Griffin Grocery Co. v. Scroggins

1930 OK 53, 293 P. 235, 145 Okla. 9, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1930
Docket18618
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1930 OK 53 (Griffin Grocery Co. v. Scroggins) 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
Griffin Grocery Co. v. Scroggins, 1930 OK 53, 293 P. 235, 145 Okla. 9, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 145 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

LEACH, C.

This is an appeal by Griffin Grocery Company, who was defendant in the trial court, from a judgment in the district court of Muskogee county, in favor of Inez Scroggins, a minor, for damages arising out of personal injuries to Arthur Scrog-gins, while employed by the defendant, which resulted in his death. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

The first assignment of error presented and argued in the brief of the defendant,. Griffin Grocery Company, is that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to make plaintiff’s petition more definite and certain. The plaintiff alleged, in part and in substance, in her iietition, that she was an infant of the age of four years, the only child and sole heir of Arthur Scrog-gins, deceased, who was 29 years of age and was capable of earning and did earn $175 per month; that she, plaintiff, was wholly dependent and did rely on the deceased for her support, maintenance, and education ' that no administrator had been appointed for the estate of the deceased, and quoting from her petition, it is alleged;

“3. That on or about the 29th day of September, 1925, the said Arthur Scroggins was employed by the Griffin Grocery Company, a corporation of Muskogee, Okla., defendant herein, as a carpenter for the purpose of repairing the four-story building of said defendant in the city of Muskogee, located at No. Ill South Cherokee street, said c-ityr and was required, among other things, to-hoist on an elevator lumber from the ground floor of said building to the fourth floor-thereof, in an elevator run and controlled by electricity, provided by the defendant; that said Arthur Scroggins was not experienced in operating- elevators, in fact, knew nothing about operating elevators, of the proper equipment for elevators, or what was necessary to be furnished for safety to the users or operators thereof, and said Arthur Scroggins relied wholly upon the defendant for his own safety in operating said elevator,, all of which was known to the defendant.

“4. That the defendant wholly disregarding its duty, negligently and carelessly permitted and directed the said Arthur Scrog-gins to operate said elevator without inform» ing him that said work was in any wise dangerous to an unskilled or inexperienced workman, and did not furnish said Arthur Scroggins a safe place in which to work, oí-an elevator equipped in a safe manner foi-operation, and did not instruct said Arthur Scroggins as to the proper manner to operate said elevator, and did not provide proper guards for said elevator to properly protect the life of said Arthur Scroggins, and did not furnish an elevator equipped with such guards as are and were required by orders of State Factory Inspector of the state of Oklahoma, all of which defendant should have done.

“5. Plaintiff further states that the operation of an electric control elevator and especially an elevator without proper guards- *11 was dangerous and required skill and experience on the part of the operator and Was not such work as an employee tó do carpenter work or a carpenter without special experience which the said Arthur Scroggins did not have, should have been required to do, which was known to the defendant and was not known to the said Arthur Scroggins.

“6. That on the 29th day of September, 1925, while hoisting lumber on said elevator from the first -floor to the fourth floor of said building, at and under the direction of the defendant, the said Arthur Scrog-gins in attempting to operate said electric control elevator was caught between the floor of the third floor of said building a ad the bottom floor of said elevator, without negligence on his part, and his body was crushed and he was painfully and severely injured from which injury he died on October 1, 1925, although he was immediately taken to the Baptist Hospital in Muskogee, Okla., after said injury and received medical treatment.

“7, * * * That on account of, the wrongful death of the said Arthur Scroggins caused by the carelessness and negligence of the defendant, this plaintiff has suffered damages in the sum of $30,000.”

The defendant’s motion to make plaintiff’s petition more definite and certain calls attention to that part or paragraph of the petition which refers to the operation of the elevator and failure of plaintiff in error to properly equip the same in a safe manner with proper guards, and moved the court to require the plaintiff to make her petition more definite and certain by alleging the facts claimed by her instead of the conclusions stated in the petition.

Section 29S, C. O. S. 1921, provides, in part:

“* * *When the allegations of a pleading-are so indefinite and uncertain that the precise nature of the charge or defense is not apparent, the court may require the pleading to be made definite and certain by amendment.”

The defendant, in support of its first assignment, cites Smith v. Board of Com’rs of Rogers County, 26 Okla. 819, 110 Pac. 669, and Swarts v. State, 70 Okla. 205, 174 Pac. 255. The ease of Smith v. Board of Com’rs of Rogers County did not involve a motion to make the petition «more definite and certain, but it was held therein that a petition was subject to demurrer where it merely stated conclusions and failed to contain a positive statement of essential facts. The other case, Swarts State, supra, was an action against a court clerk and the sureties on his official bond for alleged failure to account for and pay over certain sums collected, at various times from divers sources, and it was there held that the mo-' tion to make the petition more definite and certain so as to allege the names of the persons from whom the money had been collected, in what eases such funds had been collected and retained, and to whom the funds belonged, should have been sustained, the court being of the opinion that the complaining party had been prejudiced by the action and ruling of the trial court in that the defendants were not in position to fully prepare for a proper trial of the case..

The defendant’s motion to make the petition more definite and certain in the instant ease is of itself somewhat indefinite and broad in that it merely moves the court to require the plaintiff to make her petition more definite and certain by alleging facts instead of conclusions (Henry v. Gulf Coast Drilling Co., 56 Okla. 604, 156 Pac. 321), but it apparently was directed chiefly at the failure to allege wherein the elevator referred to was not equipped with proper guards. No evidence was admitted as to any guards required by order of the State Factory Inspector, and as to the allegation on that point in the petition it became immaterial. It would have been better pleading, we think, to have alleged to some extent the nature of the guards referred to in the allegations of the petition, but failure, of the court to sustain the motion, considering it as applicable and directed at specific allegations, or to all allegations in the petition based on conclusion, did not, as we view it, from all consideration of the record, materially prejudice the rights of the defendant or prevent it from properly presenting its defense in the action.

“A motion to make more definite and certain is addressed to the sound' discretion of the court, and a ruling thereon in the absence of an abuse of such discretion that results prejudicially to the party complaining will not be disturbed.” City of Lawton v. Hills, 53 Okla. 243, 156 Pac. 297; Fox v.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 53, 293 P. 235, 145 Okla. 9, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-grocery-co-v-scroggins-okla-1930.