Allen v. City of Tulsa

1959 OK 191, 345 P.2d 443, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1959
Docket38469
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1959 OK 191 (Allen v. City of Tulsa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. City of Tulsa, 1959 OK 191, 345 P.2d 443, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 468 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This is an appeal from the judgment-entered in condemnation proceedings instituted in May, 1957, by the City of Tulsa,, as plaintiff, to acquire, through its right of eminent domain, a certain parcel of real' estate belonging to plaintiffs in error (hereinafter referred to as defendants), for the-purpose of opening and extending a city-street across it. The subject property consists of a five-room house with two-rooim living quarters in a smaller separate structure behind it, both on a 8(7 x 10CK lot.

The property was appraised by two of' the three court-appointed commissioners as-having a value of $12,500, while the third commissioner appraised it at only $7,000. After a jury trial pursuant to plaintiff’s-demand, defendants’ damages from condemnation of the property were fixed, by the verdict, at $7,700.

Thereafter, defendants filed a motion for a new trial and, before any hearing thereon, also filed eight purported sworn statements by five persons who had been members of the jury that returned the verdict.. Four of these statements, which were identical in wording, but bore the names of' four different jurors, represented that, while on the jury, they would “have held' out” for awarding defendants more than the amount of the verdict “but for the-testimony of witnesses” at the trial “to the effect that the real estate * * * had' been purchased” by defendants “approxi *445 mately two years before said trial for ⅜ * $4500.00 * * The four other affidavits, bearing the names of three of the same afore-mentioned jurors, and one other, indicated that the verdict was arrived at in the manner of “quotient” verdicts, by representing that during the jury’s deliberations

“ * * * it was suggested and agreed among the jurors that each * * * would write down on a piece of paper the sum he or she thought the defendants * * * should be awarded, and that then the total of the amount written down by all the jurors should be divided by twelve, and the resulting sum be incorporated in the verdict * * * as the award to * * defendants, which was done, in the amount of $7700.00.”

In defendants’ present appeal, they first refer to those of the above described statements to the effect that the jury’s award was a quotient verdict, as conclusive of their right to a new trial, citing Salter v. Larison, 99 Okl. 245, 226 P. 585, Oklahoma City v. Stewart, 76 Okl. 211, 184 P. 779, and Williams v. Pressler, 11 Okl. 122, 65 P. 934. Plaintiff counters -this argument by pointing to paragraph 4 of the syllabus in the Salter case, supra, restricting vacating of compromise verdicts to cases where the verdict cannot be justified on a hypothesis presented by the evidence, and with argument to the effect that there was ample evidence in the present case showing that the property involved was worth no more than the jury’s award. Plaintiff’s counsel also cite the rule prohibiting jurors from impeaching, or explaining, their verdict by affidavit or other sworn statement, citing Herber v. Snee, Okl., 294 P.2d 814, 815, and other cases. Said counsel also urge, in effect, that the trial judge was required, in ruling on defendants’ motion for a new trial, to ignore their charge that the award was a quotient verdict, because the affidavits in question presented no competent evidence supporting such charge, citing H. A. Marr Grocery Co. v. Jones, 204 Okl. 183, 228 P.2d 388, 391, and other cases. In reply defendants say that plaintiff’s argument fails to recognize that a quotient verdict is not a valid one. They also say that in agreeing, with each other to render such a verdict, jurors abandon the deliberative process, and litigants’ right to a lawful trial is abrogated. They also say the decision in the Marr Grocery Co. case, supra, is “a departure from the long established general rule, which departure, if followed, may seriously weaken our jury system and certainly impose an injustice on many worthy litigants.” Defendants’ argument cannot be upheld. In the Marr Grocery Company case, we quoted an excerpt from American Jurisprudence, showing that the Oklahoma decisions forbidding impeachment of verdicts by jurors’ affidavits is in accord with the general rule followed in most states as a matter of public policy; we noted that in some states said rule has been changed by statute; and then we significantly pointed out: “ * * * but no such statute has been enacted in this state.” In accord with the long-established rule to which we are committed, and with the precedents for its application, as exemplified by the Marr Grocery Company case, supra, we must here hold that the affidavits in question presented no competent evidence that the jurors’ award was a quotient verdict. As these are the only part of the record pointed to by defendants for its support, we must hold their said charge to be without competent foundation, and therefore that the trial court committed no error in refusing them a new trial on that ground.

Under part “II” of their argument, defendants charge that the trial court erred in allowing the witness, John Taylor, to testify, over their objection, that he sold the property to the defendant, Allen, in 1955, for the sum of $4,500. They point to the four above described purported affidavits concerning the influence such testimony had on the action of four of the jurors, as indicating its prejudicial effect; but, in the third paragraph of this portion of their brief, they say:

*446 “Conceding but not agreeing with the general rule that condemnees’ purchase price paid for property being taken may be proved by condemnor under proper circumstances when not too remote, and when accompanied by appropriate instructions as to weight of testimony; in the discretion of the trial Judge but subject to review thereof on appeal (City of Enid v. Moyers [196 Okl. 470], 165 P.2d 818 [173 P.2d 419]; Chapman v. U. S. [10 Cir.], 169 F.2d 641) : Yet, refusal to admit such evidence of purchase price rests in the Sound discretion of the Judge (Okla.[homa] Turnpike [Authority] v. Williams [Okl.], 257 P.2d 1052) in the light of the particular circumstances of each case; and if same alone, or considered with other evidence introduced by condemnor, makes it appear to the jury that defendants, having acquired the property at a low price, were speculating in lands on which use for roadway was contemplated, such evidence of purchase price paid is prejudicial to the rights of condemnees, and is not competent. (Quinn v. State [ex rel. King] (Okla.) [173 Okl. 536], 49 P.2d 98). Also, note (2), holding a recent purchase offer and its acceptance, in a previous transaction covering the same land was not competent evidence as to reasonable value of the land taken.”

In view of defendants’ above quoted concession as to the general rule recognizing the competency of evidence showing the price condemnees have paid for property involved in condemnation proceedings, and the predication of its inadmissibility in this case on whether or not it makes it appear that they were speculating on property the city contemplated using for a right of way, the issue submitted may be determined by ascertaining whether or not the evidence in question had such fault that was referred to in Quinn v. State ex rel. King, supra [173 Okl. 536, 49 P.2d 100].

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1959 OK 191, 345 P.2d 443, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-city-of-tulsa-okla-1959.