Gypsy Oil Co. v. Ginn

1925 OK 957, 241 P. 794, 115 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 24, 1925
Docket15803
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 957 (Gypsy Oil Co. v. Ginn) 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
Gypsy Oil Co. v. Ginn, 1925 OK 957, 241 P. 794, 115 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 260 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C-

The plaintiff in error, Gypsy Oil Company, was defendant and the defendants' in error were plaintiffs in the trial court, and they will be hereinafter so designated.

The plaintiffs instituted this action against the defendant in the district court of Carter county, to recover damages on account of the death of Clarence Edgar Ginn, husband of the plaintiff Mrs. Tessie Ginn and father of the plaintiffs. Alfred Ginn and Hugh Ginn. From judgment, in favor of the plaintiffs, the defendant appealed the case to the Supreme Court, and this court reversed and remanded the cause with directions to grant a new trial. 88 Okla. 99, 212 Pac. 314.

Upon the reversal of the' case, the plaintiffs filed a second amended petition, which, in its final form, eliminated certain allegations of negligence appearing in their original amended petition, which this court held should have been withdrawn from the consideration of the jury in the first trial. To the second amended petition of plaintiffs, the defendant filed its answer and the case being regularly called for trial, was tried to the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $9,000. The court pronounced judgment upon the verdict of the jury, and the defendant filed its motion for a new trial, which was overruled and exceptions saved. From this judgment and from an order overruling'its motion for a new trial, the defendant brings the cause regularly on appeal to this court for review by petition in error and case-made attached.

Many specifications of error are relied on by the defendant for reversal of the judgment, but in our view of the case, it is only necessary to consider those which relate to alleged error of the trial court in giving certain instructions and in refusing to give other requested instructions. Under the allegations of the second amended petition of plaintiffs, practically the only issue presented in the second trial of the case was whether or not the defendant, in the operation of the machine that caused the death of Clarence Edgar Ginn, was guilty of wanton and intentional negligence.- Many of the legal propositions applicable to this issue were settled by this court in the opinion rendered in the first appeal. It was there determined, and it is not now disputed by plaintiffs, that Clarence Edgar Ginn, at the time he met his death, was a trespasser on the premises of the defendant, and this court in its opinion fully set out the duties which the owner of premises owes to a trespasser thereon. See Gypsy Oil Company v. Ginn, supra. So far as the direct evidence of the eyewitnesses is concerned, there is no substantial difference in the facts as they appeared on the first appeal and as disclosed by the record in the instant case. For a more detailed statement of these facts, reference is made to the opinion of the court written by Justice Cochran in the first appeal.

Plaintiffs, however, rely upon certain indirect and circumstantial evidence which they did not offer in the first trial, but which was received in evidence in the second trial, for the purpose, as we understand it, of controverting the direct testimony of the employes of the defendant with respect to the circumstances under which Clarence Edgar Ginn met his death. This circumstantial evidence was to the general effect that the engineer, Bosha, standing in the position he must occupy to start the engine which propelled the Star drilling machine, must necessarily have been looking in the direction of the crank, which killed the deceased and in the direction of his iellow employes who were underneath the machine near the crank and near the deceased, and that so situated, he could not help but see the perilous position of the deceased near said crank. The testimony of two witnesses, who testified that they were familiar with the operation of a Star drilling machine, .was offered to show that the engineer standing at the engine must have been looking in the general direction of the crank, and that no serious obstructions intervened to prevent such engineer from seeing the crank. We purposely express no opinion as to whether this character of Evidence, in the face of direct and positive testimony on the part of the employes of the defendant and the only eyewitnesses to the accident, to the effect that they did not see the deceased, would justify a verdict in favor of plaintiffs if no prejudicial errors of law had been committed by the couirt in its instructions to the jury, or in its ruling upon law questions presented at the trial.

The plaintiffs admit that deceased was a trespasser and rely for a recovery entirely upon showing of wanton and intentional injury. In its general instructions, the trial court told the jury in instruction No. 7 as follows:

- “You are therefore instructed that if you find from the evidence and all of the facts and circumstances admitted for your con *78 sideration in this ease, and by a fair preponderance thereof, that on the 17th day of November, 1919, Clarence Edgar Ginn was killed upon the drilling location of the defendant near the town of Graham, in Carter county, Okla. and that said killing resulted from the willful acts of the defendant and its employes and more particularly its employe Bosha, and if you find that the said Bosha willfully and wantonly set in motion the drilling machinery, and at the time that he set in motion said drilling machinery, he saw1, or could with the exercise of the slightest care, have seen the perilous condition of the said Ol'arence Edgar Ginn, and without any regard for the life of the said Ginn did willfuily start said machinery, and that the said Clarence Edgar Ginn was thereby killed by the willful, wanton and negligent acts of the said Bosha, then and in that event you will find for the plaintiff. * * *”

It will be noted that this instruction imposed upon the defendant a duty to exercise some care to see the deceased. It will also be observed that this instruction fails to tell the jury that if they should believe by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the defendant, after it discovered the perilous position of the deceased failed to use ordinary care to prevent injuring the deceased, it would be liable, but the court undertakes to tell the jury that the defendant was under some duty, not to avoid injuring deceased after he was discovered, but to discover the deceased, a mere trespasser on defendant’s premises. 'It must also be noted that the court was not telling the jury that in determining whether the defendant’s employes actually saw the deceased before starting the machinery they might take into consideration circumstantial evidence, but that they were under some duty to discover, the perilous position of the deceased.

The theory of plaintiffs, as we understand it, upon which they based their right to recover, was the act of the defendant in wantonly and willfully injuring a trespasser ; that is to say that it, through its employes, deliberately set its machinery in motion and killed the deceased after it had observed his perilous position. This instruction, we think, ignores entirely the law which the owner of premises owes to a trespasser as laid down by the court on the first appeal in this case and in numerous other authorities. In C., R.. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Owens, 78 Okla. 114, 189 Pac. 171, our court stated the rule in the 4th paragraph of the syllabus as follows :

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gypsy Oil Co. v. Ginn
1931 OK 496 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 957, 241 P. 794, 115 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gypsy-oil-co-v-ginn-okla-1925.