Beatty v. Dixon

1965 OK 169, 408 P.2d 339
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 2, 1965
Docket40732
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 1965 OK 169 (Beatty v. Dixon) 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
Beatty v. Dixon, 1965 OK 169, 408 P.2d 339 (Okla. 1965).

Opinions

HALLEY, Chief Justice.

This action was instituted by Wanda Beatty, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, against her parents, O. L. Dixon and Mrs. O. L. Dixon, hereinafter referred to as defendants, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained when the plaintiff slipped and fell down in the back doorway of the defendants’ home. At the conclusion of all the testimony and evidence offered by the plaintiff, the trial court sustained defendants’ demurrers to the evidence and judgment was entered that plaintiff take nothing.

Plaintiff contends that the evidence was sufficient to establish a prima facie case of negligence and that the case should have been submitted to the jury. On the issue of negligence there were but three witnesses called by the plaintiff to testify: the plaintiff and both defendants.

The plaintiff testified that she and her family were invited by the defendant, Mrs. O. L. Dixon, to take shelter in the defendants’ storm cellar on May 21, 1961, because of a tornado alert. That the plaintiff and her family, the defendant Mrs. O. L. Dixon, and the plaintiff’s sister with her family entered the storm cellar while it was raining quite heavily at about 7:00 p.m., but that the defendant, O. L. Dixon, stayed in the house. The storm cellar was located about twenty feet from the back doorway of the defendants’ home, which opened directly to the outside from the kitchen. The kitchen floor was constructed of asphalt tile and there was a wooden threshold, one concrete walk leading from the back doorway of the defendants’ house to the storm cellar. The back doorway was on the north side of the house. The plaintiff testified further that her husband and brother-in-law left the cellar first; that the defendant, Mrs. O. L. Dixon, and the plaintiff’s sister left next; and that she followed with the children about fifteen or twenty minutes thereafter. That she came up the cellar steps, walked up the concrete walk to the house, stepped up onto the back step, then stepped into the kitchen, which was wet and slippery, and “fell half in and half out of the house.” She also testified that her father, O. L. Dixon, later told her that “the back door flew open while we were in the cellar and the wind blew the rain in and he swept it out with a broom but he didn’t mop it up.”

Plaintiff testified on cross-examination that her parents, O. L. Dixon and Mrs. O. L. Dixon, had resided in their same home for approximately ten years; that she had used their storm cellar as many as twenty times altogether; that she was completely familiar with the storm cellar, the concrete walk, the back entry into the house; and that when she came out of the storm cellar, it was more or less sprinkling. The walkway was wet, her shoes were wet, and the wooden threshold was wet, which she knew. That she held a plastic raincoat over her head as she opened the back door, but she didn’t look at the floor as she stepped into the house. She further testified on cross-examination as follows:

“Q. These people, whoever they were, would have had to have walked from the storm cellar on the wet concrete driveway and then into the kitchen?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now, when they walked into the house, from their wet feet, they could have made tracks on the floor?
“A. Yes, sir.
“A. I didn’t stop to think about it.”

[342]*342The defendant, O. L. Dixon, called as a witness by the plaintiff, did not remember the kitchen floor getting wet at any time while he was in the house, nor whether the back door as a matter of fact did blow open during the storm. He did not remember whether he did or did not sweep water off the kitchen floor. He did not remember the conversation as testified to by the plaintiff, but he testified that water always blew on the kitchen floor when someone went in or out the back door during a rain storm and the wind was out of the north. He also testified on cross-examination as follows:

“Q. If that door is open as you say, would people, — with the wind blowing from the north, she would also know water would come in through there?
“Q. She would know as much about it as you would, that’s my question, she was there many times and she seen it when it was raining and she was in the storm cellar and she knew as much about your place as you did, isn’t that right ?
“A. Well, she ought to.”

The defendant, Mrs. O. L. Dixon, called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that she and her eldest daughter and a granddaughter came out of the storm cellar at about the same time and went into the house through the back door to start supper. She did not notice water on the floor at that time. She also testified that the plaintiff came out of the storm cellar about fifteen or twenty minutes thereafter, and that as “she came to the door and just as she got to the door she just lunged and fell.” She testified further as follows:

“Q. What did you notice at that time?
“A. Well, the floor was wet when Wanda came in. because the door had been opened so many times and the wind and the rain was coming from the north and it did blow in, the floor was wet. ■ -
“Q. When did you first notice that?
“A. Well, I don’t particularly know just when I noticed it, when she came in it was wet because you see we had all come in before her and the door being open the wind blew the rain in.”

The facts of each particular case-are, of course, controlling upon the question of negligence in respect of a dangerous condition upon the premises, and ordinarily the question whether an owner or occupant has been negligent in this respect toward a person whom he has invited upon the premises is to be decided by a jury. In such cases, as in other cases, however, if there is no dispute as to the facts and only one conclusion can be drawn from the-evidence, the court can decide the question as a matter of law. 38 Am.Jur., Negligence §§ 102 and 356; and Pruitt v. Timme,. Okl., 349 P.2d 4.

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Bluebook (online)
1965 OK 169, 408 P.2d 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-dixon-okla-1965.