Teal v. Bilby

123 U.S. 572, 8 S. Ct. 239, 31 L. Ed. 263, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2198
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 123 U.S. 572 (Teal v. Bilby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teal v. Bilby, 123 U.S. 572, 8 S. Ct. 239, 31 L. Ed. 263, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2198 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

These are separate actions brought by the same plaintiffs against the same defendant in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western- District of Missouri.

The first was an action of replevin, under which the plaintiffs got possession of 1232 head of cattle, and the second was an action to recover damages for a failure on the part of defendant to fulfil a contract of agistment with regard to the same cattle. As the rights of the parties depended upon the same contract, and as the testimony in each case ivas pertinent in the other, the court very properly ordered their consolidation and trial together before the same jury. The testimony submitted to the jury on both sides of the controversy is embodied in a single bill of exceptions under the introductory phrase that each party offered testimony tending to prove such and such facts. This bill of exceptions is very voluminous, consisting of a great variety of evidence running through twenty-eight pages of printed matter, and to none of it does there appear to have been any objection offered by either party. The questions presented in .the record are exclusively upon the charge of the judge to the jury, on exceptions taken by the plaintiffs below, who are also plaintiffs here, and to the refusal of the court to grant such instructions as the plaintiffs’ counsel prayed for.

A verdict was rendered for the defendant, holding that he was entitled to the return of the property replevied from him, or to the sum of $23,835.12, which was found by the jury to be the value of his interest in the property. In regard to the other suit the verdict of the jury was simply for the defendant. *574 Judgments were rendered in accordance with these verdicts, to which the present writs of error are prosecuted.

It seems from the evidence that the plaintiffs, under the partnership style of J. Teal & Company, were owners of about 3000 head of cattle, which they had driven across the plains from Oregon to a shipping point on the ITnion Pacific Railroad, called Rock Creek Station, in Wyoming Territory. These cattle were shipped from this point to Council Bluffs, in the State of Iowa, between the 14th day of October and the 10th day of November, 18S0. On the 3d day of November of that year Teal & Company entered into a written contract with John S. Bilby, of Nodaway County, Missouri, by which Bilby agreed to keep, feed, and care for 1500 of these cattle until December 1, 1881. By this instrument he agreed that he would so feed and care for them that they would increase in weight 450 pounds each, on an average, for which the plaintiffs were to pay him, on their delivery to them, at the rate of five cents per pound for such increase.

It also appears that before the terms of this agreement were decided upon one lot of about 200 cattle had arrived at Council Bluffs, and had been seen by Bilby. It was a part of the agreement that the remainder, as they arrived, should be average lots with those that Bilby had seen, of which fact Mr. Bass, of the firm of Rosenbaum, Bass & Co., who resided at Council Bluffs, was to be the judge. The expense of transporting the cattle to Dawsonville, Missouri, where Mr. Bilby resided, was to be paid by plaintiffs; but if Mr. Bilby should pay any of that expense, he was to be repaid with ten per cent interest upon his money on final settlement.

There is also evidence to show that Mr. Bilby was a man ol means, owning extensive lands in the neighborhood of Dawson ville, and accustomed to the business' of feeding cattle; and the agreement was that the cattle should be weighed at .Dawsonville, or the nearest scales thereto, upon their arrival, undfer circumstances minutely provided for, and that Bilby contracted “ to take the cattle and winter them well on hay, straw and stalk fields until grass comes ; to be kept in enclosed pastures on good grass until the 15th of August, 1881, after *575 which date, on each and every day, they shall be fed all the corn they will eat until delivered to J. Teal & Company; ” and that the cattle were to be re-delivered to the plaintiff between the 15th day of October and the 1st day of December, 1881, by giving ten days’ notice. Bilby was also t'o be responsible for all cattle lost, strayed, or stolen, and for any dying through his neglect or carelessness; but if any died through causes which were unavoidable, the loss of such cattle was to be borne by Teal & Company, and the loss of the feed by Bilby.

Another provision to which some importance is attached is in the following language': “If any steers, die John S. Bilby shall preserve the hides as evidence of death, and the ears if there are any ear-marks.”

It is agreed that 268 of these cattle were not recovered by plaintiffs under the writ of replevin, nor were they tendered by Bilby under the tender which he sets up in his answer; nor did the weight of the cattle at the time Bilby was ready to deliver them, or offered to deliver them, or at the time they were replevied, come up to that which was required to make the increase of 450 pounds each on an average. It is on the ground of this failure to bring the cattle up to the contract weight,' alleging that it was .the fault of Bilby in not giving sufficient care and attention to them, as well as want of proper feed according to the contract, by reason of which a part of the 268 died and were lost, that, the plaintiffs assume that they have a right to recover possession of the property without making any compensation to Bilby for his services.

A large amount of testimony was submitted to the jury on both sides with regard to this question of proper feeding, care, and attention, without objection apparently by either party, as well as instructions asked of the court to the jury upon these subjects, and the consequences of the supposed failure on the part of Bilby to comply with his contract. The exceptions taken to the general charge of the judge are also numerous, and many of them too unimportant to receive special notice at our hands.

A principal question, and the most important one in the *576 case, arises out of the fact that Bilby gave testimony of a subsequent oral agreement changing very materially the terms of the written contract. The bill of exceptions which relates to the evidence introduced on this subject reads as follows :

“ The defendant introduced evidence tending to show that the appearance of the cattle when they were delivered to him by the plaintiffs would not disclose the treatment they had received previously, and that it required time to develop the evil effects of such treatment; that although the cattle might appear to be very thin and weak, yet it would not be apparent that they were diseased; on the contrary, experienced cattle men might well suppose that they would, upon the treatment provided for in the contract, soon recover their flesh and strength.

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Bluebook (online)
123 U.S. 572, 8 S. Ct. 239, 31 L. Ed. 263, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teal-v-bilby-scotus-1887.