City of Pawhuska v. Rush

1911 OK 373, 119 P. 239, 29 Okla. 759, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1911
Docket1079
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1911 OK 373 (City of Pawhuska v. Rush) 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 Pawhuska v. Rush, 1911 OK 373, 119 P. 239, 29 Okla. 759, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 383 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

This action was prosecuted in the court below *760 by defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, against plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the city, and one James R. Pearson, to recover damages. Plaintiff recovered in the court below separate judgments against the city and its codefendant. From the judgment against it, the city .prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff alleges in her petition in the trial court that she is owner of a certain lot in the city of Pawhuska on which she and her family have resided as their home; that there are two alleys running through the block in which her lot is situated, which are necessary in order that she may have egress and ingress to and from her lot, and complete enjoyment and use of her property. She alleges that defendants and each of them have permitted to be closed up and obstructed, and have closed up and obstructed, said alleys; that they have destroyed the egress and ingress over same to her lot, and have permitted and caused to be deposited therein large quantities of manure, filth, and other noxious substances, and have caused to be erected thereon cattle and hog pens; and that, because of the unhealthy and offensive odors arising therefrom, she and her family have been compelled to abandon their home; that her property has been depreciated in value; and that she has been compelled to lay out and spend large sums of money for medical treatment, because of which she prayed for judgment in the total sum of $950.

There was a motion by the city to require plaintiff to make her petition more definite and certain in several respects, one of which was that she be required to state how much damage she claimed for money expended for medical purposes, and the amount she expended; and that she be required to attach an itemized account of all the money so paid out. Failure to grant said motion as to this ground is complained of under the first assignment of error urged in the brief of the city’s counsel. There is some merit in this contention. Money paid out or contracted to be paid out for medical attendance or medicine is special damages, and should be specially pleaded, and the sum so expended should be alleged, in order to entitle a recovery therefor. Houston City St. Ry. Co. v. Richart (Tex. Civ. App.) 27 S. W. 920; *761 Bates on Plead. & Prac. vol. 1, p. 291. Blit we think the refusal of the court to require plaintiff to plead the amount expended by her for medical purposes, in view of the subsequent proceedings at the trial, was without prejudice to plaintiff in error. No evidence was introduced to establish any damages whatever arising from this cause, and the court in instructing the jury as to the measure* of plaintiff’s damages did not include as an element thereof money expended for medical purposes. We cannot see how the mere pleading in the petition that money was expended or contracted to be expended by plaintiff for such purposes, without pleading the amount thereof, could have prejudiced the substantial rights of the city, when all claim for damages on that account was abandoned -by plaintiff in the subsequent proceeding at the trial. The court is required by the statute to disregard errors and defects in pleadings or proceedings that do not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party. . Section 4344, Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St. 1903. The overruling of the motion, therefore, while error at the time the court acted, does not alone require-a reversal of the judgment.

To plaintiff’s petition there was a general demurrer filed by the city, setting up several specific grounds of demurrer, two of which were misjoinder of parties, and that the petition failed to allege that the city had notice of the nuisance in the alleys and failed thereafter to remove same. ^ As to the first of these grounds, it is setted under our Code that misjoinder of parties is no ground for demurrer. Marth v. City of Kingfisher et al., 22 Okla. 602, 98 Pac. 436, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1238.

The petition charges the city with, acts, both of commission and omission, in maintaining and permitting the nuisance in the alleys, by which plaintiff’s access to her property was obstructed and her lot rendered unsuitable for residence purposes. It charges that the defendants caused to be constructed and did construct and maintain the nuisance in the alleys, and. also charges that they-(defendants) permitted said nuisance to be maintained therein. No notice is necessary to establish negligence- where the city itself committed the act complained of. The doing of the negli *762 gent act is sufficient to charge the city with knowledge of it. Abbott on Municipal' Corporations, vol. 3, $ 1040. Since the petition charges the city with an act of commission, as well as an act of omission, the demurrer thereto for failure to allege notice should not be sustained; for, in any event, a cause of action is stated as to the act of commission. Rut we do not think the petition so defective in alleging negligent acts of omission as to render it vulnerable to a demurrer. Where the negligent act is not committed by the city, but the ground of liability is that the corporation permitted the act to be committed by others, and the obstruction created thereby to remain in the streets, alleys, or public highways, the burden is upon plaintiff to allege and prove that the corporation had. .notice or reasonable knowledge of the wrongful acts or existence of the nuisance. Abbott on Municipal Corporations, vol. 3, § 1034. The petition does allege that “the defendants and each of them failed, neglected, and refused to abate such nuisance when notified so to do.” This allegation of notice is not as specific and definite as good pleadings require, but it is good as against a demurrer. The fair meaning of this language is that notice was given to defendants to abate the nuisance, but that they not only failed and neglected, but refused, to do so.

There was a demurrer to defendant in error’s evidence, which was overruled and exceptions saved. There is no evidence tending to show that the city or its agents had anything to do with placing the obstructions in the alleys. The theory of the city’s liability upon which the case was prosecuted at the trial was that the city, with knowledge of the existence of the obstruction in the alleys, and that its codefendant was maintaining therein a nuisance, by which defendant in error’s property was injured, and the health of herself and family.endangered and impaired, permitted him to do so, and failed to abate or to make any effort to abate the nuisance. Under an assignment of error complaining of the court’s oyerruling the demurrer to the evidence, counsel for the city contends in his brief that, while in platting the town site alleys were laid out upon the plat where *763 said barn and lots stand, the alleys do not in fact exist; that they have never been opened, and have never been used by the public for the purpose of travel, or by adjoining property owners as a means of access to their property; and that if the nuisance exists at all it is a private nuisance, maintained by the owner of the property upon his own property, for which no liability exists against the city. We think the city is precluded by admissions in its answer from making this contention at this time.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 373, 119 P. 239, 29 Okla. 759, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pawhuska-v-rush-okla-1911.