Fike v. Peters

1935 OK 1009, 52 P.2d 700, 175 Okla. 334, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 889
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 22, 1935
DocketNo. 22411.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1009 (Fike v. Peters) 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
Fike v. Peters, 1935 OK 1009, 52 P.2d 700, 175 Okla. 334, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 889 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in the district court of Creek county for the wrongful death, and pain and suffering endured by Frankie Peters, who was drowned at Sapulpa, Okla. While swimming with companions in a municipal swimming pool, she was drawn by force of suction into the mouth of a large siphon, installed by defendants for the purpose of lowering the surface of the water impounded by the dam in order to more conveniently construct a railroad trestle one-half mile up stream. The deceased was swept from the surface of the water into the mouth of the *335 siphon three feet below, thereby severely lacerating and bruising her body and holding her fast until she was drowned, the force of the current being so great that men who were summoned were unable to remove her body in time to save her life. These siphons were installed in this public swimming pool without any notice to the public and without sign of warning, guard or protection.

The facts show that some years prior to the occurrence complained of in the plaintiff’s petition and as disclosed by the evidence at the trial of this case, the city of Sapulpa, owning a municipal, park along Rock creek, constructed a dam in the creek, and at the dam constructed a municipal bathing beach. The dam elevated the surface of the water in the creek by approximately ten feet at the dam and by several feet for a distance of over half a mile up the creek. At a point up stream nearly a half mile from the dam, the creek was spanned by a railroad bridge and trestle of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company.

The defendant E. G. Fike & Company entered into a contract with the railway company to replace the piers under the bridge. In order to more conveniently do so, the defendant E. G. Fike & Company, acting by its manager and agent, the defendant E. G. Fike, decided to drain the water from the swimming pool and creek. To do this, defendants constructed, of oil field casing, two large siphons, which were installed in the swimming pool at the dam. The casing used wag twelve inches in diameter, except that in one siphon a section of casing ten inches in diameter was used, constituting the intake. These siphons were so placed that the shorter ends extended into the water above the dam and the longer ends protruded over the dam and down stream. After they had been started and were siphoning, the defendants left them in place to complete the drainage of the pool.

It will be observed that in order to accomplish their purpose, the siphons would be required to have sufficient capacity to not only lift over the dam the volume of the water representing the natural flow of the stream, but also the reserve accumulation impounded behind the dam. This they had sufficient capacity to do, for the surface of the water was being lowered at the time the accident complained of occurred. The point near the dam at which the siphons wez'e installed had for a long time been used as a municipal swimming pool. The public generally, but more especially boys and women and children, resorted there to bathe.

The siphons in operation obviously created a very real menace to the safety of persons swimming there. When they were being installed, agents of the defendant É. G. Fike & Company were warned of the danger, but despite this fact no signs were posted and no efforts made to protect the mouth of the siphons with guards. Experts differed to some extent as to the effect of the siphons upon the water in the pool. The force of the current at the intake was variously estimated at from 350 to 881 pounds; the volume of water flowing in the pipe, according to one of defendant’s witnesses, was about 25 feet per second. Considerable export testimony is in the record in regard to the currents created by1 the siphons upon the water at varying distances from the intake. All agreed, however, that the siphons set up currents in the water similar to those described by defendants’ witness Cochran, which were of such nature that “any objects moving in the current of course would be acted upon by the force of the current,”

Lay witnesses who saw the siphons in operation testified that upon the surface they could see the water swirl. Richard Carpenter, a boy playing near .the dam, threw sticks and leaves into the water and watched them get into the swirl, be drawn down and up through the siphons and discharged at the other end. He stated that the swirl was sufficient to create a funnel-like hole in the water, which came and went; that a stick about a foot long would go through the pipe so you could see it come out at the other side of the dam. It seems that, perhaps due to the vagaries of the current feeding the siphons, at times the water at the surface would appear undisturbed, and at others the suction would become so great that objects would be drawn from the very surface with tremendous velocity down deep under the water and hurled at the rate of 25 feet per second through the pipes and out the exits some 27 feet down the stream.

The evidence disclosed that the casing of which the siphons were made had been cut, with a sharp instrument resembling a chisel, from the outside, in such manner that sharp steel projections some four inches long protruded inwardly about the periphery at the intake end.

On the occasion which gave rise to the case at bar, Frankie Peters, a 14-year-old girl, who had just graduated from the Sa-.pulpa High School, went with a party of *336 girl friends to the pool to swim. Unmindful of the lurking danger, the girls swam about in the vicinity of the siphons, to the dam and back, until about ready to depart, when Frankie Peters swam between the/ pipes, to the dam, and lay with one hand resting upon it. Then she turned, started swimming, took one stroke, and, disappeared. At the time she went down she was near the 12-inch pipe. Her head was directly over the north siphon (12-inch-pipe) when she went down. All the minor details, as revealed by witnesses, concerning her exact position and movements at the time she was drawn beneath the water and out of sight cannot be reconciled. However, none of the witnesses seemed to be in doubt concerning the basic facts in which we are interested. Henry Coe, a boy who was sitting on the bank watching them swim, immediately upon her disappearance said to a companion, “I believe that girl was sucked in that pipe, because she went under so fast,” and the same witness described what happened. He said, “Then she was just sucked under.” After a time bubbles rose.

Aid was summoned. When the ten-inch siphon was inspected it was found that her lifeless body was wedged into it to her hips, feet first, with one arm also drawn into the siphon. Efforts to dislodge the body with the siphon in place proved unavailing. The 'weight of the water, together with the barbed steel projections, held the body SO' firmly in place that it could not be dislodged.

Ultimately, with the assistance of the fire department, the siphons were taken out of the poo] and the body recovered. ' Deep lacerations were apparent about the arms, legs, hips, and thighs, caused by the steel projections on the inner side of the pipe. There was a cut over one eye. All efforts at resuscitation failed.

The defendant E. G. Hike, agent and president of the E. G.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1009, 52 P.2d 700, 175 Okla. 334, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fike-v-peters-okla-1935.