Comar Oil Co. v. Richter

1930 OK 85, 285 P. 27, 142 Okla. 89, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1930
Docket18948
StatusPublished

This text of 1930 OK 85 (Comar Oil Co. v. Richter) 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
Comar Oil Co. v. Richter, 1930 OK 85, 285 P. 27, 142 Okla. 89, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 66 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

REID, C.

In this case the plaintiff, by his amended petition filed June 5, 1925. alleged, in substance, that for more than 20 years he had been the owner and lived upon the N.E-⅛ of section 36, township 25 north, range 1 west in Kay county, Okla., and was also the owner of a valid lease upon the N.W.% of section 36 In said township. He described with particularity certain lands where each of the defendants had been from May 1, 1923, and were then operating their *90 respective leaseholds for oil and gas in the vicinity of plaintiff’s land; that plaintiff's lands and lease, and also the lands where defendants were conducting these operations, were situated in the territory drained hy Bird’s Nest creek, which creek ran through plaintiff’s land; that his land and the school land were each fertile and first class for agricultural purposes; that said creek was subject to overflow, depending upon tlie magnitude of the flood, and at times covered certain parts of his fee simple and leased lands; that the defendants in their explorations for oil and gas brought to the surface large quantities of crude oil, base sediment, salt water, and other oil field refuse, and negligently permitted the same to drain into said creek; that said substances had so polluted the waters of said creek running through his farm since May 1, 1923, as to render the same unfit for live stock, and that the overflows of said creek at certain times, carrying said substances to his said lands, tended to destroy all vegetation and crops, and was continuing to ¿o so. In one count of his petition he prayed for injunctive relief against the acts of the defendants, and in another count he a 1-leged that by said acts of the defendant certain parts of the lands had been d ¡- prived of their fertility. He asked judgment for the damage to said lands, resulting directly from overflows ir. the months of May and June, 1923; $12,000. as to tie fee simple land, and $2,000. damages as fo the school lands.

A supplemental petition was filed tw!o crop years thereafter, in which he alleged facts showing, in connection with his original petition, that, by the acts of defendants and by subsequent overflows, his own lands had become totally and permanently destroyed fo his damage in $20,000', and as to his leasehold he had been damaged $3,000.

The court thereafter overruled a motion by defendants to require plaintiff to separately state and number the causes of action stated in his petition, and also to elect as to whether he sued for partial damage to the lands, and further for injunctive relief, or whether he was proceeding on the theory of permanent total destruction o:i the land. The defendants then answered by what amounts to a general denial: al ■ leged that the supplemental petition con ■ stituted a departure, and also pleaded the two years’ statute of limitations. In this: state of the pleadings, on a trial to a jury in June, 1927, a verdict for $15,000 was re turned, and the defendants appealed.

The defendants first suggest that the court erred in refusing to require plaintiff, before the trial proceeded, to elect whether he would proceed for damages upon the theory that his farm was partially destroyed, and that he was entitled to an injuction to prevent further damage, or upon the theory that his farm was completely and permanently destroyed, as the two theories were inconsistent. This motion, in effect, and as applied directly to plaintiff’s pleadings, was a request that plaintiff be directed to elect whether he would proceed upon his amended petition, or upon that petition together with the supplement thereto, and was really a renewal of the same motion directed by defendants at the petition before they answered, which was overruled. Upon examination of the original petition, it is evident that plaintiff sought recovery of partial damages to his lands and an injunction to prevent further damage. And by his supplemental petition, be sought his proper relief under the facts occurring since he filed his amended petition. This practice is authorized by section 323, O. O. S. 1921.

We have carefully examined the record bearing upon this request made at the beginning of the trial, and find, in substance, that, in response to the motion and inquiry by the court, plaintiff’s counsel stated he would proceed to attempt to recover for total permanent damages; that defendants’ counsel then stated they were not ready upon the injunction, but were “ready to meet the issue of permanent damages as last pleaded, and the amount thereof,” hut would desire further time if the court decided to hear the injunction feature. Whereupon the court stated the case would proceed as to the damage action, and if after the trial either party desired to present additional evidence as to the injunction, it would be heard. The case proceeded for the damage, and a verdict was returned therefor. No mention was thereafter made of an injunction. and. of course, none was granted. We think that the record shows the plaintiff elected exactly as requested by the defendants. But, in any event, the defendants have failed to point out, and we are unab’e to discover how they could have been hurt by this procedure, and that is the final test to be applied. Section 2822, O. O. S. 1921.

The defendants contend that the court erred in giving instruction No. 11. in that there was no evidence showing permanent total damage to the entire home farm: and by subsequent assignment, claims error in giving of instruction's Nos. 12 and 13, in *91 that tlie same permitted recovery for tlie usable value of the lease for 1024, when, there was no evidence of damage in that year. In view of the fact that, by another assignment, the defendants also claim that the evidence does not support the verdict, we conclude it best to here set out instruction No. 11, and thereafter discuss the evidence. The instruction is as follows:

“You are instructed that if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the defendants heretofore named, or any one or more of them during the time from May, 1923, to January 4, 1927, in operating their leases described in evidence, polluted or contributed to the cause of the pollution of the stream passing through the plaintiff’s farm by causing or allowing crude oil, salt water, or base sediment, to run or escape from their wells or their leaseholds above plaintiffs land into Bird’s Nest creek, and which by natural drainage found its way onto the plaintiff’s land, and that, as a consequence thereof, naturally following, or which should have been reasonably expected as a result of the acts of the defendants, and that the plaintiffs farm was permanently damaged in any manner, or to any extent as claimed by 'him, then the defendants, or such of them as did so contribute to the cause of the injury, would be liable to the plaintiff in such amount as you find from the evidence was sustained, measured by Ithe rules hereinafter given you.”

By instruction No. 12, tlie jury, in substance, was told that if they found that defendant had likewise damaged the lands of plaintiff’s school lease for the years 1924 and 1925, and the usable value of the lands for said years had thus been diminished, they would find the plaintiff his damages on that account.

By instruction No.

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Related

Comar Oil Co. v. Richter
1927 OK 357 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)
Comar Oil Co. v. Hackney
1926 OK 754 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 85, 285 P. 27, 142 Okla. 89, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comar-oil-co-v-richter-okla-1930.