Ft. Smith W. R. Co. v. Ketis

1910 OK 213, 110 P. 661, 26 Okla. 696, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 12, 1910
Docket446
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1910 OK 213 (Ft. Smith W. R. Co. v. Ketis) 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
Ft. Smith W. R. Co. v. Ketis, 1910 OK 213, 110 P. 661, 26 Okla. 696, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 120 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

*699 HAYES, J.

(after stating the facts as above). The first assignment of error urged goes to the action of the court in overruling a motion by defendant to require plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain. The alleged defects in the petition pointed «out by the motion are that the petition fails to state the name of the person who directed plaintiff, .while he was engaged in performing for defendant the services set forth in the petition, and fails to state in what capacity the agent, foreman, or employee of the company who had charge and supervision of the work being performed by defendant at the time and place wherein he was injured was working. No complaint is made of any uncertainty in what the petition alleges, but all complaint is directed to that which the petition fails to allege, and pertains to an extrinsic fact as to what evidence will be produced by plaintiff to support the allegations of his petition. Defendant cites and relies on the case of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. O'Neill, 49 Kan. 367, 30 Pac. 470. In that case the only charge of negligence contained in the petition was:

“And this plaintiff avers that said injury occurred wholly without any fault or negligence on his part, and wholly because of the gross carelessness and negligence of said defendant, its agents and servants, in violation of all proper rules and regulations for the management and handling of cars under such circumstances.”

A motion to make more definite and certain upon three different grounds was overruled by the trial court. The defects in the petition which the motion in that case asked the court to require plaintiff to cure were, first, that plaintiff 'be required to allege the name of the agent or employee of defendant whose negligent conduct or acts had injured plaintiff; second, that he set forth the facts constituting the negligence and carelessness of which he complained; third, that he set forth all the facts which show any violation of all the proper rules and regulations of the company for the management and handling of its ears. The appellate court held that the motion should have been sustained, and that the defendant company was entitled to know which of its agents was *700 chargeable with the negligence or acts of omission complained of by plaintiff, and to know of what such acts consisted. The aver-ments of the cause of action in that case consist entirely of allegations of general conclusion, and we think with the appellate court that the trial court erred in overruling the motion to maKe more definite and certain, but we do not understand the holding of the appellate court in that case to be that in every action where a corporation is sued to recover for an injury resulting .from its negligence every officer, agent, or employee of the company responsible for such negligence of who contributed thereto must be named in the petition of plaintiff, and that the overruling of a motion to require such to be done is in all cases reversible error. A motion to make more definite and certain is in a large measure addressed to the discretion of the trial court, and its rulings thereon will be reversed only for abuse of its discretion. 6 Encye. of Plead. &■ Prac. p. 2'80. Defendant’s objection to the petition is not that it is so indefinite and uncertain that defendant is unable to ascertain therefrom the precise nature of the charge against it, and is unable to form or prepare a defense to the action, but that which it objects to in effect'is that the petition fails to set iorth the names of the particular witnesses which plaintiff may produce to sustain his action or which defendant may need to establish his defense. The petition charges that the defendant has committed certain acts resulting in injury to him for which he seeks to recover.

It is not complained that the allegations as to the acts ot the defendant constituting plaintiff’s cause of action are indefinite and uncertain. The motion only asks that plaintiff be required to name the particular officer or agent of the company claimed to have committed the acts, so that defendant may know in advance what particular witnesses it will probably need to rebut the evidence of plaintiff. The action of the trial court in refusing to sustain this motion under the circumstances of this case .we think was not reversible error. Todd et al. v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Ry. Co., 37 Minn. 358, 35 N. W. 5; Lee v. Minneapolis & St. Louis *701 Ry. Co., 34 Minn. 225, 25 N. W. 399. The' evidence at the trial discloses that plaintiff is a Greek; that he called"the foreman of the company who had charge of the. work at which plaintiff was employed, and who directed him therein, “Malley,” but he did not know his name. The petition- informs defendant of the time and place where the injury occurred, the circumstances under which it occurred, and at no time during the trial was any legal showing made by defendant that it did not know which of its officers or agents had charge and supervision of the work at the time plaintiff was injure'd, or that it had been unable by reason of any ■ lack of such knowledge to prepare its defense. It' must be presumed, in the absence of any showing to - the contrary, that defendant knows who its own officers, agents, and employees are, and who had charge of its work at that time and at that place. • New trials are not to be granted for mere technical errors occurring in the proceeding of the trial that have not resulted prejudicially to the complaining party. The failure to name in .the petition the particular agent, officer, or employee of the company who directed plaintiff in his work and' who was directly responsible for the acts of the company resulting, in plaintiff’s 'injury could be prejudicial to defendant only in that defendant for such reason was unable to obtain its witnesses for the trial. But no such showing was made. No evidence was introduced by the defendant, and no showing made that any evidence could be procured to rebut the evidence of plaintiff, or that it-had been unable to ascertain whether such evidence could be procured because of • the omissions in the petition complained of.

• The acts of negligence- relied upon by plaintiff in his petition to recover are that,' while he was employed in shoveling dirt into cars of defendant, he was directed by defendant to work at a place which was unsafe, in that it was near to a bank of earth which was in a dangerous and unsafe condition and likely to fall; that defendant had knowledge of the condition of the bank, or by inspection could have had such knowledge; and that it failed to keep said place in a reasonably safe condition, and failed to *702 use reasonable care and diligence to prevent the bank from falling upon plaintiff and injuring him. The embankment at which plaintiff was working was one of the banks in a cut of defendant’s line of railway. It was from 10 to 14 feet high, and sloped from the top outward to the bottom at an angle of about 45 degrees. Plaintiff was working at the bottom of the embankment shoveling loose dirt into a car of defendant when the accident occurred. The top of the hank caved, and the sliding dirt came down upon plaintiff, knocked him down, and broke his leg.

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Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 213, 110 P. 661, 26 Okla. 696, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ft-smith-w-r-co-v-ketis-okla-1910.