Gulf Oil Corporation v. McCoy

1966 OK 107, 416 P.2d 948
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 31, 1966
Docket40823
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1966 OK 107 (Gulf Oil Corporation v. McCoy) 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
Gulf Oil Corporation v. McCoy, 1966 OK 107, 416 P.2d 948 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In the trial court William McCoy and Evelyn McCoy, his wife, sued the Gulf Oil Corporation for damages caused by the salt water pollution of their stock water pond, constructed on their preference right school land lease. In this opinion, the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below, where the McCoys were plaintiffs and Gulf Oil Corporation was the defendant. In the trial court, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs in the amount of $5,000.00 compensatory damages and $500.00 punitive damages. From this verdict and judgment thereon, the defendant has perfected this appeal.

The facts are undisputed that the defendant, Gulf, was engaged in secondary recovery operations in the East Payson Skinner Sand Unit, and was the operator of the unit. In its operations, Gulf installed a water injection unit upstream about 500 feet from the plaintiffs’ said stock water pond on land adjoining the land occupied by the plaintiffs. As a part of its operations, the defendant, Gulf, constructed a large earthen salt water disposal pit on this adjoining land. In December of 1961, (or early in 1962,) this salt water disposal pit overflowed and according to Gulf’s production foreman who testified on behalf of Gulf, such overflowing could have ■caused pollution to the plaintiffs’ stock water pond downstream from this salt water disposal pit.

The evidence of the plaintiffs tended to ■show that a part of the wall of this salt water disposal pit washed away in March ■or April of 1962 and the salt water drained into plaintiffs’ stock water pond. The evidence is clear that the stock water pond ■of the plaintiffs was polluted with salt water and there is ample evidence to show that it came from Gulf’s operation. Gulf was not the oil and gas lessee operator on the land covered by the plaintiffs’ lease.

Gulf’s foreman testified that when the plaintiffs advised him that their pond was contaminated with salt water in June or July of 1962, he went down to the pond and tasted the water and found it to be salty and that he took samples from the pond and he also testified that he dug five holes in or within fifty-five feet from the ravine upstream from the plaintiffs’ pond and that two of the holes were dug in the bottom of the ravine, one west of the salt water disposal pit some 75 or 80 feet and the other in the' ravine or draw at the plaintiffs’ fence line, and that both of these test holes had salt water seeping in them. On learning of this condition, Gulf filled in the salt water disposal pit then existing and dug another pit adjacent to the old one and lined it with vinyl plastic lining. Both plaintiff and Gulf’s foreman testified that Gulf did dig another water storage hole on the plaintiffs’ lease and hauled tank water and filled this hole with water for the plaintiffs’ cattle on at least two occasions.

The plaintiffs were in the possession of their land by virtue of a preference right lease from the Commissioners of the Land Office. They went into possession of this land under this type of lease in 1952 and it had been renewed to them periodically since that date. The last renewal of their preference right lease was for a period of five years from January 1, 1962, and this lease will expire on December 31, 1966. Subject to the approval of the Commissioners of the Land Office, this preference right lease could be sold. The testimony was that it had a value of from $5000.00 to $5500.00 before the subject pond became polluted and that thereafter it had a value of from some $2500.00 to $4000.00.

The land which the plaintiffs leased from the Commissioners of the Land Office was used by them solely in their cattle business and dairy operations. The stock water pond on their lease was constructed in 1954 by the Soil Conservation Service, after *950 a survey of the entire 160 acre site by an engineer of the Soil Conservation Service. This engineer testified that the pond was constructed at the only place on the entire 160 acre lease which would have been approved by that agency and that no other site on the plaintiffs’ lease would have come up to its standards and qualifications.

Proof on behalf of the plaintiffs showed that from April of 1962, their cattle commenced losing weight and their milk volume decreased and in September of 1962 their milking operations ceased entirely. Proof by the veterinarian was of effect that this probably was caused by salt water poisoning from drinking from plaintiffs’ pond and that a cow often made slow progress in recovering from the effects of salt water poisoning. The plaintiffs’ evidence showed a loss in the market value of their cattle between April and September, 1962, in the amount of some $2800.00 to $3000.00. The plaintiffs also made proof tending to show the loss of Grade C milk sales during this interval.

The evidence tended to show that the salt water contamination of the stock water pond would be slow in correcting itself (if it would). There was sufficient evidence in the record from which the trial court, in giving its instructions, and the jury in its deliberations, could have determined that the damage to the plaintiffs’ stock water pond and leasehold estate was permanent.

On the question of damages, the Court permitted testimony as to the value of the plaintiffs’ preference right lease before contamination of the stock water pond and the value of the lease after the contamination of the pond. It was the giving of this instruction that the defendant Gulf urges as reversible error.

The instruction complained of reads as follows:

“You are instructed that in arriving at the damages done to the preference right school land lease in this case, if any you find, you will first determine the value of the preference right school land lease, including the improvements placed thereon by the plaintiffs, prior to the damage or injury from pollution. You will then determine the value of the preference right school land lease, including the improvements placed thereon by the plaintiffs, after it had been injured by the pollution and the difference between these two values is the measure of damages to the preference right school land lease of the plaintiffs, which is one of the elements of damages which they seek to recover in the case.”

In deciding whether or not the giving of this instruction was error, we think it is of material significance that, according to their evidence, the plaintiffs’ operations on this lease were confined entirely to the raising of cattle and dairy operations; that the place was more suited to stock-raising than other types of farming; and that according to plaintiffs’ engineer the only place on the plaintiffs’ lease suitable for a stock water pond was the location on the lease where the pond in question was constructed.

In their brief on the issue of error in the granting of Instruction No. 7, supra, the defendant Gulf cites the case of Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. McBride, 188 Okl. 384, 109 P.2d 221. This was an action for damages brought by the holder of a preference right school land lease for damages caused by the oil and gas lessee operator in carrying out its operations on the preference right school land lease. The oil and gas operator was operating under a valid oil and gas lease granted by the Commissioners of the Land Office. In the instant case, the defendant Gulf was unit operator of a water recovery operation and was not the oil and gas lessee of the plaintiffs’ lease.

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 107, 416 P.2d 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corporation-v-mccoy-okla-1966.