Wiggins v. Jackson

1912 OK 85, 121 P. 662, 31 Okla. 292, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 9, 1912
Docket1267
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1912 OK 85 (Wiggins v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. Jackson, 1912 OK 85, 121 P. 662, 31 Okla. 292, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 52 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

Plaintiff in error, hereinafter designated plaintiff, filed originally this suit in replevin before the admission o-f the state in the United States District Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory at Ardmore, in which he sought to re-plevy certain personal property described in his petition, to which he claimed the title by virtue of a certain chattel mortgage, executed by defendant in error, hereinafter designated defendant, to secure the payment of one certain promissory note for the sum of $388.85, dated the 7th day of February, 1907, payable to plaintiff and executed by defendant, which plaintiff alleges is past due and unpaid.

Defendant, by his amended answer, admits the execution of the note and mortgage mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and alleges that the consideration for which said note was executed was: First, $50 worth of supplies, to be furnished by plaintiff to him, and that same, except in the amount of $9'.55 worth had never been furnished by plaintiff or received by defendant, and be tendered into court the sum of $9.55, as payment for the supplies received; second, $35 in money, advanced by plaintiff to him, on which he alleges plaintiff charged a usurious rate of interest, rendering the same void under the statute in force in the Ipdian Territory at the time of the execution of the note and mortgage; and, third, that $275 represented by the note was for the purchase price of a pair of horses, sold by plaintiff to de~ feñdant. He alleges that plaintiff represented to him that the two horses, the purchase price of which formed a part of the consideration of the note, were sound and serviceable; that he stated to plaintiff that said horses were required by him for the purpose ■of cultivating a crop of 70 acres during the year 1907; and that plaintiff guaranteed them to be sound and in good health and con *294 dition and fully able to do and perform the services required. He then alleges that one of the said horses was, at the time of the sale, afflicted with the heaves and other diseases, from which he shortly thereafter died; and that the other horse, although still alive, is and was at that time diseased and crippled in the shoulders and otherwise unfit to work or to perform the services for which defendant bought him; that he (defendant) has been at all times ready and willing and offers to return said horse, which he alleges to be without value. He thereupon makes the- following allegations :

“Third. Defendant says that, during the year 1907, he rented 70 acres of land to be cultivated by him in crops of corn and cotton; that on account of the diseased condition of the horses set forth herein, and after due diligence on the part of this defendant, he was able to cultivate but 40 acres of said land, although under his rental contract he was compelled to pay rent on the 70 acres; that upon 25 acres of cotton he cultivated, raised, gathered, and marketed nine bales of cotton, of the market value of $50 each. He alleges and says that the 30 acres of land, uncultivated for the reasons set out hereinbefore, were of equal quality to that he did cultivate; and that he verily believes that he would have raised thereon at least ten bales of cotton; that he was compelled to pay rental upon the said 30 acres of land in the sum of $75; and that, had he been able to cultivate the 30 acres for cotton, same would have netted him at least the sum of $5 per acre, or a sum of $150; defendant therefore says that he was damaged by this plaintiff by his false and fraudulent acts and representations, and by the items set forth above, in the sum of $225; and that he verily believes that plaintiff should take nothing by his action, but that he should recover over and against the plaintiff judgment in the sum of $225 as damages for the failure of the said plaintiff to do and perform what he in law and equity should have done.”

He then prays that plaintiff take nothing by his action, but that he have and recover from plaintiff the sum of $225 as his damages, and that he have judgment for his costs expended.

To this answer, plaintiff filed a general and special demurrer. The special demurrer is directed against the foregoing paragraph of the answer. The court overruled the demurrers and the cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor *295 of defendant for the sum of $75. Defendant was permitted, over .objection of plaintiff,, to introduce evidence tending to show that he had leased, for the year 1907; 70 acres of land, to be cultivated by him in crops of corn and cotton, as alleged in the third paragraph of his amended answer, for which he was to pay and did pay the sum of $2.50 per acre; and that, on account of the diseased and worthless condition of said horses, he was unable to cultivate 30 acres of the land; and that, had he been able to cultivate it in cotton as he had other portions of the land, he would have raised sufficient crops thereon to have realized a profit of $5 per acre on the 30 acres he was unable to cultivate. Upon this issue, the court gave the following instruction;

“Believing from preponderance of the evidence these facts that I have just stated to you — that is, that the guarantee was-given as alleged and that the horses were diseased as alleged— If you further believe that the plaintiff guaranteed them to cultivate 70 acres of land, and that he had to let 30 acres lay out uncultivated; and that he made known to the plaintiff at the time lie wanted a team that would cultivate 70 acres of land, and the plaintiff guaranteed this to the defendant; and that they would -cultivate it — were able to do it — able to cultivate 70 acres of land; ■and that the horses could not do this by reason of their diseased and unsound condition; further that the defendant had to pay '$2.50 per acre for the 30 acres he was unable to cultivate by reason of the premises I have stated, then, in that respect, you will find for the defendant such damages for the 30 acres at $2.50 per acre as you may think he expended for rental of that land which was under the circumstances stated.”

Defendant’s right in a replevin action to set up his counterclaim for damages and recover judgment therefor in a sum in excess of the amount necessary to liquidate or offset his note, has not been questioned either in the trial court or in this court, and both parties have proceeded upon the theory that defendant may recover in this proceeding judgment for such damages caused by the breach of warranty as he may be entitled to; and we shall dispose of the case upon that theory, without deciding the correctness of it, if its correctness had been timely challenged.

The overruling of the special demurrer to the third paragraph of defendant’s answer, the admission .of testimony tending *296 to establish the profits defendant would have realized from the cultivation and growing of the crops on the land he was unable to cultivate, and the giving of the foregoing instruction, constitute the principal assignments of error urged for reversal of the cause, and they present so nearly the same question that it will not be necessary to consider them separately.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 85, 121 P. 662, 31 Okla. 292, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-jackson-okla-1912.