Darby Petroleum Corp. v. Rogers

1938 OK 235, 82 P.2d 839, 183 Okla. 415, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 5, 1938
DocketNo. 27698.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1938 OK 235 (Darby Petroleum Corp. v. Rogers) 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
Darby Petroleum Corp. v. Rogers, 1938 OK 235, 82 P.2d 839, 183 Okla. 415, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 291 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

Plaintiffs recovered a verdict and judgment against each of the eight defendants, covering injury to cattle caused by drinking creek water which had been polluted by the defendants in the operation of their nine oil and gas leases, and the defendants appeal.

Plaintiffs were lessees and operators of a ranch of about 2,000 acres, which ranch contained four separate pastures. The north pasture was traversed by Little Wewoka creek, which meandered through it for over a mile. This creek was the only permanent stock water in that pasture. It did not pass through the other three pastures. It was in this pasture that the plaintiffs’ cattle were injured.

In the spring of 1933 the plaintiffs purchased 375 good grade Whitefaced Hereford cattle in good condition, and placed them in the east and south pastures of the ranch, where the cattle thrived, producing during that summer a 90 per cent, crop of calves with no abortions in the herd. In November of 1933, after weaning the calves, the remainder of the herd was moved to the north or bottom pasture for the winter. Shortly thereafter they began to abort calves, which were born dead. The cattle began suffering from intestinal disorders and began to lose weight and become thin. Plaintiffs did not know the cause of the trouble. Different sorts of feed were tried, and the cattle in that pasture were heavily fed. After about *416 60 days they were moved from that pasture and put in the feed lot, where the heavy feeding was continued and they were given fresh spring water. Nevertheless they continued to lose weight and became further emaciated. They also continued to abort their calves, so that until the fall of 1934, 102 calves were born dead.

■ In the fall of 1934, the plaintiffs, not yet having discovered the pollution of the creek, placed upward of 100 calves and yearlings in the north pasture. They began to lose weight, although feed was abundant. They were moved from that pasture in about 30 days, having lost both in weight and in quality, and six of them died. The total deaths, counting both years, were 13 cows, one bull and six calves, in addition to the 102 calves born dead. The largest item of ■ damage, however, was the depreciation to the entire herd, caused by permanent loss of weight and depreciation in quality.

Up the creek some distance the defendants were operating their oil and gas leases. All leases in that oil field, except the nine leases of defendants, drained north into the North Canadian river. The nine leases of defendants drained south into the creek which traversed the land in question, and are the only leases draining into that creek. It was shown by undisputed evidence that-with the exception of one defendant, hereinafter discussed, salt water in considerable quantities was being run or piped directly into the creek by each of the defendants.

The defendants assert that the witness who testified that they were permitting salt water to escape into the creek made his inspection, wherein he observed that fact, , more than a year after the injuries were sustained. They say that this was too remote in point of time and that the judgment should be reversed for that reason, citing Thurman Oil Co. v. Carman, 179 Okla. 388, 65 P.2d 963. The record does not support the contention of defendants as to the evidence in this connection. It reveals that the examination was made within a week or ten days of the date upon which the cattle were last removed from the pasture. Furthermore, as stated above, the leases of the' defendants were the only leases which for some years had drained into that creek, and evidence was adduced showing that the water had been of high salt content for the past several years. Also, the water immediately above the leases was not polluted. Additionally, evidence was received that the pipes in which the salt water was being emptied into the creek were corroded half their thickness, indicating that for a considerable while the same condition had existed. The vegetation where the salt water had drained was killed and barren and the soil was dead. The trees were dead. Other facts were adduced indicating that the same condition had existed for a long while. We therefore are of the opinion that the principle that presumptions do not run backward is of no benefit to the defendants in the instant case, for not only was the inspection made within a week or ten days of the last date of injury, but the physical facts circumstantially indicated that the condition found on that date had existed for several years prior thereto. Furthermore, numerous witnesses testified as to the salty condition of the water at dates interspersed throughout the several years prior to the inspection in question. No witness was produced by any of the defendants, except the one hereinafter mentioned, denying that they had actually polluted the water.

Defendants also complain that the court erred in failing to submit to the jury their theory.of the case. This contention is made in connection with their complaint that the trial judge refused to give the jury the following instruction, requested by the defendants :

' “You are instructed that if you find and believe from the evidence that the cattle involved herein were suffering from Bang’s disease or any other disease not caused by the drinking of salt water, if any, permitted to escape by the defendants, your verdict must be for the defendants.”

The trial judge correctly refused to give that instruction. The evidence produced by defendants revealed that some of the cattle were suffering from Bang’s disease, but it was shown that Bang’s disease does not cause loss of weight, death, or depreciation in cattle, but that its only' effect is to cause the abortion of calves. The requested instruction was too broad in its scope. According to the evidence, such disease could not have caused any of the injuries which were actually suffered, other than the loss of calves, yet the instruction would have required a finding for the defendants on all of the issues as hereinafter discussed. The court did properly instruct the jury that it was the theory of the defendants that Bang’s disease was the cause of the loss of calves by premature birth, and that if the jury believed that the loss of said calves by premature birth was occasioned *417 by that disease, then they should find for the defendants on that issue. This was all that the evidence on that issue required.

A part of defendants’ fourth proposition complains of the trial judge’s admitting evidence of a sample of water talren -from the creek on December 5, 1934, showing that by chemical analysis the water was of a sufficiently high salt content to cause serious injuries and death to cattle. They assert that the sample of water was taken more than one year after the first of the cattle were injured. On the other hand, however, it was taken from the stream while the injury was still being sustained, while the cattle were still drinking the water. Furthermore, it was shown by the evidence that the water was very salty in the spring of 1933, in May of 1934, and in October of 1934. The only difference between its condition on those dates and on December 5, 1934, would be one of degree. This contention is without merit.

The remaining propositions involve instructions given the jury on the subject of damages, the refusal of the court to give certain instructions on that issue, and allied questions.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 235, 82 P.2d 839, 183 Okla. 415, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darby-petroleum-corp-v-rogers-okla-1938.