Lugenbuhl v. D. W. Feitel Bag Co.
Lugenbuhl v. D. W. Feitel Bag Co.
Opinion of the Court
rendered the opinion and decree of the Court, as follows:
Defendant pleaded a general denial.
There was judgment for plaintiff and defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff testifies that he bought the horse from defendant on April 12th, 1912, for $117.50; that it was sold to him as Sound; that after he bought the horse, he worked him for fpurteen days in a regular ice wagon weighing about 1,600 pounds loaded with about one ton of ice delivering the ice from 4725 Tchoupitoulas uptown to Broadway and from Magazine to St. Charles; that the horse worked all right and seemed all right with the exception of his stomach that jumped a little bit; at the end of the fourteenth day the horse took sick; he sent for Dr. Rexford within two hours thereafter; about twenty-four hours after he died; it was on a Friday evening; the post mortem examination was held on Sunday morning at 11 o’clock; he was not present; he did not notify Mr. Feitel that the horse was sick; Feitel was told of it on Sunday.
Dr. W. H. Rexford is a veterinary surgeon of 35 years practice; he made the post mortem examination of this horse; he arrived at the conclusion that the horse died of
Flaintiff had no other evidence.
Defendant, on the other hand, examined Dr.. R. W. Tuck, a veterinary inspector of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry for 14 years; he has charge of the meat inspection, ante and post mortem, investigates contagions and infectious diseases in the Gulf States; tuberculosis in horses is very pare; he has read of one or two cases; he has heard Dr. Rexford testify; the symptoms of tuberculosis in horses are the lesions; to confirm the opinion that a horse has tuberculosis it is necessary that there should be tubercles in the lungs; in case of an animal dying of tuberculosis of the lungs that would be so extremely existing that you could not miss it; a microscopic examination is not necessary to an expert; in the oa.se of tuberculosis of a horse the lungs would be probably three to four times their normal size and would contain a large rttnning mass of cheezy substance; if it was an acute case the tubercles would be very small from a pin point to a pea, of a yellowish color making a cross section of the lungs.
•Dr. Hamlet Moore, a veterinary surgeon since fifteen years, has held many post mortem examinations; has never had a case of tuberculosis in a horse and knows of no one who had; has heard one or two very .authentic reports of them; doubts that this horse died of tuberculosis ; would not swear he did not, but'believes he did not; if he made ia. post mortem examination .and found no tubercles he would be willing to swear that the horse did not die of tuberculosis; he has heard Dr. Rexford testify and from his testimony that there was an absence of tubercles he would conclude that there was no tuberculosis and that from the length of the time the horse was sick
Dr. T. J. Douglas is a veterinary surgen for the last 12 years; has never seen a case of tuberculosis in a horse; has read of a few cases which were not sufficient to make him believe it; a horse cannot contract tuberculosis and die within 24 hours,; it is not possible that the horse could have worked 14 days before his death and hauled a ton of ice if he was sick; a post mortem is absolutely necessary to conclude that a horse died of tuberculosis; tuberculosis is very plain, and a microscopic examination is not necessary; if a horse died of tuberculosis he must have had it for a long time; he could not work with it; tuberculosis is a progressive disease with slow progress; all animals are susceptible to it and when they approach death they cannot work; he does not.think horses have tuberculosis.
As the disease of which the horse died did not disclose itself within three days immediately following the sale, there is no presumption that it existed before the sale, and the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish it. C. C., 2530 (2508).
Dr. Rexford is the only witness to testify that the horse died of tuberculosis. He draws that conclusion from the only fact that he saw lesions and abscesses in the horse’s lungs. He saw no other symptoms of any kind. Yet he admits that lesions and abscesses exist in cases of pleural pneumonia. Pitted against this diagnosis are the more irresistible facts that tuberculosis in horses is very rare, that the disease is slow and progressive and that animals afflicted with it are emaciated and weak. In this case the horse died suddenly without premonition, and he
We think that the stern facts of the case are more convincing than even expert testimony and overcome the testimony of Dr. Rexford, or at least create a doubt de-. structive of plaintiff’s demand. Add to this the impossibility of contradicting the Doctor in what he saw and the fact that the defendant was not notified and was not given an opportunity to be present at the autopsy.
The law and the jurisprudence of the case were examined by us in the case of Parique v. Ortolano, No. 6508, decided on January 17th, 1916. We adhere to the views therein expressed.
The principle of the superior force of affirmative testimony over negative has no place here. It applies to witnesses who swear affirmatively to the existence of a fact and not to such as give opinions or conclusions.
45 A., 331; 40 A., 741; 38 A., 955; 37 A., 258; 36 A., 84; 33 A., 799, 800.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment herein be reversed and annulled and that plaintiff’s demand be rejected at his cost in both Courts.
Dissenting Opinion
This is a redhibitory action. Plaintiff purchased a horse from defendant which died fourteen or fifteen days afterwards. The veterinary who attended the animal held a post mortem examination and found that it had died of tuberculosis of long standing. In support of this he testifies that he made no microscopic or chemical examination of the animal’s lungs, but found lesions which had healed up and had existed at least six months; that one lung was almost completely gone. He denies that the horse died of pneumonia, or of founder (from, which last it was also suffering) but declares that the founder was due to his tubercular condition, and that the same condition rendered him peculiarly subject to an attack of acute pneumonia. And he admits that some of the symptoms which he found (such as open abscesses on the lungs) are also present in cases of acute pneumonia.
In substance therefore he testifies that he found a condition indicating that the horse had tuberculosis of at least six months standing of which he thinks the animal died; but which at any rate made the animal particularly subject to founder (which he did have, but of which he did not die) and to acute pneumonia, (which in his opinion the animal did not have, and of which he therefore did not die).
But his testimony is direct and positive that he found lesions which had healed up indicating a tubercular condition existing at least six months before the animal’s death, and one lung was almost entirely gone.
In my opinion, this (if it be a fact) is sufficient for plaintiff to recover. For it is wholly immaterial whether the animal’s death resulted directly or indirectly from
Opposed to this is the testimony of experts, that tuberculosis in horses is rare, and acute pneumonia common; that the .animal could not have worked (as he did) for fourteen days immediately preceding his death; that one of the symptoms of tuberculosis is emaciation which would have been visible at once (but which did not exist in this case).
But the District Judge found and so do I that this testimony is not sufficient to overcome the direct and positive testimony of a credible and competent witness as to the conditions which he found; to-wit, that lesions had formed and healed at least six months before the animaPs death, and one lung was almost entirely gone.
I therefore respectfully dissent.
May 15th, 1916.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.