Underhill v. Motes

146 P.2d 374, 158 Kan. 173, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 4, 1944
DocketNo. 35,897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 P.2d 374 (Underhill v. Motes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underhill v. Motes, 146 P.2d 374, 158 Kan. 173, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 80 (kan 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This was an action to recover damages for loss of cows due to alleged poisoning and to recover the first half of a pasture rental payment made by plaintiffs to defendants. The defendants appeal.

The appeal is from (1) an order granting a new trial; (2) an order overruling a demurrer of one of the defendants to plaintiff’s evidence; and (3) a ruling setting aside a previous order sustaining the demurrer of the other defendant to plaintiffs’ evidence.

Appellees and appellants are farmers. L. R. Underhill and Paul Underhill, appellees, are brothers associated in a farming enterprise. They had leased sixty acres of pasture land from the appellant, Susie [174]*174Lacoe Motes. The appellant, Buard Motes, is a son of the lessor and Buard supervised the farming operations. Adjacent to the pasture appellants had an alfalfa field. It was appellees’ contention Susie Lacoe Motes had furnished poison to kill grasshoppers which were infesting the alfalfa and that appellees’ cows ate some of the poison near the pasture fence which separated the pasture from the alfalfa field and that the cows died as a result thereof. Appellant Susie Lacoe Motes filed an answer and cross petition in which she denied liability for loss of the. stock and also denied liability to appellees for a return of the first half of the rent she had received for the pasture. She sought to recover the balance or last half of the rent.

We shall first consider appellants’ contention the trial court erred in granting a new trial. Separate general verdicts were returned in favor of appellants. The jury also made certain special findings of fact. The trial court was dissatisfied with the special findings and the general verdicts. The court so stated. It will serve no useful purpose to discuss the particular special findings. It is sufficient to say the special answers were not frank. They disclosed prejudice and some of them were directly contrary to the evidence. Furthermore, aside from the special findings, the general verdicts were inconsistent with each other and could not stand. A demurrer of the appellant, Susie Lacoe Motes, had been sustained to appellees’ evidence. She therefore remained in the case only on her cross petition to recover the last half of the rental. Although the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the appellant, Buard Motes, which absolved him of liability for damages, the jury did not return a verdict in favor of Susie Lacoe Motes for any money judgment she sought. Manifestly, if neither, of the appellants were liable in damages the jury should have returned a verdict in favor of Susie Lacoe Motes for the balance of the rental due. The record also discloses the court was dissatisfied with the trial in other respects. When a trial court is dissatisfied with a verdict it should set aside the verdict. (Johnston v. Lanter, 92 Kan. 257, 139 Pac. 1031; Blake v. National Mutual Casualty Co., 155 Kan. 201, 124 P. 2d 478.) It is, of course, well settled that in order to permit a verdict to stand it must have the independent approval of the trial court. (Motor Equipment Co. v. McLaughlin, 156 Kan. 258, 133 P. 2d 149.)

Appellants contend that when a trial court grants a new trial and states the reasons therefor, which are not good, the ruling will be [175]*175reversed. We have referred only to reasons stated which are unquestionably sound and sufficient. In order to sustain the ruling of the trial court we need, therefore, not consider other reasons discussed by the trial court, assuming they were insufficient.

Appellants concede the granting of a new trial generally had the effect of setting aside the former order sustaining the demurrer of Susie Lacoe Motes. They argue their demurrers should have been sustained for the reason appellees’ evidence failed to establish a cause of action against either of them for damages.

Appellees called Susie Lacoe Motes as their own witness. She, in substance, testified:

She leased the sixty-acre pasture to appellees for the pasture season beginning May 1, 1941, and ending November 1, 1941; the land south of the pasture on which the alfalfa was located was farmed in cooperation with her son, Buard; the latter supervised the farm; he received one-half of the crops and she received the other half; they seeded nine acres of alfalfa in the spring of 1941 under the Agriculture Conservation Act; under that act it seemed necessary to protect the alfalfa from grasshoppers; they got the grasshopper poison in 1940 from the Farm Bureau and they used it that season; they used it according to instructions; she obtained and receipted for the poison; Buard did the spreading; she knew it wasn’t all used in 1940; they decided to keep what was left over in 1940; shé knew the rest was kept over for use in 1941.

It is conceded Buard Motes in July, 1941, scattered the poison which was left over from 1940 and that he scattered it prior to July 20. In his own defense he testified he did not scatter it in chunks and that it was not scattered near enough to the pasture fence to permit the cows in the pasture to reach it through the fence. On demurrer we are, of course, concerned only with testimony offered on behalf of appellees. Those witnesses, in substance, further testified:

Some of the poison was found in chunks and sufficiently near the fence to enable cows in the pasture to reach it; appellees had placed additional cows in the pasture on July 20, 1941; one of those cows died July 24 and three of them died July 25; a veterinarian was called in the forenoon of July 24; he examined one of the cows and concluded she was ill from arsenic poisoning; he returned that afternoon and the cow had died; from the symptoms of her illness he was suspicious of grasshopper poison and directed appellees to make a [176]*176search for it; he performed an autopsy on the cow, which confirmed his previous suspicion; the other cows that died had the same symptoms; he was very familiar with the effects of grasshopper poison, having had much experience with it in the treatment of cattle; numerous cattle had died from it in that country; the other three cows had the same symptoms as the cow on which he performed the autopsy; it was his opinion the cows had all died from a killing dose of arsenic which was contained in the grasshopper poison; the arsenic is usually mixed with bran, sawdust and molasses.

Appellees’ testimony further, in substance, disclosed:

That any person obtaining grasshopper poison from the Farm Bureau was required to sign a receipt in which such person agreed to use the grasshopper bait in the manner approved in the instructions attached to the sacks of poison bait and that the person receipting therefor agreed to assume full responsibility for its use; Susie Lacoe Motes receipted for the poison; the receipt also provided that the bait remained the property of the U. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P.2d 374, 158 Kan. 173, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underhill-v-motes-kan-1944.