Sturgeon v. Hanson

245 N.W. 481, 62 N.D. 720, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 237
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1932
DocketFile No. 6096.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 481 (Sturgeon v. Hanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturgeon v. Hanson, 245 N.W. 481, 62 N.D. 720, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 237 (N.D. 1932).

Opinion

*723 Birdzell, J.

In 1930 the defendant and appellant, Ole Hanson, was a dealer in sheep and resided at Bowman, North Dakota. The defendant C. B. Hanson, a resident of Dickinson, was a broker who sold sheep for others. The plaintiff, Sturgeon, was an attorney at law, imacticing at Dickinson, and was also interested in farming and stock raising. C. B. Hanson, pursuant to authority from the defendant and appellant, entered into an agreement, dated September 6, 1930, to sell to Sturgeon 250 white-faced yearling ewes at $6.00 per head for delivery, f. o. b. cars at Belfield, on September 17, 1930. The contract was executed in duplicate and carried the signature of O. B. Hanson as seller, as well as that of Ole Hanson by O. B. TIanson. At the time the contract was made and delivered there was written into it the following expression as a part of the description: “These are the Terry yearlings.” On September 17th, Sturgeon, having received no previous notice that they would not be delivered, went to Belfield for the purpose of receiving the sheep, but they were not delivered. He also caused to be present from points some distance away two farmers with whom lie had made arrangements for the future care of the animals. He communicated with Ole Hanson by telephone and learned that, on account of the poor condition of the so-called Terry yearlings, Hanson did not care to ship them, and he agreed to get other good yearlings at the same price and ship them the following week. Again the defendant failed to ship the sheep and again the plaintiff made futile preparations to receive them. Later, to fulfill his requirements, the plaintiff purchased 250-ewes of the character described in the contract from another, being required to pay $6.50 per head. He brought the instant action against both Ole Hanson and O. B. Hanson to recover his damages. The latter defaulted. At the conclusion of the trial, the plaintiff moved for an instructed verdict against the answering defendant. The motion was granted. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, which motion was denied. The instant appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying the defendant's motion.

The first contention of the appellant is that the -district court erred in permitting C. B. Hanson to be called for cross-examination. There is no merit in this contention. The statute §-7870, Comp. Laws of 1913, permits a party to-the record of any civil action or proceeding *724 to be examined upon the trial as if under cross-examination at tbe instance of the adverse part}. O. B. Ilanson was a party to the record and a person against whom the plaintiff had a prima facie right to' obtain a judgment. It is a matter of no consequence, so far as the exercise of the statutory right is concerned, that this defendant was in default, or that during his examination it appeared he was not as reluctant to impart information and disclose the truth as he might have been if he had been disposed to resist the plaintiff’s claim. The record shows, too, that the defendant later called C. B. Hanson as a witness; also, that there is no real controversy concerning any fact which the testimonjr of O. B. Hanson tends to prove and that the defendant was not prejudiced by the manner in which his testimony was elicited.

It is next contended that error was committed in permitting testimony over the appellant’s objection concerning the descriptive words in the contract, “These are the Terry yearlings.” It was the plaintiff’s contention that these words were inserted by C. B. Hanson at the time of the execution and delivery ■ of the contract, not with the view of binding him to the purchase of any particular ewes or of ewes taken from the particular band of sheep, otherwise spoken of as the Cunning•ham sheep, but that they were used as a direction to Ole Hanson. If any error was committed in this connection, it clearly appears that it could not possibly have been prejudicial, for Ole Hanson did not attempt to comply with the contract by shipping the Tferry or Cunningham ewes. On the contrary, he declined to ship them- because of their inferior quality and agreed to ship others, which he likewise failed to ship.

The testimony of Ole'Hanson, when considered as a whole, shows that he did not construe the contract as binding the plaintiff to take the Cunningham ewes as the “Terry yearlings” in their inferior condition and as -not necessarily relating to this particular band of sheep. According to the record and the appellant’s own testimony, the plaintiff called him by long distance telephone and inquired as to the delay in delivery of the Terry yearlings, to which the defendant replied that on account of their inferior condition he could and would rather furnish other yearlings that would be better at the same price, and agreed to deliver them in a week or ten days at Belfield, North Dakota. Fur *725 thermore, the term “Terry yearlings” in the circumstances existing at the execution of the contract was ambiguous, since it might have meant either the Cunningham sheep or any other sheep answering the 'description from the vicinity of Terry. The plaintiff had a right to show that the description was not limited to the particular sheep. The defendant’s testimony shows, not only that he was not content to supplj the Cunningham sheep in fulfillment of the contract, but that . with a little indulgence as to time he could satisfy the contract by obtaining ■other sheep in that locality. - ••

It is next contended that the judgment includes elements of damages which are not recoverable. By testimony on this subject the plaintiff ■established the value of the time which he lost, together with the expense incurred in attendance at the place where 'the sheep were to have been delivered and expenses incurred in finding sheep to take the place of those not delivered and the additional cost. The appellant concedes that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the difference between the contract price and the price the plaintiff had to pay to obtain other sheep answering the description of the contract, but claims that the other elements are too remote. There is merit as to some items of expense which were included, but, as we have determined to reduce the judgment sufficiently to exclude any questionable items, it is unnecessary to enter into any extended discussion. Clearly, the plaintiff can recover the reasonable expenses incurred by him in reliance upon the defendant’s undertaking to deliver sheep at a specified time. One contemplating a delivery of livestock should expect that reasonable preparations would be made by the purchaser to receive them at the time and place of the contemplated delivery.

The appellant argues that, instead of directing a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, a verdict should have been directed in favor of the defendant, for the reason that the suit is not brought for the breach of the original contract but is an action for damages based upon the substituted oral agreement, which, it is said, is not enforceable on account of the statute of frauds. The defendant made no motion for a directed verdict, but we may properly assume, however, that he is nevertheless entitled to predicate error on the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff as involving the enforcement of a contract within the statute of frauds. The complaint shows that the action is not predicated upon *726

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 481, 62 N.D. 720, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturgeon-v-hanson-nd-1932.