United States v. Price

95 F.2d 687, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4790
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 1938
DocketNo. 8446
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 F.2d 687 (United States v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Price, 95 F.2d 687, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4790 (5th Cir. 1938).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Appellees are: (1) Shippers and owners of Texas cattle transported from tick infested areas in Texas to clean areas in Oklahoma, after having been dipped under the supervision of, and certified for interstate shipment by, inspectors of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture; (2) owners of native, or clean, cattle and pastures in tick free areas, which were quarantined by Oklahoma authorities as the result of the shipping in of the aforesaid Texas cattle.

They brought this suit for damages alleged to have been sustained as the result of the negligence of the Bureau in connection with the dipping and certification of the cattle for shipment.

The Act of Congress1 authorizing the suit, provided:

“Henry Price * * * J. L. Kieth, W. T. Brummett; Price and Florence, a co-partnership composed of Henry Price and Buster Florence * * * and estate of G. J. Kieth, their heirs, legal representatives, executors, administrators, and assigns, and statutes of limitations being waived, are hereby authorized to enter suit, * * * for the amount alleged to be due to said claimants from the United States by reason of the alleged neglect of the inspectors of the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, in certifying as clean of splenetic fever ticks, cattle shipped from Texas to Oklahoma in the year 1919.

“Sec. 2. * * * and said court shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine said suit and to enter a judgment or decree for the amount of such damages and costs, if any, as shall be found due from the United States to the said claimants by reason of the alleged negligence and erroneous certification, upon the same principles and under the same measures of liability as in like cases between private parties, and the Government hereby waives its immunity from suit.”

The negligence claimed was: (1) In permitting one dipping in Beaumont oil, instead of the repeated dipping, in an arsenical solution, as then required by the Department regulations; (2) in not inspecting the particular oil to determine its strength and efficacy as an eradicator of ticks; (3) in issuing certificates stating “that the cattle ’were clean and free of infection from splenetic or Texas fever,” and authorizing their shipment to points in Oklahoma which were in clean territory, without a compliance with the requirements of- the Bureau of Animal Industry relative to such ¡shipments.

The defenses were: (1) That though the United States had, by the permissive act, waived its immunity from suit, it had done this and nothing more. It had not given or created a cause of action nor assumed a liability not already existing; and since the inspectors, in supervising the dipping of, and in inspecting the cattle for, shipment were merely performing a statutory duty for the benefit not of the plaintiff, or of any other particular persons, but of the whole people, neither the United States nor its inspectors would be liable to plaintiffs for the negligent performance of, or the failure to perform, that duty; -(2) if the terms of the act could be construed as not only waiving immunity from suit, but as conferring a right of action for the negligence of the inspectors of the Bureau in certifying the cattle for shipment, to the same extent and upon the same principles as the inspectors, and the concerns they worked for, would have been liable if the certification for shipment had been undertaken as a private enterprise, and for the benefit not of the public generally, but of particular shippers, there could be no liability here, because the inspectors, in certifying the cattle after they had been dipped in oil were merely, as they were compelled to do, following a Department rule, which gave the shippers the option to elect dipping in oil, and shipment in 48 hours, if they preferred this method over the arsenical dip, and the longer delay before shipment; (3) the act limiting the inquiry to the alleged neglect of the inspectors in certifying the cat-tie as clean of splenetic fever, and the petition alleging that the inspectors negligently so certified, the claim must fail for [689]*689want of proof of the negligence alleged, for not only was there no evidence that the inspectors negligently certified the cattle as clean of splenetic fever, but it was affirmatively shown, that in strict accordance with the rules and practices of the Bureau, the cattle were not certified as clean at all but the certificates merely stated the fact of the dipping, the number of times and the solution in which they were dipped. Whatever, therefore, might have been said under a differently worded statute with regard to whether the use of Beaumont oil and the certificate which followed the use was negligence, plaintiffs cannot make that claim here as a basis for recovery, for the act which alone authorizes their suit limits their recovery to the alleged negligence of the' inspectors of the Bureau of Animal Industry “in certifying as clean of splenetic fever ticks cattle shipped from Texas to Oklahoma in the year 1919”; (4) finally, the limitations in its terms disregarded, and the act construed as imposing on the United States the same liability for negligence private concerns would have been under if they had, in the interest and for the benefit of the particular shippers, undertaken the supervision of the dipping, and the certification of the cattle for shipment, the record is completely wanting in proof that either dipping or certification was attended with, or was the result of, negligence.

No evidence whatever was offered as to the nature and contents of the particular dip, except that it was Beaumont, or crude oil furnished by the shipper. Plaintiffs offered Dr. Grafke, as a witness. He had worked for the Bureau of Animal Industry 20 years, from 1907 to 1927. From 1914 to 1924 he was inspector of the Bureau in Texas,'in charge of the field work for tick eradication, maintaining his office in Fort Worth, where he was supervisor in charge of the various branches of the Bureau at Fort Worth. Because he testified at length, and there was no contradiction of his testimony, it will be well to comprehensively summarize it.

At the time the cattle in question were dipped in crude oil at the Fort Worth yards, he had had long experience with such dipping, and neither he, nor any other agents of the Bureau, suspected or had reason to suspect, the results to be obtained from it. As far as he and his associates, and all the other officers of the Bureau knew, it was highly effective in killing ticks, and they were satisfied with it as a dip. He does not recall any ill results up to that time, like failure to kill ticks from the use of the oil dip, in the 7 or 8 years the government had been using it. At the time, therefore, that these cattle were dipped, there was a prevalent belief in which he shared, based upon the fact that crude oil had been for a long time effectively used in killing ticks, that it was effective as a dip.

The necessary and usual process as to cattle dipped in oil and held for 48 hours was for a government inspector to make a check inspection of the herd, to see, so far as he could from a casual inspection, that they were all dipped and apparently free from ticks. Such inspection could only be made for full grown ticks, for, after an oil dipping, the hair of the cattle would be matted, with an ugly, shiny appearance, making it impossible, for several days, to part it/ and find any small ticks in the early stages of development.

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Related

Kuhnert v. United States
127 F.2d 824 (Eighth Circuit, 1942)
Price v. United States
34 F. Supp. 49 (N.D. Texas, 1940)
Russell & Tucker v. United States
34 F. Supp. 73 (N.D. Texas, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
95 F.2d 687, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-price-ca5-1938.