Thummel v. Krewson

764 S.W.2d 700, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1989 WL 6065
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1989
Docket15477
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 764 S.W.2d 700 (Thummel v. Krewson) 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
Thummel v. Krewson, 764 S.W.2d 700, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1989 WL 6065 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff Charles Thummel 1 brought this action against defendant Terry Krewson for defendant’s allegedly improper failure to return to plaintiff cattle owned by plaintiff and placed by him in defendant’s care *702 for feeding and growth. Count I of the petition dealt with the failure of the defendant to return 649 head of cattle on plaintiff’s demand. Count II was an alternate statement of the claim contained in Count I and was abandoned. Count III dealt with the failure of defendant to return 11 Charoláis bulls on plaintiffs demand.

The case was tried to a jury and both sides introduced evidence. At the close of all the evidence, the trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion to direct a verdict in favor of plaintiff on the issue of liability on Count I, and that count was submitted on the issue of damages only. Count III was submitted on both the issues of liability and damages. The jury awarded plaintiff $190,700 on Count I and $6,600 on Count III. Defendant appeals.

In general, defendant’s points on appeal are that the trial court erred (1) in directing a verdict for plaintiff on the issue of liability on Count I; (2) in denying defendant leave to amend its answer so as to plead, as a defense to Count I, defendant's exercise of ordinary care with respect to the cattle; and (3) in giving Instruction 11 dealing with the measure of damages on Count III. Other points raised by defendant need not be considered.

Point I and Point II, both dealing with Count I, will be considered together. For the reasons which follow, this court holds that both points are meritorious.

Plaintiff Thummel is a cattleman who lives in Kansas. Defendant Krewson owns and operates a livestock auction in Licking, Missouri. Defendant also runs cattle of his own and fattens cattle for other owners on several tracts of land, some owned and some leased by defendant.

In December 1982, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement, primarily unwritten, whereby cattle owned by plaintiff, selected and purchased by plaintiff’s agent at defendant's auction, would be delivered to defendant for agistment. Defendant was to receive 40 cents for each pound each animal gained while under his care. Although the parties made a memorandum of a portion of the agreement, neither side claims that all the terms of the agreement were contained in it.

The memorandum made no mention of who would bear the loss in the event of injury or death of the animals. Plaintiff testified that defendant orally agreed to “take care of the death loss.” Defendant testified that he made no such agreement and that, when the oral arrangements were made, “we had no conversation about the death loss.”

Beginning in December 1982 and continuing into February 1984, plaintiff delivered to defendant, pursuant to the agreement, 3,576 head of cattle. The parties agree that by April 26, 1984, defendant had redelivered to plaintiff 2,927 head. Defendant's failure to return 649 head was the basis for plaintiff’s claim under Count I.

On April 26, 1984, plaintiff requested delivery of a certain number of cattle, and when they were rounded up there was a “shortfall” of 134 head. Further inspection disclosed that 649 head were missing. Defendant told plaintiff that the loss was due to death of the cattle from the diseases of “red nose” and “hemophlous” (haemo-philus?).

Plaintiff’s evidence showed that the 2,927 head which were returned to plaintiff had an average gain of 82.57 pounds while they were in defendant’s possession. Plaintiff’s evidence showed that plaintiff had paid defendant $111,504.80 but had owed defendant, with respect to the 2,927 head returned to plaintiff, only $96,672.96, resulting in an overpayment by plaintiff of $14,831.84. Plaintiff’s attorney asked the jury, in his final argument, to award plaintiff $14,831.84 plus the value of 649 head, the missing cattle, which he estimated to be $175,958.86.

The record does not indicate when the action was filed. The trial took place in October 1987. The amended petition, on which the action was tried, was filed in April 1987.

Count I alleged the making of the agistment agreement, the “40 cents per pound of gain” provision, plaintiff’s delivery of 3,576 head to defendant, defendant’s rede *703 livery of 2,927 head, and the failure of defendant to account to plaintiff for 649 head upon plaintiffs demand therefor. It also pleaded the over-payment of $14,-831.84. Count I made no mention of death loss or of any agreement concerning responsibility for death loss. Significantly paragraph 16 of Count I alleged that defendant’s refusal to return the 649 head and to compensate plaintiff “for said cattle, plus gain and plus the [overpayment], constitutes a willful, wanton, malicious and wrongful act performed intentionally and without just cause or excuse by defendant and therefore [plaintiff is] entitled to punitive damages in the sum of $500,000.” The prayer of Count I was for $275,000 actual damages and $500,000 punitive damages.

Although defendant’s answer admitted some of the allegations of Count I, defendant denied the allegations of paragraph 16. Another allegation of the answer, pleaded in response to plaintiff’s claim that defendant “failed to account” for the missing 649 head, was the following: “Defendant has heretofore advised plaintiff that 649 head of plaintiff’s cattle had cecum (sic) to he-mophlous (sic) and ‘red nose’ and thereby died.”

On the morning of the trial plaintiff dismissed his “claim for punitive damages.” Prior to the impanelment of the jury the defendant requested leave to amend his answer by interlineation to state, in response to Count I, “the cattle died through no negligence on the part of defendant.” The court denied that request.

In his opening statement, plaintiff’s counsel told the jury that defendant had stated to plaintiff, with respect to the 649 missing head, “they all died.” Defendant, called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified to having an “extraordinary death loss” with respect to plaintiff’s cattle. He said that hundreds of plaintiff’s cattle died from red nose and “the bad cold winter.” Defendant testified that the “normal death rate” for pasturing cattle such as plaintiff’s was “6 to 10 percent.”

Plaintiff, on direct examination by his counsel, testified that defendant agreed to bear the death loss and that defendant told the plaintiff that 649 head had died.

Billy Jackson, an employee of defendant who was called as a witness for plaintiff, testified that he did not know how many of plaintiff’s cattle died, that “we had a lot of sickness and red nose,” that on one day “we hauled off five or six carcasses,” that at least one carcass a day was hauled away, that the veterinarian had been out there to treat the sick cattle, and that “we tried to doctor them ourselves and gave them shots and medicine.”

On cross-examination of the defendant during the presentation of defendant’s evidence, plaintiff’s counsel elicited testimony that defendant “knew we had a bad death loss,” that the cattle Dr. Keeney looked at were plaintiff’s cattle, that there was no sickness in other cattle which were kept by defendant in a separate field and which were “raised” rather than brought in from a sales auction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
764 S.W.2d 700, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1989 WL 6065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thummel-v-krewson-moctapp-1989.