Fleetham v. Therres
Fleetham v. Therres
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff yras the owner or in possession of a large tract of land, upon which a herd of cows owned by defendant strayed and trespassed. Plaintiff distrained the cows by authority of chapter 19, G. S- 1894, on the subject of estrays, and defendant tendered him soon thereafter the sum of $5 as payment for the damages committed by them. Plaintiff refused to accept the tender, and retained the cows for the period of two days; drawing from,them during the time they were so in his possession large quantities of milk, which he either used, gave away, or
Two questions only are presented for our consideration: (1) Whether, upon the question as to the sufficiency of the tender, plaintiff was entitled to have assessed in his favor all damages caused by the cows prior to the time they were distrained, or whether his damages, as to that feature of the case, should be -limited to the acts committed by the cows at the time of and immediately preceding their distraint; (2) whether plaintiff was in duty bound, as a matter of law, if his detention of the cows after the tender was wrongful, to exercise reasonable effort to dispose of the milk received from them, and account for the proceeds to defendant.
2. Defendant having tendered plaintiff $5 to cover the damages committed by the cows immediately preceding the time they were distrained by plaintiff, and plaintiff having refused to accept the same — his damages in fact having been, as found by the trial court, only fifty cents— his retention of the cows thereafter was wrongful and unlawful. The trial court properly held that he was under legal duty to exercise every reasonable effort not only to take proper care of the cows, but to dispose of the milk received from them, and account for the proceeds to defendant. Plaintiff had the undoubted right to refuse the tender, if, in his judgment, the amount of damages exceeded the amount offered; but he did so at his own risk, and, having failed to establish that his damages exceeded the amount tendered, his continued retention of the cows was unlawful, for the tender operated as a release and discharge of his lien. Whether plaintiff would have been required to make reasonable effort to dispose of the milk received from the cows, and account for the proceeds to defendant, if his possession had been rightful — i. e., if the tender of damages by defendant was inadequate and less than plaintiff was entitled to — we need not determine. The findings of the court are sustained by the evidence, and judgment was properly ordered for defendant.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.