Black v. Ellithorp

1963 OK 60, 382 P.2d 23, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 12, 1963
Docket39824
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1963 OK 60 (Black v. Ellithorp) 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
Black v. Ellithorp, 1963 OK 60, 382 P.2d 23, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 388 (Okla. 1963).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

In the trial court, plaintiffs E. E. and Frances M. Ellithorp sued defendants Riley Black, Gladys Morris, and others for losses resulting from flood damage to their crops, in the total amount of $18,525.00. Demurrers of all defendants to plaintiff’s evidence, except Mr. Black and Mrs. Morris, were sustained, and the case went to the jury as to those two defendants only. The jury returned a verdict against Mr. Black only for $2500.00, and he appeals.

From the evidence it appears that plaintiffs’ farm is located east of, and adjacent to, a north-south street in Lindsey, Oklahoma, called North Thompson Street. Immediately west of, and adjacent to, said ■street is a tract of land which was developed as a residential area by defendant Black beginning in 1955, and thereafter annexed to the city of Lindsey, Oklahoma (along with North Thompson Street) in 1956 as Black’s Manor Heights Addition. Immediately north of said addition, and west of North Thompson Street, is a small ■tract owned by defendant Morris.

It further appears that elevations in this •area are such that surface water normally -drains from the north and northwest to the ■south and southeast.

For more than thirty years prior to 1955, there had been a “bar ditch” or drainage ditch running north and south along the west side of North Thompson Street, past the properties of Mrs. Morris and Mr. Black. Plaintiffs’ evidence, contradicted by defendants, was that it was about seven feet wide at the top, four feet deep, and four feet wide at the bottom. In 1955 or 1956, defendant Black, in the course of the development of Black’s Manor Heights Addition, filled in this ditch level with a concrete curb six inches high which he built along the east side of his tract. At that time plaintiffs complained to him that such action would cause water which would normally drain south through the drainage ditch to cross over North Thompson Street onto their farm.

Sometime thereafter, a rock fill was placed in the drainage ditch beginning at the northeast corner of the Morris property, presumably to keep waters draining to the south from spreading onto the Morris’ property and standing in the ditch on the east side of that property, as it would probably do because of the fill Black had placed in the drainage ditch immediately to the south.

On May 17, 1957, there was a heavy rain in this area, resulting in flood damage to plaintiffs’ crops. The evidence was that when the water draining south hit the rock fill at the northeast corner of the-Morris property, it was diverted east across the street, running thence in a south or southeasterly direction over plaintiffs’ farm. Soon thereafter this damage suit was filed, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs and against defendant Black.

On appeal, Black first argues that there is no evidence of proximate cause, and in this connection invites our attention to the evidence that the diversion of the water occurred at the rock fill at the northeast corner of the Morris property, 240 feet north of Black’s Manor Heights Addition, tie makes a forceful argument that this rock fill was a new and intervening cause of the injury, and that his action in filling in the *26 drainage ditch along the east side of his own property merely created a condition which made the damage possible, and was not a proximate cause.

The question presented is whether Mr. Black’s activities created a “condition” or whether it was a foreseeable precipitating cause of Mrs. Morris’ activities in filling the drainage with rock.

Since it does not appear that any appreciable amount of water, if any, was diverted by Mr. Black’s fill (his fill being shielded by Mrs. Morris’ fill) and it not appearing that Mr. Black and Mrs. Morris were acting in concert, the plaintiffs’ verdict can only be sustained, if at all, on the theory that Mrs. Morris’ conduct in making the rock fill was responsive to and precipitated by Mr. Black’s fill and its threat of damage to her property. It must further appear before plaintiffs can recover of Mr. Black that Mr. Black might reasonably have anticipated that Mrs. Morris would respond by creating an embankment to protect her property and thus cause injury to others. The general rule of law applicable is well stated in the third paragraph of the syllabus in Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Courtney, 182 Okl. 582, 79 P.2d 235, as follows:

“Where there is an intervening, responsible agency, which directly produces the injury, as in this case, the question as to whether the original negligence is to be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury, or only as a condition, or remote cause, is to be determined by ascertaining whether the agency which intervened was of such a character, and the circumstances under which it occurred were such, that it might have been reasonably expected that such agency or a similar one would intervene in such a way as to be likely to produce an injury similar to the one actually caused. If, under the circumstances, the intervention of such an agency in the manner stated might reasonably have been expected in the usual course of events, and according to common experience, then the chain of causation, extending from the original wrongful act to the injury, is not broken by the independent, intervening agency, and the original wrongful act will be treated as the proximate cause.”

In the cited case we quoted with approval from Kentucky Independent Oil Co. v. Schmitzler, 208 Ky. 507, 271 S.W. 570, 39 A.L.R. 979, as follows:

“Does the fact that a second human actor, not acting in concert with a first human actor, intervenes with a tortious act which begins later in time to a tor-tious act of the first actor, and which second tortious act is the only force in active motion at the time of the damage, exonerate the first actor from liability ? Although the second human actor may be liable, it does not necessarily follow that the first is exonerated. By the decided weight of authority, the first will be liable, if he foresaw or ought to have foreseen the commission of the second’s tort. Although the earlier view was that the prior tort-feasor was never liable where a later tort-feasor intervened (see Vicars v. Wilcocke, 8 East 1 [1806]) yet it has gradually come to be admitted that the earlier tort-feasor is liable in cases where the commission of the subsequent unlawful or tortious act and the happening of the damages ought to have been foreseen by him as not unlikely to follow.”

Assuming, as the parties apparently have, that Mr. Black had no legal right to close the ditch and cause water to collect on portions of Mrs. Morris’ property and to stand in the ditch along the east side of her property, then it is reasonable that Mr. Black might have anticipated a reaction of some type by Mrs. Morris. She might file an injunction suit against Mr. Black, she might construct a fill to protect her property, or she might elect to sue for damages subsequently sustained because of Mr. Black’s fill. We pose the question of what action Mrs. Morris might reasonably have been expected to take ? Was it unlikely that she *27 might construct a fill to protect her property? The answers are not found in law hooks, but in human experience. We have concluded that a jury in Garvin County, through which flows the Washita River, are as well qualified to answer this question as are we. By their verdict they have concluded that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1963 OK 60, 382 P.2d 23, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-ellithorp-okla-1963.