Johnson v. Kittleson

Eo BINS ON, J.

In September, 1919, near Galesburg, in Traill coun*94ty/tlie plaintiff was a tenant on a farm of defendant. Both parties bad pigs on the farm. The pigs all ran together and drank from the same creek. The plaintiff owned one sow and eight spring pigs; defendant three sows and eleven spring pigs, in common with the plaintiff. That is, each party had a half interest in eleven of the spring pigs. Cholera was prevailing in the neighborhood. One Mr. Miller had lost sixty pigs. Defendant had lost one sow and another'was sick of cholera. Plaintiff put the nineteen pigs into their house and sent defendant a message of distress, lie quickly arrived with some dope for the prevention or cure of pig cholera. He had bought it from Pollins in Bolla and.had used it several times. It was in a can with directions thus: “Mix a teaspoonful of the dope in a gallon of water and drink freely of it and let the animals drink freely of it.” Defendant put some of the dope into a beer bottle and gave the same to plaintiff, telling him how to use it, as per said instructions. Plaintiff Johnson testifies that defendant told him to put a cupful of the medicine into three pails of water and to give it to the nineteen pigs and the sick sow three times a day; that he did so three times, and in three days the pigs were all dead. Then he put what remained of the dope into a can marked “maple syrup” and sent it for analysis to the Agricultural College.

At the trial Johnson called two professors of the A. C. One testified that the dope contained 4.6 per cent of phenol which is carbolic acid. The other professor, a veterinarian, testified that it contained 10.4 per cent “cresol compounds.” Neither professor seemed to know much of phenol or its use or the amount of a poisonous dose. Now as we learn from the United States Dispensatory, a poisonous dose is a half ounce and in two hours the poison causes death.

“Creosote is a mixture of phenols and phenol derivatives.” Cresol is used as a surgical disinfectant. It is also a gastro-intestinal anti-spoctic. Dose 2 to 3 minims. Phenol is a locally irritant anesthetic aud mildly caustic in dilute solution of 3 to 4 per cent. It is only mildly irritant but is actually anesthetic and germicidal. Phenol is widely used as a disinfectant not only for sanitary but for surgical purposes. It is frequently used as an antiseptic in gastro-intestinal affections. Dose is 1 to 3 grains.”

Now a cupful of the dope contains about six ounces and as each *95ounce contains 4.6 per cent of phenol, we find the phenol contents of a cup to be six times 4.6 per cent, or .276 of an ounce, which is only half a poisonous dose. The phenol was the principal part of the compound cresols which the veterinary says amounted to 10.4 per cent. In a six ounce cupful the amount would be .624 part of an ounce. That is barely enough to poison one pig if the whole cupful were given and taken at one swallow, but when diluted in three pails of water the strength is divided by three hundred, so that a person or a pig might safely drink it. Surely to drink it, every drop, would not injure twenty pigs.

Aside from that the testimony of the plaintiff and his wife shows that from the start the pigs exhibited all the marks and symptoms of hog cholera. They all became crooked like a rat with its back up, and huddled together in the pig house, ceased to eat, lost all strength and died within the usual time of death by cholera.

2. But if the dope had been poisonous and had caused the death of the pigs, that would not make defendant liable. He was a common farmer, not a chemist. He was not bound to know or to guarantee the dope. He was only bound to use good faith and honesty the same as if he had owned all the pigs and not merely two sows and a half interest in eleven of the spring pigs. There is no reason for thinking that the defendant acted in bad faith or that he wilfully poisoned his own pigs or those of his neighbor and tenant.

Were there any reasonable chance for plaintiff to prevail on a second trial the opportunity should be given him, but as there is no such chance the judgment is reversed and the action dismissed.

Bronson and Grace, JJ., concur in the result; we are of the opinion that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict.