Chickasaw Refining Co. v. Pruitt

1923 OK 811, 219 P. 710, 93 Okla. 99, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 23, 1923
Docket12319
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1923 OK 811 (Chickasaw Refining Co. v. Pruitt) 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
Chickasaw Refining Co. v. Pruitt, 1923 OK 811, 219 P. 710, 93 Okla. 99, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 339 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

In the trial court the defendant in error was the plaintiff and the plaintiffs in error were the defendants. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below.

This was an action instituted by the plaintiff in the district court of Carter county, ©n the 14th day of January, 1020, against the défendants, Ardmore Refining Company, the Chickasaw Refining Company- the Imperial Refining Company, and the Cameron Refining Company, for the recovery against the defendants of the sum of $9,155 damages, which the plaintiff alleges have, been sustained by him by reason of the polluting of a certain stream of water, which the plaintiff alleges and states runs through a pasture used and operated by him in the pasturing of. cattle and other stock during the years T918 and 1919.

Plaintiff alleged in his amended petition that he was a lease holder of the premises described in his petition, which premises were used by him as a pasture for cattle and other stock, and that the defendants and each of them own and operate refining-plants in the city of Ardmore, or near the said city, wherein and by reason of which they refined crude oil, and that certain refuse is let out and permitted to flow from said refining plants into the stream of water running from and by said refining plants of the defendant companies to and through the pasture lands of the plaintiff, and that the defendants, by means of said refuse, have so polluted mid 'Stream of water, by means of poison substances which they allowed and permitted to flow into said stream, that it has killed and injured certain of his cattle, and that it has prevented the use of said pasture lands by the plaintiff for the purposes for which he leased the same, to his damage in the total sum of $9,155.

Plaintiff further alleged in his said amended petition, that during the years 1918 and 1919 he leased from one Louise Byrd Pruitt approximately 800 aefre^ c|f Iapd in Carter county, Okla.; that said lands were grazing lauds, and a creek ran through same which furnished water for cattle pastured upon said land, and that when he leased said land the same furnished an ample supply of pure water, and was the only supply of water for his cattle and stock pastured upon said land; that he paid the sum of $1,-000 for the use of said lands during said time, arad pastured in :said Rastrarle 624 head of cattle and 45 horses and mules; he alleged that the defendants were engaged in refining crude petroleum, and that their refinery plants were located near the creek above mentioned during the years 1918 and 1919, and that they emptied their refuse into said creek; that the refineries were so located that the water in the creek, when polluted from said refineries, ran into and through plaintiff’s pasture.

That said defendants operated their refineries independently, but that by their acts in emptying their said refuse in said creek, they jointly and concurrently poisoned and polluted plaintiff’s supply of stock water.

Thai said water flowing into plaintiff’s pasture so poisoned and polluted was unfit for use, and was the only supply for said pasture, and permanently destroyed the value of said pasture, and plaintiff was unable to use the samé; that as a result of said water flowing into plaintiff’s pasture, and, before plaintiff discovered the poisonous nature of said water, 23 head of plaintiff's cattle, of the value of'$50 each, and one head of the value of $100, died as a result of drinking said poison water and four mules, each worth $150 died a,s a result of drinking said poison water, causing a total death loss of $1,850. That 600 of plaintiff’s cattle lost flesh and fat by reason of drinking said water and having starved for water, -and were damaged to the extent of $10 per head, or the sum of *101 $6 000, and 41 head of horses and mules lost flesh to the extent of $5 per head on 21 head. of horses, and $10 per head on 20 head of mules, or $305; that in addition thereto the plaintiff lost the use of the pasture which was reasonably worth the sum of $1,000, making a total damage amounting! to $9,155.

The Ardmore Refining Company filed an answer, which was a general denial, and the other -“three defendants filed their answer denying the allegations in the petition, and denying that they were guilty of any negligence, and alleging that if any damage was caused, it was caused by the contributory negligence of the p’aintiff because he could have avoided the same by the use of reasonable diligence and the outlay of a small sum of money-

The case was tried before the court, and jury, and resulted in jo. verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,525 against th'e Chickasaw Refining Company, the Imperial Refining Company, -and the Cameron Refining Company. The case was dismissed as to the Ardmore Refining Company for the reason that the evidence showed that it had been dissolved prior to the damage in question.

Upon the. request of the defendants, the jury was required to answer certain question® as to the damage found, and they found that $250 of the damages was by reason of the loss of the cattle, $275 by reason of injury to cattle, and $1,000, by reason of the loss of pasture. Motion for new trial was filed, overruled, and excepted to. Judgment was rendered by the court in favor of the plaintiff and against the said defendants, the Chickasaw Refining Company, the Imperial Refining Company, and the Cameron Refining Company, on the verdict of the jury in the sum of $1,525. with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, from the 14th day of! December. 1920, until paid, and for costs, to which judgment defendants, and each of them, excepted and gave notice of appeal; and the case comes regularly on appeal to this court.

Defendants say in their brief that:

“A number of assignments of error -are set forth in the petition in error, filed, herein, but in our discussion of the ease, we only desire to consider the following propositions: First, the verdict and judgment against the defendants' to the extenit of $526 for 'damages to /cattle,, jhorsds ahd mules is wholly unsupported by the. evidence; second, the verdict and judgment against the defendants for $1,000 fo-r damages to the pasture is excessive.”

In the defendants’ discussion of the first proposition it is contended that the verdict and judgment of $525 for damages to cattle, horses, and mules, is -wholly unsupported by the evidence.

It appears that the plaintiff leased from his sister and mother, for the years 19Í8 and 1919, about 800 acres of laDd. located four or five miles below, and along a creek which flowed by the location of the ref in-eries of the defendants.

That quantities of oil flowed down this creek and into plaintiff’s pasture; that his stock drank water from the creek; that they were injured by so doing and that a number died as a result of drinking the polluted water.

The uneontradicted evidence disclosed by the' record is that during the spring of 1918, before plaintiff discovered the cause of the injury to his stock, he lost five head of cattle at a minimum value of $50 per head, and the jury so found in answer to the -special interrogatory on that question.

Plaintiff testified, and he was corroborated -by other witnesses, that! the cattle which were not killed suffered damages of $10 per head by drinking the polluted water.

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Related

Maney v. Cherry
1935 OK 115 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 811, 219 P. 710, 93 Okla. 99, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickasaw-refining-co-v-pruitt-okla-1923.