Hart v. Lewis

1940 OK 273, 103 P.2d 65, 187 Okla. 394, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1940
DocketNo. 29336.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1940 OK 273 (Hart v. Lewis) 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
Hart v. Lewis, 1940 OK 273, 103 P.2d 65, 187 Okla. 394, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 253 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

HURST, J.

This action was brought by A. C. Lewis and Beatrice Lewis against W. C. Hart and Chickasha Cotton Oil Company for damages for the wrongful death of their six-year-old boy. The trial court overruled the defendants’ demurrers to the evidence and motions for directed verdict, and from a judgment for plaintiffs on the verdict, defendants appeal.

1. The first contention is that the evidence was insufficient to show primary negligence on the part of defendant Hart, local manager of the gin of defendant Chickasha Cotton Oil Company at Weatherford, or that his act was the proximate cause of the boy’s death. This necessitates a brief review of the evidence. The fact that the boy was killed in the gin office by a bullet from an automatic pistol owned by or under the control of defendant Hart is not disputed. But the evidence offered by the respective parties relating to his presence in the office, and the manner in which he was killed, is widely divergent.

For the plaintiff, it tends to show that the Lewis boy and Manley Bell, another colored boy about eleven years of age, had gone to the gin to buy feed, and that while they were engaged in playing marbles just outside they were joined by Hart; that after playing marbles with them for a while, the manager went into the office and called to the boys to come in, and the boys followed; that the manager took the pistol out of a desk *395 drawer where it was kept and began to clean it; that while so doing it was discharged, and the boys ran out; that Hart called them back, assuring them he would not hurt them; that he then took the magazine out of the pistol, and laid the latter on the desk, or counter; that while Hart was working with the magazine Manley Bell put his hand on the pistol and in some way it was discharged, causing the Lewis boy’s death. Plaintiff A. C. Lewis testified that a short time prior to the accident he was in the gin office trying to obtain employment, and on that occasion Hart took the pistol out of the desk, and that Mr. Wilson, a district manager of the defendant company, told Hart to get the pistol cleaned up, as the ginning season was coming on and there would be money in the office at night.

For the defendants the proof tended to show that after the marble game the boys followed Hart into the office, and he ordered them out, telling them that the pistol might go off; that the pistol had nothing to do with the business, being one which Hart had taken from his son a few years before and kept in his desk thereafter. Hart testified that neither of the boys was in the office when he placed the pistol on the desk. He explained the cleaning of the pistol by stating that in the first part of the season any gin manager naturally cleans up the entire office for the season, and cleans up the machinery also. Both he and the district manager Wilson denied the testimony of A. C. Lewis as to the conversation between them in reference to cleaning up the pistol. Defendants also showed that the counter or desk on which the pistol lay was higher than the Lewis boy’s head, and that Manley Bell was unusually intelligent for a boy of his years, and that just before the shot was fired Hart heard him say “stick em up,” and that Hart turned around when the shot was fired and Manley was putting the pistol on the desk. Hart denied that Manley Bell came to the gin for feed, or that he invited the two boys into the office. He also denied that either Wilson or any other company official knew that the pistol was in his possession, or had ever given him any instructions concerning it.

Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to prove primary negligence or proximate cause, for the reason that the boys were trespassers, or at most licensees, and that the degree of care required of defendants in such case was, if trespassers, not to wantonly or willfully injure them, and if licensees, to use ordinary care to protect them from injury, citing Midland Valley Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 106 Okla. 237, 233 P. 716, Julian v. Sinclair Oil & Gas Co., 168 Okla. 192, 32 P. 2d 31, and other cases to the same effect. They also contend that the evidence does not show that Hart was acting within the scope of his authority, and that the act of Manley Bell in discharging the pistol was an intervening efficient cause of the injury, and was really the proximate cause thereof. Since defendants offered evidence after the overruling of their demurrers to plaintiff’s evidence, the case must be considered on all the evidence. Mohrman v. Paxton, 172 Okla. 389, 44 P. 2d 926. Such consideration involves the evidence tending to support the verdict, with the inferences reasonably to be drawn therefrom, but rejecting all the evidence of defendants in conflict therewith. Tull v. Milligan, 173 Okla. 131, 48 P. 2d 835; Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Beers, 185 Okla. 331, 91 P. 2d 777.

One in possession or control of a dangerous instrumentality accessible to children of tender age is required by law to exercise the highest degree of care to prevent them from being injured thereby. Shaffer Oil & Refining Co. v. Thomas, 120 Okla. 253, 252 P. 41; Lone Star Gas Co. v. Parsons, 159 Okla. 52, 14 P. 2d 369. And that firearms are an extraordinarily dangerous instrumentality is established beyond question. 68 C. J. 71, 72. This rule has been announced and applied to widely differing facts in many cases. In Brittingham v. Stadiem, 151 N. C. 299, 66 S. E. 128; *396 Anderson v. Settergren, 100 Minn. 294, 111 N. W. 279, and Gerbino v. Greenhut-Siegel-Cooper Co., 152 N. Y. S. 502, the facts upon which liability was affirmed were in some respects similar to those in the present case, if we assume that the testimony of Hart that Manley Bell fired the shot was correct, in that the negligence of the owner or his agent consisted in permitting the firearms to get into the possession of the minor. And this rule obtains regardless of whether the children are trespassers, if there is a reasonable probability that they may obtain access to such dangerous instrumentality, and injury results to them thereby. Lone Star Gas Co. v. Parsons, supra. An invitee is one who possesses an invitation, express or implied. And the duty of the owner of the premises is an active, positive exercise of ordinary care and caution to prevent injury to an invitee. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Williams, 176 Okla. 465, 56 P. 2d 815. From the evidence in the present case, the jury would be justified in finding that the boys were invitees. The placing of the loaded pistol within reach of boys of the ages of six to eleven years was not an exercise of the highest degree of care. The factors entering into a determination of whether such an act would be negligence are discussed at length in Lone Star Gas Co. v. Parson, supra, and need not be reiterated here. The evidence was sufficient to justify submitting to the jury the question of whether Hart was negligent, and whether his conduct, if found by the jury to have been negligent, was the negligence also of his employer, and was the proximate cause of the injury. Lone Star Gas Co. v. Parsons, supra. The last-cited case involved the finding of dynamite caps by a six-year-old boy, who gave them to another boy four years of age, who was injured by driving a nail into one. The court stated that one having explosives in his possession was under the highest degree of care to prevent them coming into the hands of children and causing harm to or through them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 273, 103 P.2d 65, 187 Okla. 394, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-lewis-okla-1940.