Hays Trucking Co. v. Maxwell

1953 OK 245, 261 P.2d 456, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 519
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1953
Docket35643
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1953 OK 245 (Hays Trucking Co. v. Maxwell) 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
Hays Trucking Co. v. Maxwell, 1953 OK 245, 261 P.2d 456, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 519 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Defendant in error instituted this action as plaintiff, against plaintiffs in error, as defendants, to recover damages allegedly incurred by her when she ran her automobile into the rear of a track belonging to the plaintiff in error, Hays Tracking Company, Inc. As this trucking company is the only defendant hereinafter necessary to mention, our further reference to the parties by their trial court designations will exclude its insurer, Highway Insurance Underwriters.

The negligence alleged to render defendant liable for the collision was its leaving its truck parked on South Agnew Avenue, in Oklahoma City, at night without lights or other warning devices. The particular location at which the truck was parked was near a street light, and one defense raised was that plaintiff could or should have been able to see the parked truck in time to have gone around it, using the remaining 56 foot width of the street. Plaintiff, in an effort to refute this claim or defense, introduced evidence to show that in the exercise of reasonable care, she could not see the truck until she was directly upon it. Some of this evidence consisted of testimony to the effect that the street light near the scene had a metal shield over it that had the *459 effect of casting a shadow upon the scene of the accident. As it appeared that the condition of this light had been changed between the date of the collision, and the trial, the attorney for the plaintiff procured the giving by the court of an admonition to the jury, after the evidence was in and the case was being submitted to it, not to visit the scene of the accident. Immediately upon the returning of a verdict for the defendant, on April 17, 1951, the attorney for the plaintiff learned from one of the jurors that he and another juror had visited the scene of the accident one evening on their way home, before their deliberations were complete; and, the trial judge having retired to his chambers, said attorney went there and called this to his attention immediately after the jury had been discharged and before all of its members had left the court room. Within three days thereafter, plaintiff filed a motion for new trial which included, among other statutory grounds, the allegation that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and the further allegation of “mis-conduct of certain members of the jury contrary to admonition of the court in viewing the premises and informing the other jurors of their observations made by such juror.” Attached to this motion was an affidavit of one of plaintiff’s attorneys containing allegations of substantially the same undisputed facts we have hereinbefore stated concerning what one of the jurors had told him immediately after the jury had been discharged. After hearing argument on this motion, the trial judge took his decision on the matter under advisement. Thereafter, in December, 1951, he mailed to the attorneys for the parties a paper entitled: “On Motion for New Trial.” On this undated paper, the judge made various observations concerning the merits of the motion and gave a sort of a digest of the authorities on the points he regarded as raised by the motion, and concluded the writing as follows: “The Motion for New Trial is overruled. Exceptions.” This so-called memorandum opinion was never filed in the records of the case and no minute or other record thereof was made therein.

Thereafter, in February, 1952, plaintiff filed what was denominated: “Motion to Correct Record and for- Further Argument on Motion for New Trial.” At the conclusion of a regularly scheduled hearing on this motion, the court entered a general order granting plaintiff a new trial, containing no mention of the grounds upon which said action was based. At the hearing, however, the court’s views on the matter were indicated in the following oral remarks:

“Now, on this motion for new trial, I would have stuck to that written opinion, but the matter has been in my file since the summer of last year, and I checked those files about every two weeks and did some independent work on it myself, and I have come to the conclusion that I might have been wrong in that opinion. I have come to the conclusion that the way this matter came up with the jurors, that under those circumstances that at least one, maybe two or more did view these premises, in the nature of this case I would be inclined to think that influenced the verdict. Furthermore, I have serious doubt in my mind as to whether or not the instruction on unavoidable accident is a valid instruction under the law as it now seems' to exist. I don’t know what that is. I am not satisfied with the verdict at this time.”

In this appeal from the order and judgment sustaining plaintiff’s motion for'new trial, defendant first asserts that the trial judge’s above described “opinion” mailed to the attorneys in December, 1951, was a final judgment on the merits of plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, and being a final conclusion and disposition of the litigation, the court was without authority or juris-, diction to vacate or modify it after the term at which the verdict was rendered, except for the cause of newly discovered evidence as specified in 12 O.S.1941 § 651. Its counsel says that plaintiffs’ “Motion to Correct Record and for Further Argument on Motion for New Trial” was in reality a second motion for a new trial filed after a final order or judgment on the first one, and was *460 not authorized anywhere in our code of civil procedure, citing United States Smelting Co. v. McGuire, 123 Okl. 272, 253 P. 79; Taliaferro v. Bates, 123 Okl. 59, 252 P. 845; J. R. Watkins Medical Co. v. Lizar, 78 Okl. 302, 190 P. 552; and many other cases to the effect that when a particular term of the district court ends, all final orders or decrees pass beyond its control. Plaintiff does not take issue with the general proposition, but says it does not apply here because the record shows that no final order or decree had ever been entered on her motion for a new trial, which was timely filed, and that the “opinion” mailed to the attorneys in no way constituted such an order or decree. With her position, we must agree. It is well settled that such expressions by the court are no part of the judgment roll and have no standing as an order or decree or part thereof, unless directly incorporated in such order, decree or judgment, or made a part thereof by separate order. De Watteville v. Sims, 44 Okl. 708, 146 P, 224; 30 Am.Jur. 824, Secs. 8 and 9; 2 Am.Jur. 225, 226, Sec. 595, Notes 16, 17, 2, and 3; 49 C.J.S., Judgments, § 4, page 28. In this connection, see also Tillman v. Tillman, 199 Okl. 130, 184 P.2d 784; Miller v. Young, 197 Okl. 503, 172 P.2d 994; City of Tulsa v. Bliss, 194 Okl. 255, 149 P.2d 507. In many material respects the facts with reference to the “opinion” of the trial judge are similar, with one decisive difference to the situation in Peebles v. Kansas Life Ins. Co., 175 Okl. 231, 52 P.2d 747, 750, described in our opinion therein as follows:

“Thereafter, January 11, 1933, the balance of the evidence was taken, and at the close thereof the court said: T will take this case under advisement and both sides will submit written briefs.’
“Thereafter, but some time before March 25, 1933, the court sent the attorneys, for both sides, a letter apparently expressing the view of the court on the questions of fact and law in the case, and announcing that he would on Saturday, March 25, enter judgment for defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 245, 261 P.2d 456, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-trucking-co-v-maxwell-okla-1953.