Durell v. Public Service Co. of Oklahoma

1935 OK 1103, 51 P.2d 517, 174 Okla. 549, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1305
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketNo. 24831.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1103 (Durell v. Public Service Co. of Oklahoma) 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
Durell v. Public Service Co. of Oklahoma, 1935 OK 1103, 51 P.2d 517, 174 Okla. 549, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1305 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The Public Service Company of Oklahoma constructed a high line from Tulsa to TVeleetka. This high line was constructed of three strands of heavy, uninsulated wire, carrying 66,000 volts of electricity. The wire was suspended from cross-arms between pairs of poles, 40 feet high, the poles in each pair being about ten feet apart. Each pair of poles, joined by the cross-arms, is called a ‘'frame,” and the. frames, supporting the wires, were placed along the high line at intervals of 550 feet.

This high line was run across private property, and the right of way therefor was obtained by condemnation proceedings. Among the owners of the private property crossed by said line were John M. Durell and Emma Durell. who complained of the inadequacy of damages arrived at by the appraising commissioners. The appraising commissioners set their damage at $400, and they demanded a jury trial on the issue. About one mile of their land was crossed by the high line. The jury returned a verdict of $700, and the Durells appeal. Their contention in the lower court was that the damage ran into thousands of dollars. In this appeal they contend, among other things, that certain remarks of the trial judge and the admission of incompetent evidence probably caused the jury to greatly underrate-their damage. The Public Service Company will, be referred to as plaintiff, and the Du-rells as defendants, as they were called in the lower court.

When the condemnation proceeding was first instituted, the trial court appointed Messrs. Brockman, Avery, and Eaton to appraise the damage to the various tracts of land in accordance with our statutory provisions on that subject. During the instant trial on the limited question of defendants’ damage, the plaintiff company had each of the commissioners testify in support of the award of $400 which they, the commissioners, had made. Strictly speaking, the question for consideration was not whether the award wás correct in amount, the real issue being the damage sustained by defendants, which was measured by the difference in market value of the land immediately preceding and immediately after the construction of the high line, and attributable to the construction thereof.

However, the defendants do not object to that variance so much as they c-bject to a remark of the trial judge, in the presence of the jury, while Commissioner Brockman was being cross-examined by the defendants’ attorney. The attorney had been interrogating the witness concerning the matters considered in estimating the -damage, it appearing that the commissioners had visited the farm together. The witness had just testified that not more than $400- damage had been done the particular tract by the erection cf the high line, when counsel asked him if that was the amount which Mr. Avery, another commissioner, had told the witness the damage should be. ’The witness answered that it was Mr. Avery’s opinion and also his own opinion. The following proceedings then took place in the presence of the jury;

“Q. Isn’t it a fact that Mr. Avery told you and Mr. Eaton what the damage should be? A. No, sir; I don’t think he did. The Court: Mr. Brockman has bought and sold more land than Mr. Avery has. You don’t know Mr. Brockman like I do or you would knew that nobody could tell him what to do. Mr. Jameson: Just a minute. I except to the remarks of the court and now move the court to discharge the jury and declare this case a mistrial on account of the remarks of the court. The Court:" Overruled. Mr. Jameson: Exception.”

The foregoing was urged strenuously in the trial court as one of the grounds for new trial, which motion was taken under advisement by the trial court. In overruling the motion for new trial the trial judge commented at length concerning this remark and stated that it was justified in fairness and courtesy to the witness, unless defendants’ attorney at the time intended to later introduce evidence tending to prove that Avery did in fact influence the witness’s estimate, of the damage, and that it was further justified because on the voir dire examination' of jurors defendants’ attorney asked each *551 juror if Re owned any stock in any of the Instill companies, it appearing that one of the Instills was president of the plaintiff company and that Commissioner Avery had been associated with him in business, — that thus it was apparent from the outset that defendants had sought to increase the amount of their verdict by appealing to the jurors’ passion and prejudice against the Insulls, who, the trial judge stated, were in popular disfavor. Yet the judge stated that such questions on the voir dire were proper, and that the question which prompted this unfortunate remark was also proper, with which latter statements we agree.

Certainly it was not only the right but the duty of defendants’ attorney to learn whether there were any interested parties on the jury. If a prospective juror owned stock in the plaintiff company, his interest was direct and active. If he owned stock in an affiliated company, he may or may not have been thereby biased, depending on the juror.

It was also permissible, and a proper part of the cross-examination of the witness Brockman, to inquire into the question of whether his estimate was the direct expression of his own mind or the hearsay repetition of another’s estimate. The rule as to hearsay testimony was as 'applicable to him as to any other witness. And even assuming that the figure was his own appraisement, and not hearsay, we nmy not lose sight of the fact that appraisals of value and damage are largely opinions 'and conclusions, as distinguished from the basic facts, and tlinL such opinions and conclusions are not events, which “happen,” but are. the result of foi1-mative, progressive reasoning. It is only By a stretching of the rules of evidence in the first place that conclusions are permitted to emanate from the witness s and in some cases, their proper locus being the jury room. Hence every reasonable latitude in such cases should be permitted on cross-examination, to determine the strength or weakness of the premises upon which siich conclusions are based. If Mr. Brockman arrived wholly or in part at his own conclusion upon the strength of the previous conclusion of Mr. Avery, it would be a case of one witness basing his conclusion on the conclusion of another, — -no more permissible among experts than any other class of witnesses.

When Mr. Brockman testified, the other appraisers had not yet been on the witness stand. It was well within the rights of defendants, at this time, to interrogate as to all matters touching upon whether witness was speaking not only from, but how much from, his own knowledge and experience. Independently of whether defendants could later prove that Mr. Brockman’s appraisal was influenced by, or founded upon, Mr. Avery's appraisal, they were entitled to all of the opportunities afforded by the rules of procedure to discover latent defects, of. a reasonably possible nature, in the testimony of their opponents. Else the right of cross-examination would be of little benefit. We do not mean that counsel should be permitted indulgence in wild, unreasonable questioning, leading tot innuendo and suggestion which he figuratively leaves in the, air, without evidence of his own to support or justify such questioning. This was not that kind of an instance.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1103, 51 P.2d 517, 174 Okla. 549, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durell-v-public-service-co-of-oklahoma-okla-1935.