Carter Oil Company v. Kerley

1925 OK 201, 234 P. 737, 109 Okla. 69, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1925
Docket15239
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1925 OK 201 (Carter Oil Company v. Kerley) 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 Company v. Kerley, 1925 OK 201, 234 P. 737, 109 Okla. 69, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 679 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

This action was commenced by the filing of .plaintiff’s original petition on May 18, 1921, which petition was later amended, alleging that the plaintiff — defendant in error herein — is the owner of certain lands in sections 28. 29, 32, and 33, township 4 south, range 3 west, in Carter county, therein specifically described, and that the defendants and each of them are engaged in producing oil and operating oil wells in sections 9, HO, 15, and 16, of said township, range, and county; that in their operations the said defendants have' negligently allowed oil and salt water to waste on the premises around their wells, and to accumulate in and around their premises in great quantities; that during the latter part of the year 1919, and the year 1920, the salt waste from said wells drained into the stream of water running across the lands of plaintiff and overflowed upon a portion of said lands consisting of 75 acres thereof, causing the lands so overflowed to become sterile and nonproductive, and killing the vegetation thereon; that the said 75 acres of land so overflowed was, prior to the action complained of, productive and of a reasonable market value of $100 per aci*4 but that the continual overflow of said land of the waste oil and salt water from the wells of defendants has rendered said land worthless to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $7,500.

It is further alleged that the stream of water flowing through the premises of plaintiff furnished stock water for the pasture of plaintiff, said pasture consisting of 700 acres of land, and was and is the only stock water available for said stock, and that the said stream has been ruined for stock water by reason of the salt water and oil draining into the same from the wells of defendant; that plaintiff has been thereby deprived of the. use of said stream for stock water and therefore damaged in the sum of $2,000. .

Each of the defendant oil companies, for its answer, denied generally] the allegations of plaintiff’s petition,, and further pleaded the judgment obtained by one W. O. Newton and his wife, which awarded damages caused by some of the defendant companies allowing oil and salt wafer to escape in January, 1917, and 1917, as a bar to the present action by the plaintiff, H. A. Kerley, for damages caused by the defendant companies permitting oil and salt water to escape from their premises and overflow the said lands in the latter part of 1919 and the year 1920.

The case was tried to the court and jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000 damages to the land and $500 to the water rights of the plaintiff. Judgment was rendered upon the jury’s verdict, exceptions reserved by each of the defendant oil companies, and the cause comes regularly on appeal of defendants by petition in error and case-made attached.

Counsel for the defendant oil companies state in thedr brief that all the alleged er *70 rors of which the plaintiffs in error complain in this court and which it is desired to urge can be disposed of by a correct determination of the legal principles governing the question as to whether the injuries complained of, either in their cause or result, are permanent in character, or were adjudicated to be permanent by the decision in the Newton Case, and .the further question as to the measure of damages applicable, in case it should be held that the plaintiff had a cause of action for damages to his stock water.

The record discloses that in the year 1918 W. C. Newton and his wife owned the lands Involved in this action and on the 13th day of November, 1918, instituted an action against some of the oil companies that are plaintiffs in error in the instant case.

The petition in the Newton Case is incorporated in the record before us, and it is alleged therein that on or about January 1, 1917, said oil companies permitted waste oil and salt water to escape from their premises and to flow over and across the lands of W. C. Newton and wife, and that by reason of the wrongful, unlawful, and careless actions of defendants, as aforesaid, the lands of plaintiffs (Newtons) have been damaged in the full sum of $2.50 per acre, and further allege that the creek, which prior to January 1, 1917, had been used as stock water, was by reason of the' waste oil and salt water, which escaped from the premises of said oil companies, rendered unfit for stock to drink and ask for damages by reason of the pollution of said stream in the sum of $350.

It appears that W. C. Newton and wife obtained judgment against the oil companies sued in that action for $500, and the court found that by reason of the waste oil and salt water which was allowed to escape from the premises of the oil companies and flow down the stream “the real estate along-said creek was rendered unfit for grazing and agricultural purposes, and the said real estate is permanently damaged thereby.”

In August, 1919, H. A. Kerley, the defendant in .error in the instant ease, purchased the lands from W. C. Newton and wife, and as before stated, on May 18, 1921, instituted this action.

The argument of the oil companies, as we understand it, is that the recovery in the Newton Case was for permanent injury to the lands acquired by the plaintiff, Kerley, from Newton, and that the judgment in the Newton Case operates as a bar to plaintiff's recover}' as to all of the lands involved in that case.

We do not think this contention can be sustained. We observe nothing in the allegations in the petition in the Newton Case or in the judgment rendered in his favor that lends any support to this proposition.

Newton simply instituted an action against some oil companies, defendants in the present action, for damages caused by the escape of oil and salt water from their premises. There is no allegation in the Newton petition that any future damages might occur. Newton’s suit was for temporary injury to trees and crops grown by him on his land. The question of permanent injury was not an issue in that case, as we understand this record.

The theory of the defendant companies seems to be that permanent partial injury is equivalent to total destruction of the usable value of the freehold.

There is a broad distinction between a partial permanent injury, and a total destruction of property.

In Harmon v. Railroad, 87 Tenn. 614, cited by defendants in their brief, it is said:

“There is a broad distinction between those) injuries occasioned by causes permanent in their character and which are likely to continue with no right in plaintiff to abate them, and those which arise fr mi nuisances which may be discontinued. In respect to the former, the entire damages, past and prospective, can be estimated, and the cause of action cannot be split up, while as to the latter, it is not to be presumed that the wrongs will be continued; and it would be unjust to defendant to allow plaintiff to recover damages estimated upon such an assumption. On the other hand, it would be equally wreng to permit the defendant to insist upon, such a rule of -om-pensation and thus become vested with a perpetual license to commit a nuisance to the injury of plaintiff and over his protest.”

In Nashville v. Comar, 88 Tenn. 416, it is said by Lurton, J.:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Powell Briscoe, Inc. v. Peters
1954 OK 107 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Pace v. Massey
1940 OK 138 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
H. F. Wilcox Oil & Gas Co. v. Murphy
1939 OK 533 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Ricks
1935 OK 1180 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Commercial Drilling Co. v. Kennedy
1935 OK 232 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Marland Oil Co. v. Hubbard
1934 OK 384 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. v. Allen
1930 OK 287 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Kelly
1928 OK 256 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
Comar Oil Co. v. Hackney
1926 OK 754 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 201, 234 P. 737, 109 Okla. 69, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-company-v-kerley-okla-1925.