City of Enid v. Reeser

1958 OK 197, 330 P.2d 198, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1958
Docket37944
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1958 OK 197 (City of Enid v. Reeser) 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
City of Enid v. Reeser, 1958 OK 197, 330 P.2d 198, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 565 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

CORN, Vice Chief Justice.

Defendant in error is one of the owners of airplane who, on the evening of April 8, 1956, was renting storage space for them in a hangar operated and maintained at its Woodring Airport by plaintiff in error. About 10 o’clock that night a storm struck the area damaging the hangar and virtually demolishing said airplane, along with some others stored therein. Thereafter, defendant in error and two other owners of airplanes thus wrecked, instituted separate actions, as plaintiffs, against^ the plaintiff in error, as defendant, to recover the difference in the value of the planes before and after the storm. The three cases were consolidated for trial, j

At the trial, the liability of the defendant' city was made to depend upon whether or not the damages to the airplanes were proximately caused by defendant’s negligence, through its agents and employees, in failing to close the hangar doors before the storm and/or take other precautions against the planes being blown about by the wind, or whether the damages were due to what in law is termed “an act of God” in the form of a storm of unprecedented character. At the close of the trial, the jury returned separate verdicts for the defendant and against each of the plaintiffs, and the court thereafter incorporated them in separate judgments conforming therewith.

Thereafter, each of the plaintiffs filed separate motions for a new trial, alleging, among other errors complained of, that the trial court erred in allowing defendant to introduce into evidence at the joint trial, its Exhibit No. 29. At the hearing on said motions, the court entered separate orders sustaining them on the sole and specific ground that the .admission of said Exhibit “was a material error of law which was so prejudicial that it prevented the plaintiff from having a fair trial, and'materially affected * * * his rights”.

Before the defendant city perfected the present appeal from said order and/or judgment, the parties in the other two cases stipulated that the decision herein would be considered conclusive and binding as to the correctness of the court’s granting of a new trial in those cases. Our continued reference to the parties will be by their trial court designations.

In one of its two propositions of error, defendant takes the position that the trial court’s granting of a new trial on account of the claimed inadmissibility of defendant’s Exhibit No. 29, was error, both because said Exhibit was properly admissible *200 and because, if such admission was error, it was harmless and therefore insufficient ground for reversal.

The disputed Exhibit was a part of the evidence the defendant introduced to show that the storm in question, was an unprecedented and tornadic one. It was a copy of a document entitled “State Climatologist’s Evaluation of Storm” written on a U. S. Department of Commerce Weather Bureau printed form. The only portions thereof containing any affirmative representations were in words and figures as follows:

“Year 1956 Month April State Oklahoma Storm Number 24
“A. Classification of storm-Type (Check)
Tornado---X
Accompanying Phenomena (Check)
Wind--.-X
Rain-X
Plail---X
“B. Basis for classification (Check)
Newspaper clippings-X
Reports of actual witnesses without special training X
Reports of W. B. meteorologist after visit to storm area X HVL)
* * *
“C. Pertinent facts about the storm
1. Number of actual witnesses reporting storm-several
2. Estimate of accuracy of data on this storm
_X_
Excellent Good Fair Poor
⅜ ⅜ ⅝
4. Type of wind damage essentially _X_
Straight Line Rotating
5. Was there evidence of a local circulation (low) of the order of 10 miles in diameter or less ? X
Yes.
6.Other evidence (Check) 2205 C SCTD STG 320/60 346/70 308/100
* ⅜ *
Photographs-Radar record_
Photographs of damage only X
* * *
“D. Summary of storm information to be used as basis for publication in Climatological Data, National Summary.
Okla. Enid
Place Garfield, Waukomis Date April 8, 1956 Time 10:15 P.M. (State, County, Area) (Month, Day, Year)
“Width of Path 400
(Yards)
“Length of Path 8__
(miles)
“Casualties: Number killed _0 Number injured 4
(persons) (persons)
“Damage: Crops $50,000 Other property $300,000 to $500,000
“Type of Storm Tornado
*201 “Remarks: Evidence indicates several tornadoes or funnels aloft skipped around over Garfield County causing widespread damage. The area of greatest destruction was from Waukomis to Enid. Numerous farmsteads in the Waukomis area received complete destruction to barns, outbuildings, livestock killed and farm supplies and equipment destroyed. A semi-trailer was tipped over and thrown 40 ft. Several business establishments received roof and window damage, as well as did many houses. A large number of trees were uprooted and most TV antennas were destroyed. The roof of the high school was lifted and the building was declared unsafe. 75 electric poles were broken over by the twisting winds. In the Enid area 4 persons were injured as the storm moved over the south and east portions of the city.

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 197, 330 P.2d 198, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-enid-v-reeser-okla-1958.