Cities Service Oil Co. v. Billen

1959 OK 176, 347 P.2d 637, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 507, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 515
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 1959
DocketNo. 37122
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1959 OK 176 (Cities Service Oil Co. v. Billen) 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
Cities Service Oil Co. v. Billen, 1959 OK 176, 347 P.2d 637, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 507, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 515 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Justice.

Action in the District Court of Oklahoma County by landowners, Leonard B. Billen and Pearl May Billen, husband and wife, against certain oil companies, Cities Service Oil Company, a Corporation; Earl E. Ives; Phillips Petroleum Company, a Corporation, and Mercury Oil Refining Company, a Corporation, for the recovery of actual and punitive damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiffs from the defendants’ salt water pollution of the subterranean fresh water producing formations underlying the plaintiffs’ lands. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence as to the defendant, Mercury Oil Company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Phillips Petroleum Company on which the trial court entered judgment. The jury also rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, upon which judgment was entered against the defendants, Cities Service Oil Company and Earl E. Ives, for actual damages of $4,500 together with costs and interest, from which they appeal.

The appellants for reversal interpose 64 separate specifications of error which they present and argue under four separate propositions with sub-divisions, to-wit:

“I. The court erred in submitting to the jury the claim of plaintiffs relating to the west branch of Crooked Oak Creek.
“II. Where land is subject to permissive pollution and the land owner seeks to recover damages from non-permissive pollution he will not be permitted to prevail unless he proves the ■quantum of damages resulting from the permissive pollution and separates the damages resulting from the permissive and non-permissive pollution.
“(A) The salt water easements in ■question are not void as contrary to public policy.
“(B) Plaintiffs are charged with the "burden of separating the damage •caused by permissive pollution from the damage caused by non-permissive pollution.
“(C) Failure of the court to instruct the jury on the law governing the decisive issue in this case is prejudicial error, notwithstanding the absence of a requested instruction.
“III. The general rule that no person is entitled to recover from another for damages which have been occasioned by his own acts or neglect prevails and continues to operate in cases involving the application of the doctrine of liability irrespective of negligence.
“(A) Where a nuisance has its origin in negligence as distinguished from an absolute nuisance, contributory negligence is a defense.
“(B) A nuisance, whether absolute or having its origin in negligence, will not preclude the defendants from preventing or reducing recovery by showing that the damages were due, in whole or in part, to the plaintiffs’ own acts and conduct.
‘TV. The court erred in failing to submit to the jury the issue as to the character of damages involved and failed to properly instruct the jury on the measure of damages.”

This is a companion case to the case of Cities Service Oil Company v. Merritt, Okl., 332 P.2d 677, 681. Therein we said:

“We will review a verdict founded upon conflicting evidence only for the purpose of determining whether it is supported by competent evidence and whether it is contrary to law and not for the purpose of determining the weight of the evidence, and whether the evidence reasonably tending to prove the essential facts in a case, either directly or indirectly, or by permissible inferences, is sufficient to sustain a verdict and judgment based thereon. Cities Service Gas Co. v. Eggers, 1940, 186 Okl. 466, 98 P.2d 1114, 126 A.L.R. 1278 and cited cases.”

[639]*639The Eggers case, supra, was followed in the Merritt case, supra, and is determinative of many of the arguments advanced herein by the defendants.

Defendants first contend that the court erred in submitting to the jury the claims of plaintiffs relating to the west branch of Crooked Oak Creek, upon the grounds that defendants had been expressly released from all claims for damages caused by salt water released by them upon the drainage area of the west branch of Crooked Oak Creek in the operation of their oil producing properties. It is claimed that the release granted them the right and privilege to continue to use the drainage area for the purpose of running salt water, etc. from the oil leases, etc. of the defendants, until such time as they abandoned the leases in the drainage area; that by reason thereof the court erred in submitting the issue of damages caused by the pollution of plaintiffs’ well water with salt water.

Plaintiffs alleged and the evidence showed that plaintiffs had owned the lands in question since 1942; that the lands lie between the east and west branches of Crooked Oak Creek; that the two branches unite a short distance north of the plaintiffs’ lands; that defendant Cities Service and its superintendent, Earl E. Ives, permitted large quantities of salt water and oil field brine produced from the Cities Service’s operations on lands lying to the east and to the west of plaintiffs’ lands to flow for many years into the two branches of the creek; that defendant Cities Service also stored large quantities of salt water and brine in a pond on the Klaus-mier lease, commonly known as the Clauer Pond, owned by defendant, on lands to the east of plaintiffs’ lands; that the subterranean fresh water producing formations underlying plaintiffs’ lands underlie the site of the Clauer Pond and also crop out in the east branch of the Creek; that the salt water and brine stored in the Clauer Pond and emptied by the defendants into the two branches of the creek constitute nuisances which have polluted the underground fresh water sources of plaintiffs’ land and thereby destroyed potability of the plaintiffs’ fresh water wells; and the jury so found, notwithstanding the defendants’ assertion that the pollution could not have been caused by the discharge of salt water into the west branch of the creek “because it is supported by an impervious substance,” and that defendants were released from any liability for damages, if any, arising from such source under an alleged instrument of release which had been executed by plaintiffs’ predecessors in title in 1939.

In this connection it was shown that both Phillips Petroleum Company and Cities Service Company emptied salt and oil field brine into the west branch of the creek, but Cities Service only emptied the pollutive substances into the east branch of the creek, and Cities Service only stored same in the Clauer Pond, sometimes referred to as Klausmier Lake or Pond. Both Phillips and Cities Service held alleged releases on easements covering pollution of the west branch. Both (Cities Service and Phillips Petroleum Company) defended as one. At no time did either defendant seek to separate its so-called permissive pollution in the west branch of the creek from the non-permissive pollution in the east branch or from the Clauer Pond. The jury by its verdict discharging Phillips from all liability necessarily found that the most probable sources of pollution and nuisances were from the Clauer Pond and the east branch of the Creek. When Phillips Petroleum Company went out of the case, likewise any pollution from the west branch went with it. This is supported by the evidence and inheres in the jury’s verdict.

The court’s instruction to the jury on this phase of the case and about which the defendant complains provides:

“5.

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Bluebook (online)
1959 OK 176, 347 P.2d 637, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 507, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cities-service-oil-co-v-billen-okla-1959.