Court Opinion

ID: 8655002
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:15:01.874452+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:36.718189
License: Public Domain

STEAUP, J.
1. This is an action brought by respondent against appellant for the conversion of sheep. Tbe court found that tbe appellant, at tbe county of Bannock, in tbe state of Idaho, converted 853 sheep, tbe property of respondent, and entered judgment in bis favor for their value. Tbe first assignment of error relates to tbe refusal of tbe court to strike *339the testimony of several witnesses who testified to the value of the sheep. The direct examination showed that the witnesses were sheep men, and for years had been in the sheep business; they testified that they knew the market value of sheep in Utah and Idaho at the time of the conversion; some of them knew and were acquainted with the sheep in question; and some of them also testified that the market value of the sheep in Utah and Idaho was determined by the market reports and prices as made and obtained at the river, and in Chicago. On cross-examination these witnesses testified that they did not know of any sales having been made at Soda Springs, at or about the time in question, and some of them, that they also knew the value of the sheep by inquiring as to their value at that time. A motion was made by appellant to have the testimony of these witnesses stricken, because of their incompetency to testify to the market value. The motion was properly overruled.
2. It is further claimed by the appellant that the evidence was not sufficient to support the finding that the sheep, alleged to have been converted by it, were the property of respondent; but, to the contrary, it is asserted by it that the evidence shows that the sheep were the property of Clark and Naylor, who had given appellant a chattel mortgage, by virtue of which appellant seized and sold the sheep. The undisputed evidence shows that in October, 1901, J. M. Jenson and Berham Hunsaker, at Brigham City, Utah, were the owners of 8,000 sheep, then in Box Elder county, Utah, which were leased by them to Clark and Naylor, and to Nay-lor’s father and brothers. Clark and Naylor received, as some of the witnesses say, 4,000, others about 3,500 of the sheep, and the remainder were taken by Naylor’s father and brothers. The sheep thus were divided into two herds, and were ranged separately. In the summer of 1902 Naylor’s father and brothers returned to Hunsaker the sheep received by them, and Hunsaker from thence on ceased to have any further interest in the leased sheep. At about the same time Jenson sold all his interest in and to the leased sheep to respondent Bich. The sheep delivered to Clark and Naylor *340were ranged by them the following season in Box Elder county, except about 890 head,- which were taken by them to Tooele county. It is claimed by the apjoellant that at that time, Clark and Naylor, at the county of Tooele, had about 900 sheep of their own, whilst it is claimed by the respondent, that the sheep so claimed by Clark and Naylor were the property of Wilson and Sherman, also leased to Clark and Naylor. In the spring of 1902 Clark and Naylor drove- the leased sheep ranged by them in -Box Elder county, the sheep taken to Tooele county, the Wilson and Sherman sheep or their own sheep, to East Canyon, Srunmit county, where they were all mixed; and, as some of the witnesses say, intentionally, on the part of Clark and Naylor. In the fall of 1902 all the sheep were taken to Skull Valley for winter. Up to this time Clark and Naylor had lost a good many sheep by death, and otherwise. In October, 1902, Clark and Nay-lor borrowed from appellant $2,500, for which they gave their note secured by chattel mortgage on 2,200 head of sheep branded “W” and “C,” and claimed to be owned by them. On January I, 1903, Clark and Naylor borrowed from appellant an additional $775, for which they gave their note secured by mortgage on 500 head of ewes, and upon all of the sheep claimed to be owned by them, not included in the prior mortgage. In the spring of 1903 about 500 head of sheep were taken from the herd without reference to the mortgages or the lease, and were left in Salt Lake county in the custody of Hat Cochrane, and, as some of the evidence tends to show, for Wilson and Sherman. The balance of all the sheep, now consisting of about 1,800 head, were loaded on cars at Tooele county and shipped to Soda Springs, Idaho, where they were grazed during the- spring and summer of 1903. In the fall of that year Clark and Naylor sold and shipped all the fat and marketable sheep, including the ewes, to Chicago, and left only about 850 sheep with which to satisfy respondent’s claim of 3,500 or 4,000 sheep together with the natural increase, and 2,700 head mortgaged to appellant. Appellant now claims that this remnant of 850 slieep were the sheep -originally owned by Clark and Naylor and *341were no part of tbe berd of slieep leased by them from Hun-saker and Jenson. There is much evidence in the record showing that these sheep were of the herd leased by Clark and Naylor from Hunsaker and Jenson. Speaking of these sheep, the witness Hunsaker testified: “I saw the sheep at Soda Springs, Idaho. We counted them, and I know that it was 850 some odd head. They were about the same quality of sheep that were turned over. They were ewes and lambs. We went out to examine them for Mr. Rich. We bunched the sheep and caught them. They had the brand that Clark and Naylor were supposed to brand them with. Clark and Nay-lor were supposed to brand the sheep of Jenson and Hun-saker. They were branded with a red cent mark (c). It is a cent mark with a stroke through it. All the sheep had that brand on them. Every ear mark that we had in the herd that I could remember when we turned the sheep over to Clark and Naylor I found among those sheep.” Joseph M. Jenson, Jr., testified:
“I knew the sheep turned over to Clark and Naylor. I never saw the sheep afterwards excepting a part of them which I saw in the spring of the year 1903, at Black Rock, and they were the same sheep that my father and Hunsaker turned over. The sheep were on the range and scattered. We bunched them and went through them. I think we counted about 632 ewes and 220 lambs. And then we began to catch them to see if we could find earmarks. The brand on all those sheep was “C” with a line through it. We found the wool brand on all the sheep and the lambs which we examined, which is found in the lease.”
Other evidence of similar character, tending to show that the sheep in question were of the herd leased by Hunsaker and Jenson to Clark and Naylor, was also given in behalf of respondent. This evidence unquestionably is sufficient to support the finding. It is true that Clark and Naylor testified that at the time they leased the sheep from Hunsaker and Jenson they owned sheep of their own which they claimed they had purchased from a man named Jenson, whose first name they could not remember, nor could they remem*342ber when they bought the sheep, nor could they even state approximately how many they bought. They claimed they also branded these sheep with a “c.” They testified that they mixed the sheep leased by them from Hunsaker and Jenson and those leased from Wilson and Sherman with their own, and that they were all shipped to' Soda Springs, except about 400, but how' many they shipped to Soda Springs they were unable to state,; that the sheep were ranged at Soda Springs; and that they sold and shipped gom© sheep to Chicago. They were unable to state what marks or brands were upon the sheep so sold and shipped by them, did not know how many they had sold, could not state how much they had received for them, and could not even state these matters approximately. They stated that the sheep so sold and shipped were taken from the herd without reference as to whether they were respondent’s sheep or the sheep mortaged by them to appellant, and they were unable to state from which they had taken the greater percentage; but one of them stated that it was his best judgment that none of respondent’s sheep were shipped to Chicago. While they admitted receiving money for th© sale of sheep, in portions of their testimony, they said that they could not approximate how much it was, and in other portions they declined to state how much it was, but admitted that none of the money so received by them was, paid to either the appellant or the respondent. This kind of testimony, as against the direct evidence upon behalf of respondent, does not even raise a substantial conflict. We think that the trial court was not only justified in making th© finding that was made; but that the evidence did not fairly warrant any other or different finding. From the evidence the fact might well be found that Clark and Naylor did not own any sheep; that all the sheep in their possession were leased sheep, and that the sheep mortgaged by them were th© sheep leased by Hunsaker and Jenson.
3. It is further urged that the transaction between Hun-saker and Jenson and Clark and Naylor constituted a sale of sheep and not a bailment. The agreement between the part*343ies upon its faco purports to- be a lease, and, among other things, expressly provides that the title of the sheep and their increase shall remain in Hunsaker and Jenson, the lessors; that Clark and Naylor are to keep and care for the sheep from October, 1901, to October, 1904, when they were to be returned to the lessors, as by the terms of the lease provided; provision was made in the lease as to the kind of brand with which the herd was to be branded; the lessees agreed to return to the lessors the number of sheep received by the lessee, and in the same condition, grade, ■quality and age; and the lessees agreed to pay, as rental for said sheep, two pounds of wool per year and 12 lambs per hundred ;• that the agreement was a personal contract to the lessees, and that they could not assign or transfer it, in any way, without the consent of the lessors. The lease further provided that in the event the lessors, in good faith, believed that their interests were being jeopardized, through mismanagement or negligence of the lessees, the lessors had the right to take possession of all the sheep. The agreement has no essential of a sale, but has all the essentials of a bailment, and in this particular the case is controlled by Wetzel v. Bank, 30 Utah 62, 83 Pac. 570; Woodward v. Edmunds, 20 Utah 118, 57 Pac. 848, and Turnbow v. Beckstead, 25 Utah 468, 71 Pac. 1062.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed, with costs.
BARTCH, C. J., and McCARTY, J., concur.