Gourley v. Jackson

1929 OK 511, 285 P. 84, 142 Okla. 74, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 26, 1929
Docket18473
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1929 OK 511 (Gourley v. Jackson) 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
Gourley v. Jackson, 1929 OK 511, 285 P. 84, 142 Okla. 74, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 42 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

LEAOH, O.

This action arose out of an automobile accident. A verdict and judgment was returned and entered at both trials of the case in the district court of Oklahoma county in favor of the plaintiff, Mrs. W. S. Jackson, against the defendant, Austin R. Gourley, who brings this, his second, appeal. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court. The opinion in the former appeal of this case is reported in 116 Okla. 30, 243 Pac. 243.

The defendant, as grounds for reversal of the second judgment rendered against him in the district court, alleges in part that the trial' court committed error in failing to sustain his demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence; in failing to sustain 'his motion for *75 a directed verdict at the conclusion of all the evidence, and in failing to sustain a 'motion for judgment in his favor after verdict.

These first assignments of error may be considered together since the argument in support thereof appears to be largely based on the contention that plaintiffs’ evidence failed to show primary negligence on the part of the defendant, and on the ground that all of the issues arising and submitted in the second trial had been decided in the former appeal in favor of the defendant.

We copy the following from defendant’s brief:

"It was contended by the plaintiff in error that every legal proposition and every question of fact had been definitely determined against the defendant in error on the former appeal of this case, and that there was nothing to be tried at the subsequent trial of the case.”

Defendant also contends that the plaintiff attempted to change her theory of the case on its remand and at the second trial. There is cited in support of the allegations of error and argument thereon: Oklahoma City Electric, Gas & Power Co. v. Baumhoff, 21 Okla. 503, 96 Pac. 758; St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. Mayne, 36 Okla. 48, 127 Pac. 474; St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. Hardy, District Judge, 45 Okla. 423, 146 Pac. 38; Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Coley, 86 Okla. 1, 193 Pac. 735, and other cases of similar import wherein is announced the rule that questions of law and of fact decided on appeal become the settled law of the case and cannot be again submitted; that where the facts on a second trial or appeal are practically the same as on the first, the decision on the first appeal is the law of the case in all subsequent stages and will not be again, reviewed. Also, Pace v. Continental Supply Co., 120 Okla. 302, 251 Pac. 743, and other cases, which announce the rule that parties to an action who present their case to the trial court upon a definite theory are bound thereby, and will not he permitted to change the theory of the case at any subsequent stage in the trial court or in the appellate court on appeal.

“A record on a former appeal in the same action may be looked into for the purpose of ascertaining what facts and questions were before the court, so as to see to the proper application of the rule that such decision is the law of the case.” Okla. City Elec., Gas & Power Co. v. Baumhoff, supra.

An examination of the opinion rendered in the first appeal of this case discloses that one of the matters therein decided was as to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition to state a cause of action, it being held that while some of plaintiff’s allegations as to the rate of speed the defendant was driving his car and its position on the highway, standing alone and in the absence of further allegations of the circumstances and conditions, were insufficient to charge negligence, but held that certain general allegations of plaintiff’s petition being in the language of the statute when read with the other allegations, were sufficient as against the demurrer thereto.

Upon remand of the case to the district court in that appeal, the plaintiff filed an amended petition presumably with a view of curing the defects in her former petition and to make it conform to the requirements stated in the opinion.

The record here presented does not show any motion on the part of the defendant to Strike the amended petition on the ground that the amendment stated a different cause of action or theory from that originally pleaded as was dome in St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. v. Mayne, supra, cited by the defendant, although it is intimated in the brief of the defendant that he presented such a motion, and he made the overruling of such a motion one of the grounds in his motion for new trial.

The record shows only a general demurrer to plaintiff’s amended petition based on the ground that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. As we view it, the amended petition does not allege any different cause of action from that on which the case was first tried, nor does it allege or show a change of theory. However, the defendant does not seriously contend that the amended petition states any different cause of action or theory from that stated in the former, but rather that the case was tried on a different theory, it being-said in the defendant’s typewritten and printed briefs in referring to the amended petition :

“We move to strike it although we contend it wasn’t likely an amendment at all. and we assigned as error the failure of the court to strike the petition in our motion for new trial.”
“The pleading in this case does not show the theory upon which the case was sought to be tried at this time, that is. the present time; the court, however, stated to the jury *76 the theory upon which the plaintiff in error was trying’ the case at this time.’’

We have examined and considered the record presented in this case on the former appeal, and the decision thereon in conjunction with the record in this appeal, with i view of determining whether such opinion finally disposed of the suit and whether it was the duty of the trial court thereunder, on receipt of the mandate.or at the close cf plaintiff’s evidence in the second trial, to enter judgment or direct a verdict in favcr of the defendant, as urged and contended fc r by the defendant.

In the former appeal, this case was consolidated with another case filed by W. ‡. Jackson, husband of the plaintiff here, and growing out of the same accident. One opinion was rendered in the two appeals although the cases were tried by different judges.

It is apparent from reading of the opinion, •and an examination of the record presented in this case on the former appeal, that much of the testimony referred to in that opinion was taken from the record in the W. S. Jackson Oase. Apparently the court, in tl.e former opinion, attached much weight to tlie evidence of W. S. Jackson and considered it very detrimental to plaintiff’s recovery and persuasive on the court in that appeal, hut W. S. Jackson did not testify at either of the trials in the case of the defendant m error, his wife.

While the actual and physical facts relating to the accident must have been tire same in each case, yet the recitation of fire facts and viewpoint of the different plaintiffs were not the same, and the testimony as a whole was not the same when presented to the different juries, nor were the instructions the same in each case.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 511, 285 P. 84, 142 Okla. 74, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gourley-v-jackson-okla-1929.