City of Tulsa v. Whittenhall

1929 OK 122, 282 P. 322, 140 Okla. 160, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 19, 1929
Docket18403
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1929 OK 122 (City of Tulsa v. Whittenhall) 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 Tulsa v. Whittenhall, 1929 OK 122, 282 P. 322, 140 Okla. 160, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 342 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

HALL, C.

This was an action by A. W. Whittenhall against the city of Tulsa for damages on account of certain personal injuries which he received in falling through the covering of a storm sewer catch basin in one of the streets of that city. The basis of the negligence was that the city, through its employees, placed and permitted a defective lid to remain on the catch basin opening. The defect consisted in the lid being too small.

At the time of the injury the plaintiff was assisting in laying some concrete or stone work near the scene of the catch basin. He left the place where he had been wording, walked across the parking, and stepped upon the lid, covering the manhole of the catch basin. The lid tilted and he fell into the hole, with one leg, resulting in a severe bruise about his sexual organs, which went to the extent of puncturing or rupturing Ms urethra, and breaking down the walls between the locality of the puncture and the scrotal sac, thereby causing his urine to leak into the scrotum around his testicles.

Immediately after the injury, the plaintiff called a doctor, who. prescribed some simple or homeopathic treatment. At the time he called the doctor and when the doctor arrived the plaintiff was urinating blood. This doctor testified that he advised plaintiff to immediately call a specialist, a urologist, to have the exact nature of the injury worked out. The plaintiff denies that such suggestion was made. The plaintiff did not have any further treatment from a medical doctor until the elapse of about 16 days, at which time he called another physician and surgeon. This doctor sent him to a hospital. At that time the plaintiff’s scrotum had swollen to enormous proportions, was filled with urine which had passed through the punctured urethra, down through the broken-down tissue to the scrotum: and the whole area was highly infected, and the plaintiff was suffering the severest pain. The scrotal sac burst from pressure caused from urine and pus, and the plaintiff was treated for several weeks at the hospital.

It seems that in order to encourage and make possible the healing of the broken place in tlie urethra, it was necessary to insert! a *162 catheter, whi$i was a small rubber tub® pushed up into the bladder. The bladder was so inflamed and infected that pus would accumulate and clog this catheter or tube, and the contraction of the muscles would force the catheter out, which would re-infect or aggravate the healing process of the rupture. The wound finally heated, and the tissue in the scrotum finally softened to nearly normal condition.

Thirty-one days after the injury, the plaintiff, through his attorney, gave notice of the injury to the city, and a claim for damages in the sum of $50,000 was made. It is needless to say that the city did not pay the claim. The plaintiff filed suit against the city, the defendant, alleging damages in the sum of $50,000. The petition alleged and the action was prosecuted upon the theory that the plaintiff suffered four elements of damages. First, pain and suffering; second, per-manenlt injuries as; a direct result of the puncture of his urethra, because of scar tissue within the inner wall thereof, which would likely later produce stricture and impair his general health ; third, the serious impairment of his sexual powers, either caused by the infection and intense inflammation around his testicles, or the result of the rupture as aforesaid ; and fourth, hospital bills and medical attention. The case was tried two or three) times. It appears that at one time there was a mistrial, and at another time the plaintiff secured a judgment for $3,200, and a new trial was granted on plaintiff’s motion. It seems that attorneys for the city conceded it. At a subsequent trial, involving this appeal, the plaintiff was awarded a judgment for $12,500.

The plaintiff in error, the defendant in the trial court, in seeking a reversal of this case presents and urges at considerable length numerous propositions.

(1) It is first contended that the notice of the injury which was served on the city or its officers-is fatally defective for five distinct reasons. (2) Error is also predicated upon the fact that the court admitted evidence of a prior accident at the same place, which accident or injury occurred four years .prior thereto. (3) Also error is predicated upon the admission in evidence of a part of the opening statement of counsel for defendant, made at a former trial. (4) The refusal to receive certain evidence offered by defendant; (5) error in refusing certain requested inst.rueffons: and (6) that the verdict is excessive and rendered under passion and prejudice.

Pertaining to the first proposition, the notice, we will be unable to discuss it separately under the various subheads arranged and set forth in the brief of plaintiff in error. The notice was not filed within the 30-day period provided by the municipal charter of the city of Tulsa. Defendant in error also consumes a considerable space and the greater portion of his brief in making a somewhat plausible argument that this provision of the city charter, requiring as a condition precedent to an action in the courts on either a common-law liability or one created by the statutes affecting the people and citizenship as a whole, is void. But it is unnecessary for us to pass upon or seriously consider that proposition. It is enough to say that in this ease there is ample evidence in the record supporting the finding of the jury that, the plaintiff was unable within the 30-day period to give this notice;

In jurisdictions where such a provision as contained in the city charter of Tulsa is embodied in the statute law of the states, or embodied in the city charters by express provisions of the statutes or the respective Constitutions, the courts uniformly hold that physical or mental inability to file a claim within the statutory period extends the limitation. Our court has passed on this question in the case of the City of Tulsa v. Wells, 79 Okla. 39, 191 Pac. 186. Among other cases, may be mentioned the following: Hartsell v. City of Ashville et al., 164 N. C. 193, 80 S. E. 226; Randolph v. Springfield, 302 Mo. 33, 257 S. W. 449, 31 A. L. R. 612.

• The notice stated that the injury occurred <>n or about the 3rd day of May, '1925, instead Of stating the exact date, the 2nd day of May. The plaintiff in error urges that fact as the second ground of rendering the notice void. The third ground urged is the lack of particularization as to the exact location of the place where the injury occurred. The fourth objection is that the notice did not state definitely how the injury occurred; and the fifth is the contention that the notice was void because it was not served upon the proper officers. In this connection it may be mentioned that the notice was served on some person in charge of the city auditor’s office. The charter provides that the notice must be served either upon the mayor or rhe city auditor. It appears that the auditor was “in the West.” and the attorney for the plaintiff took the notice and left it with a girl in charge of the auditor’s office.

The notice did not state in detail how the injury occurred. It did state, however, that the injury occurred by reason of the negli *163

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 122, 282 P. 322, 140 Okla. 160, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-whittenhall-okla-1929.