Carter Oil Co. v. Holloway

1928 OK 311, 267 P. 274, 130 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 533
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 8, 1928
Docket17887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1928 OK 311 (Carter Oil Co. v. Holloway) 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
Carter Oil Co. v. Holloway, 1928 OK 311, 267 P. 274, 130 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 533 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

FOSTER, C.

This action involves two suits filed in the lower court, one by W. L. Holloway and J. M.' Holloway against all of the above-named appellants, and one by J. M. Holloway; and were brought to recover against the appellants herein for the escape of crude oil, base sediments, and salt water from the appellants’ producing properties located in Carter county, which the plaintiffs claimed were carried by flood-waters of Walnut Bayou creek, and were deposited on plaintiffs’ land in April and May, 1924, and in June and September, 1925.

The land described in the suit brought by W. L. Holloway and J. M. Holloway was 12 acres in the northeast quarter of section 20, township 5, range 1, said land being owned by J. M. Holloway and rented by W. L. Holloway; and the suit by J. M. Holloway was for 7 acres in the northeast quarter of section 20, township 5, range 1, it being aileged that the land was owned by J. M. Holloway.

The defendants answered, denying that they had damaged the plaintiffs’ crops, and alleging that any injuries received were from natural causes, apart from the defendants’ operations, and also alleging that the plaintiffs were then prosecuting other actions eihbracihg the alleged wrongs.

At a trial before a jury, four verdicts were rendered against the defendants: (1) A verdict for $100 in favor of W. L. Holloway against all of the appellants named; (2) a verdict for $60 in favor of W. L. Holloway against all ¡the appellants except the Coline Oil Company; (3) a.verdict for $35 in favor of J. M. Holloway against all of the appellants; and (4) a verdict for $50 in favor of J. M. Holloway against all the appellants excepf the Coline Oil Company.

From these' four verdicts, the defendants bring their appeal to this court, and assign as error, in addition to the error of the court in overruling the defendants’ motion for a new trial, the following four assignments: (1) That the court erred in refusing these defendants permission to file supplemental answers; (2) that the court erred in admission of evidence on the part of the plaintiffs; (3) that the court erred in refusing to give defendants requested instructions Nos. 8, 9, 11 and Í2; (4) that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendants to the plaintiffs’ evidence

As to the first assignment above set out, it appears that on the day of the trial, after the ease had been called and after the jury had been duly impaneled, the defendants presented a supplemental answer, and asked . the court for permission to file the same, which supplemental answer set up a new and additional defense in the form of petitions which had been filed and judgments granted in the justice of the peace court, with the .allegations that they covered the identical causes of action as alleged in the petitions at bar._

*274 It appears that the cases in the justice of the peace court, which are alleged in said supplemental answers to involve the same causes of action, had been appealed and were pending in the district court at the time of the trial of the case at bar. It also appears that said judgments in the justice of the peace court were taken some 20 days before this case was called for trial.

Under section 323, O. O. S. 1921, the court may at any time permit amended pleadings to be filed, but the same is left largely to the discretion of the court. Under the circumstances in this case, we do not believe the court abused his discretion. The proposed supplemental answers set up a new defense, and were not offered until after the jury had been impaneled.

We have examined the supplemental answers, and are in doubt as to whether or not upon their face they allege any defense to the causes of action in the case at bar. But even if they do, since the cases in the justice court were pending on appeal in the district court at the time of the rendition of the judgments in these cases, we believe that they could set up the judgments herein as a defense to the judgments in the justice of the peace court, now pending in the district court. And even if said supplemental answers had been presented before the trial, or before the case was set down for hearing, the defendants would not have been materially prejudiced by the refusal of the court for permission to file the same.

The second assignment is that the court erred in permitting the plaintiffs, over the objection of the defendants, to introduce and exhibit before the jury a hunch of grass which contained oil, which the witness testified was taken from the land involved in this action on the day of the trial in the district court, there being no testimony in the record to show that the grass was in the same condition at the time it was offered in testimony as it was at the time the oil is alleged to have run over, and been deposited upon, the plaintiffs’ land.

While there are no authorities presented, we take it that, if this testimony had been offered by plaintiffs in their evidence in chief, the objection would have been good. But it appears from the record that a witness testified for defendants that along in' February, 1926, several months after the alleged damage and just a short time before the trial, he was upon the land, and saw no trace of oil thereon, or if any trace of oil whatsoever, it was very little. And in the rebuttal of this testimony, the plaintiffs, on the day of trial, sent a witness to the land to secure some of the grass showing that oil was upon the grass at that time, and he testified that he procured the grass on the land of the plaintiffs, and brought it into court in the same condition that he found it on the plaintiffs’ land. This testimony, we believe, was good as rebuttal testimony to the evidence of the defendants.

The third proposition is that the court erred in refusing to give requested instruction No. 12, which is as follows:

“You are instructed, gentlemen of the jury, that it was the duty of the plaintiffs and each of them to make every possible exer- ' tion to render the damages, if any. suffered by them as light as possible. In no case can a person recover for damages to his property which he knowingly permits to be inflicted without making every reasonable effort, and taking active steps to lessen or prevent the same. If you believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiffs could have prevented or lessened the loss or damage, if any, suffered by them' or either of them by taking proper cultivation of their crop, but failed so to do then none of the defendants can be held liable for an5» damages done either of the plaintiffs which either of said plaintiffs who may have suffered said damage could have prevented or lessened as to the particular crop which he or they claim damage to.”

In support of their contention, the defendants cite the following cases: Sackett v. Rose, 55 Okla. 398, 154 Pac. 1177; 17 C. J. pp. 767 and 776 ; 8 R. C. L. p. 442.

In these cases, the general rule is laid down that- where a wrong has been perpetrated upon an injured party, he should use all reasonable means to minimize the loss, it being his duty to use reasonable exertion and incur reasonable expense in order to arrest or minimize the loss which he is put to or is suffering.

The requested instruction places a heavier burden upon the plaintiffs than is required by the rules adopted by this court.

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Related

Paul Hellman, Inc. v. Reed
1961 OK 262 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)
Carter Oil Co. v. Jackson
1944 OK 346 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)
H. F. Wilcox Oil & Gas Co. v. Murphy
1939 OK 533 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 311, 267 P. 274, 130 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-co-v-holloway-okla-1928.