City of Mangum v. Powell

1946 OK 2, 165 P.2d 136, 196 Okla. 306, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 8, 1946
DocketNo. 31971.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1946 OK 2 (City of Mangum v. Powell) 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 Mangum v. Powell, 1946 OK 2, 165 P.2d 136, 196 Okla. 306, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 370 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

The judgment was entered against the city upon jury verdict in plaintiffs’ action for damages resulting from death by drowning of their ten-year-old son.

Defendant here asserts:

“The evidence in this case is insufficient to sustain any sort of judgment against the City of Mangum,”

—and:

“The lake or pond in which Dwain Powell drowned, being a reproduction ■of a natural lake and not being equipped with any diving boards, docks, rafts •or other paraphernalia of any kind was not an attractive nuisance.”

The facts are as follows: In June, 1940, defendant purchased some 28 acres of rough canyon land lying immediately adjacent to the defendant city. Said city had practically surrounded the land on three sides. Defendant had commenced the improvement of the lands for park purposes. To the date of the unfortunate occurrence, May 14, 1941. a number of roadways had been constructed thereon, and there had been constructed an artificial lake by the placing of a dam across a ravine or canyon. The proposed park had not been officially opened for public use, though the roads had considerable use. The grounds were police patrolled and it was strictly against police regulations for children to play upon the grounds or around and in the lake.

On the day plaintiffs’ son was drowned in this lake, he was upon the grounds without the permission or knowledge of his parents, and against police rules. His body was found in the lake clad in bathing trunks and his street clothes were found on the shore near the water.

Shortly prior to his death the police had warned him and other youngsters from the lake and premises and some time after such warning the police had taken him and another youngster from the premises to the city hall and had released them from custody upon their promise to remain away from the premises.

Prior to the city’s purchase of the land the same seems to have been a favored playgrounds for some of the young boys for more than 30 years.

At the time of drowning there were no fences or barriers around the lake, nor were any warning or danger signs posted. At the time, the city was building a stadium and making other improvements on the land in preparation of opening the premises to the public as a city park. The lake had been constructed and water impounded therein for beautification and irrigation purposes. No diving boards, piers, bathhouses or other recreational equipment had been placed at or upon said lake at the time of the occurrence mentioned. No essential difference exists between the small lake so constructed and a natural lake or pond.

We think the following authorities amply sustain defendant’s contentions: City of Grandfield v. Hammons et al., 100 Okla. 75, 227 P. 140; City of Hominy v. Musick, 137 Okla. 246, 278 P. 1094; Turner v. Durant Cotton Oil Co., 96 Okla. 31, 219 P. 892; Polk v. Laurel Hill Cemetery Ass’n, 37 Cal. A. 624, 174 P. 414; Harper v. City of Topeka, 92 Kan. 11, 139 P. 1018, and City of Tulsa v. Harman, 148 Okla. 117, 299 P. 462.

The Grandfield Case is to the effect that without an invitation, express or implied, no duty of active care arises and the rule applies to infants, pointing out certain well recognized exceptions and distinctions which were not present there nor here. The same general rules and theory of law are announced and applied in the Musick Case, pointing out that gross negligence amounting to wantonness would take a case , without the rule.

The Turner Case points out that the owner of property ordinarily has the *308 right to make such use of his property as others throughout the country.

The Polk Case points to the distinction between a dangerous condition which can be rendered safe without destroying its purpose and usefulness, and one which cannot be so safeguarded. The rule of the turntable cases is therein discussed and distinguished in a case much like the present one. Therein the court said:

“ A pond of water, it may be conceded, is always attractive to youngsters; but the dangers connected with and inherent in a lake or pond of water, natural or artificial, are obvious to everybody — even to a child old enough to be permitted by its parents to go about and play unattended upon the streets or in the public parks. It would not conform to the dictates of common reason to say that a child of the age of eight years, or even much younger, does not know and fully realize that a fall into a pond of water or a deep reservoir would result in injury to him, if not in his death. But there is no necessity for abstract reasoning upon the proposition, for we think it thoroughly settled by the decisions that a pond of water, whether natural or artificial, is not to be included in the same class with turntables and other complicated machinery, the inherent dangers of which are not obvious to a child.”

In that same opinion is found the following quotation from a former opinion of the same court:

“ ‘But the rule of the turntable cases is an exception to the general principle that the owner of land is under no legal duty to keep it in a safe condition for others than those whom he invites there, and that trespassers take the risk of injuries from ordinary visible causes; and it should not be carried beyond the class of cases to- which it has been applied. And the cases to which the rule has been applied, so far as our attention has been called to them, are nearly all. cases where the owner of the land had erected on it dangerous machinery, the consequences of meddling with which are not supposed to be fully comprehended by infant minds. It has also been applied tó a few other cases where the owner, by some affirmative act, has caused some artificial danger to exist on his premises, as in the case of Branson v. Labrot, 81 Ky. 638, 50 Am. Rep. 198, cited by appellant, where the defendants had “stacked a large quantity of lumber in one large and irregular pile,' so negligently and badly done that as the deceased, an infant, was playing near it, one of the timbers fell upon and. killed him.” It is not contended by appellant that the.,rule of the turntable cases has ever been-applied to facts like those in the case at bar; his contention is that the reasoning and philosophy of the rule ought to extend it to a case like the one at bar. But the same reasoning does not apply to both sets of cases. A body of water — either standing, as in ponds and lakes, or running, as in rivers and creeks, or ebbing and flowing, as on the shores of seas and bays — is a natural, object incident to all countries which are not deserts. Such a body of water may be found in or close to nearly every city or town in the land; the danger of drowning in it is an apparent open danger, the knowledge of which is common to all (italics ours); and there is no just view consistent with recognized rights of property owners which would compel one owning land upon which such water, or part of it, stands and flows, to fill it up or surround it with an impenetrable wall. ... No case has been cited where damages have been successfully recovered for the death of a child drowned in a pond or a private premises who had gone there without invitation, while it has been repeatedly held that in such a case no damages can be recovered. It was . . . so held in Klix v. Nieman, 68 Wis. 271, 32 N. W. 223, 60 Am. Rep. 854, in Overholt v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 2, 165 P.2d 136, 196 Okla. 306, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mangum-v-powell-okla-1946.