McCann v. Ullman

Cassoday, O. J.

This action was commenced in the municipal court of Ashland county to recover $450 damages for the alleged breach of warranty on the sale of .four horses, and upon issue joined and trial had the plaintiff recovered judgment for that amount. The defendants appealed to the circuit court, and the plaintiff thereupon amended his complaint, and increased his claim for damages to the amount of $1,500. The defendants answered by way of admissions, denials, and counter allegations. At the close of the trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the -plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $800. The defendants thereupon moved the court upon the minutes of the judge to set aside the verdict and for a new trial upon numerous grounds stated, whereupon the court “ ordered that the said verdict herein be, and the same is hereby, set aside and a new trial be granted herein, because the court erred in instructing the jury and in rejecting the evidence of the witness E. H. Graves, offered by defendants.” Erom that order the plaintiff brings this appeal.

It is conceded “that the granting of a new trial is very much in the discretion of the trial court, and that its order granting the same will not be reversed unless there clearly •appears to have been an abuse of such discretion. . . . *576The only exception to this rule is where it affirmatively appears upon the record that such order was based upon a misapprehension of the law.” Schillinger v. Verona, 85 Wis. 595, and cases there cited; J. & H. Clasgens Co. v. Silber, 87 Wis. 357; Wilson v. Eau Claire, 89 Wis. 47. The question recurs whether it appears affirmatively upon the record in this case that the order is based upon a misapprehension of the law. °

1. One of the alleged errors upon which the order is based is that the evidence of the witness Craves was improperly rejected. He was sworn as a witness on behalf of the defendants, and testified that he had been “ a veterinary surgeon ” at Appleton for over forty years. He was then asked, “ Do you know the disease known as distemper ’ or ‘ strangles ’ in horses ? ” The plaintiff objected on the ground that the witness had not shown himself to be competent, and the objection was sustained. The statute provides that “no person shall practice veterinary medicine and surgery,” nor “ be competent to testify as an expert witness in any court in matters pertaining to the diseases of animals, unless he be registered ” as therein prescribed, and that no person should “be so registered unless he is a graduate,” or the holder of a certificate, as therein prescribed, “ or shall have practiced veterinary medicine and surgery in this state ” for five years, as therein stated. Sec. 1492/, Stats. 1898, as amended by ch. 82, Laws of 1899. It does appear that the witness had been a veterinary surgeon at Appleton for many years, but at the time of sustaining such objection it had not been made to appear that he had actually “ practiced veterinary medicine and surgery ” during any portion of such period; and it was never made to appear that he was ever “ registered as a veterinary physician and surgeon,” as required by the statute. Thus it appears that the objection to the question was properly sustained. Besides, the witness was subsequently allowed to testify, over objection, *577that he had treated horses for forty years and over, and a great many cases of distemper during that time; that from his own experience .the usual time of incubation would be from two to four days — might run up to six or eight days — before the -glands would be swollen, and that the swelling might not appear until three days after the nose began to run; and that the distemper was not a serious one unless there should be a complication of some other disease with it. We must conclude that the trial court was not justified in treating such rulings as errors.

2. The important question is whether the trial court was' justified in holding that there had been error in charging the jury. We perceive no error in the portion of the charge to which exception is taken to the effect that, if the jury found from a fair preponderance of the evidence that the distemper had not fully developed in these horses at the time they were delivered to the plaintiff; that they had at that time contracted the disease; that the seeds of the disease were then in the horses, although it did not develop until after the horses came into the possession of the plaintiff,— then that constituted an unsoundness under the warranty given by the defendants. Thus it has been held that “ an allegation that a horse had the glanders at the time of sale is sustained by proof that at such time he had the seeds of that disease, which afterwards developed into the perfect disease.” Woodbury v. Robbins, 10 Cush. 520. See, also, Crouch v. Culbreath, 11 Rich. Law, 9; Stephens v. Chappell, 3 Strob. Law, 80; Hook v. Stovall, 21 Ga. 72; Fondren v. Durfee, 39 Miss. 324; Kenner v. Harding, 85 Ill. 264.

3. The only other portion of the charge to which the defendants .filed exceptions reads as follows: “Iii addition to that, the plaintiff claims damages for horses of his own to which the disease was communicated by the horses he got from the defendants.” Such mere statement of the “ claims ” • of the plaintiff ivas not, of itself, error.

*578■ But we apprehend that upon tbe motion to set aside tbe .verdict and grant a new trial tbe court was not limited to •the consideration of such portions of the charge as had been specifically excepted to. It is not so limited in the order •appealed from. This court has repeatedly affirmed an order ■setting aside a verdict and granting a new trial when the •ground upon which the order was based was not stated, and .the reasons which prompted the court in making such order were not disclosed by the record. McLimans v. Lancaster, 57 Wis. 297; Seaman v. Burnham, 57 Wis. 568; Evans v. Rugee, 63 Wis. 32, 33; Schraer v. Stefan, 80 Wis. 654. In one of these cases it is said that: “ There seems to have been sufficient evidence here to sustain the verdict. But error may have intervened, or some other satisfactory reason, not apparent to us, may have induced the trial court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. We cannot assume that the court made the order it did without a reason, merely because no reason therefor is apparent to us from the record.” Evans v. Rugee, supra. If, in charging the jury in this case, error intervened, and the trial judge became convinced of such error, then he was justified in basing the order upon that ground, even if no exception had been taken to any portion of the charge.

It seems to be conceded that, if such error existed, it was in that portion of the charge relating to damages. Undoubtedly, the general rule in actions for breach of contract is that the damages to be recovered must be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of, and that remote, contingent, uncertain, and speculative damages are to be excluded. Brayton v. Chase, 3 Wis. 456; Ingram v. Rankin, 47 Wis. 406; Shadbolt & B. I. Co. v. Topliff, 85 Wis. 525, and authorities cited in these cases. In the first Of these cases the action was for damages for failure to deliver a reaper as agreed, and it was held that evidence was properly excluded which tended to prove that the plaintiff *579-had large quantities of wheat and oats growing upon his .land that year, and that he had sustained a large amount' of damage by reason of the breach of the contract to deliver the reaper. Of course, the rule mentioned did not preclude the plaintiff in this action for breach of warranty to allege ■and prove any legitimate special damages by reason of the horses purchased being diseased as claimed. Following the ■portion of the charge on damages, already quoted, the court, ■among other things, charged the jury that: “Two of the plaintiff’s own horses — those he had there before he took these horses there — died, and he has stated to you his estimate of the value of those horses that died. Also the •amount of loss which he sustained by being interrupted in 'his logging operations by the sickness of those horses — not being able to keep his men at work. He has estimated that as so much per day for so many days.” So far as such ■charge relates to the disease being communicated to the .plaintiff’s other horses, it seems to be unobjectionable, since it was specifically alleged in the complaint, and evidence ■admitted which tended to prove it; but, in’so far as such ■charge relates to the loss which the plaintiff sustained by. .having his logging operations interrupted by the sickness ■of those horses, it was clearly erroneous, since nothing of the kind was alleged in the complaint, and the evidence in ■support of such damages was taken under objection.

Counsel for the plaintiff contends that, even if such portion of the charge was erroneous, still that it can be cured, and a new trial obviated, by allowing the plaintiff to remit trom the verdict all but $523.75, which amount, it is-claimed, is supported by proper allegations and legitimate evidence. 'The difficulty with the contention is that, for aught that ■appears in the record, the jury, or a part of them, may have based their verdict wholly or in part upon the evidence of the plaintiff’s claim for loss in business operations. Such *580claim amounted to $1,080. ¥e cannot say that there was any error in setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial.

By the Oov/rb.— The order of the circuit court is affirmed.