thereof became seriously sick, diseased and valueless. The second paragraph is the same as the first, except that it alleges a sale by appellants to appellee a few days later of seven head of yearling heifers. A supplemental complaint was afterwards filed alleging that, by reason of the sick and’ diseased condition of said steers and heifers, two of said heifers bought of appellants sickened and died; that another one had aborted and lost her calf; that several of the cows in his original herd lost their calves; and that said remaining steers and heifers and his original herd of said cattle were and still remained sick with, said disease and valueless.'

1. Appellants’ contentions are mainly based upon the idea that the measure of damages in a case of this kind is the difference between the amount paid for the cattle, and what their value would have been, if they had been in the condition as warranted.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 507, 71 Ind. App. 192, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiefel-v-witherspoon-indctapp-1919.