Highway Construction Co. v. Shue

1935 OK 802, 49 P.2d 203, 173 Okla. 456, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 25853.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 1935 OK 802 (Highway Construction Co. v. Shue) 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
Highway Construction Co. v. Shue, 1935 OK 802, 49 P.2d 203, 173 Okla. 456, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 449 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

William Shue was accidentally killed while working for the Highway Construction Company. His widow, admin-istratrix of his estate, recovered a verdict and judgment of $7,500 against the construction company on the theory that his death was caused by its negligence in failing to maintain its roadway in a safe condition.

The defendant contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict, which was based wholly on conjecture, speculation, or surmise. It is therefore necessary to review the evidence:

The defendant was constructing a highway between Blanchard and Tabler, Okla. It employed between 30 and 40 truck drivers to haul material from Blanchard to the mixer, which at the time of this accident was about six miles west of Blanchard. They were laying the cement slab over the prepared roadbed, the work progressing toward Blanchard. Thus the material was hauled over the portion of the road which had not yet been paved. The road was closed to the public and under the exclusive control of the defendant.

Shue was one of the truck drivers. The truck belonged to one Moore, from whom he rented it. Moore paid the upkeep cost, Shue furnished the oil and gas and repairing, and the defendant paid him so much per mile per load. However, the defense of independent contractor has not been seriously urged and is not here considered. Formerly the truck had been in defective condition, but there (was uncontradicted evidence that it had since been repaired.

In hauling the material between Blanchard and the mixer, over the unpaved road, it was necessary for the drivers to travel over a “All” which the defendant had heightened, between two hills. The fill had been constructed by piling up dirt and settling it, preparatory to paving', by what is known as ponding and jetting. By such process water is forced into the earth material by the use of pipes driven therein, and is made to soak into it by diking small ponds of water on the top of the All. This solidifies the foundation more quickly than if the dirt ¡were allowed to settle of its own weight. When this accident occurred the subsoil was still damp and spongy, but the top was dry and sc dusty that, as one witness put it, “you could hardly see the road.”

The fill was about 300 feet long and 12 feet high, the sides sloping steeply downward, and at the bottom there '.was a pond of water. A guard rail had formerly existed along the old road on this side, which was lower than the present road, but it had been removed by the defendant and the post and wire, or cable, were still lying along the side of the fill.

Shue had delivered a load to the mixer and was hurrying back, empty, to Blanchard for another load. I-Ie ¡was hurrying because the mixer was automatically timed to receive successive leads every minute and a half, the trucks employed this day were fewer than usually employed, and the foremen were rushing and speeding up the drivers. A truck driver, in crossing the fill, discovered Shue’s truck overturned in the pond below, with Shue’s head pinned under the truck, in the water. His legs were moving. Workmen who quickly congregated could not remove the truck by hand and so thc-y lifted it by tying the old guard line to it and pulling with another truck. By that time Shue was dead, apparently from drowning.

Due to the spongy nature of the subsoil, (he freshness of the structure, and the exceedingly heavy truckloads of material constantly being hurried across it the top of the fill was full of chug holes. Every few days a scraper was drawn over it. but it was said that this only filled the chug holes with loose dirt and they would instantly reappear. On the day of the accident the¿nortíi half ■of the fill was impassable and the south half was full cf chug holes. Witnesses testified that at the place where the accident occurred the driver had to go “dangerously near” the outer edge of the fill, with but a foot or two to spare before gding over the edge. Though no one saw the accident, many ¡wit *458 nesses testified that the tracks were plainly visible, and that although they could not be traced to any particular chug hole, they did proceed from an unusually rough place in the road some ten feet or more from where they went over the edge. The two1 right wheels apparently moved along in the loose dirt outside of the ruts and then gradually down thei side of the fill for a distance estimated from 20 feet to 40 feet, after which there were no more tracks, at which place the truck turned over and relied into the water. There was testimony that often when a truck would hit one of these chug holes it would deflect the front wheels first one way and then the other way, causing- temporary loss of control, and that once a wheel got in the loose dirt it was difficult to steer it back onto solid ground.

The defendant does not seriously urge that the evidence was insufficient to sustain 'a finding of negligence based on the condition of the roadway. The defendant does contend that the plaintiff failed to show a causal connection between the negligence and the injury, — -that is, that the rough road caused the death. Defendant argues that it ean just as reasonably be said that the truck left the road because Shue was driving at an excessive speed or was not paying attention to the road, or was searching his clothes for a match, lighting a cigarette, waving to a friend, unlacing his shoe, or had fallen asleep or .was suddenly seized with illness, — and that Hepner v. Quapaw Gas Co., 92 Okla. 9, 217 P. 438, is applicable, to the effect that:

“A verdict must be said to be based on speculation and conjecture when, after considering all the evidence favorable to plaintiff, together with all inferences to be reasonably drawn therefrom, and excluding all evidence favorable tó defendant, all unprejudiced minds must agree from the facts and circumstances in evidence, that any one of several conclusions consistent with nonliability of defendant may as reasonably be drawn therefrom as is the conclusion of liability under plaintiff’s theory of the case.”

A close analysis of the foregoing definition reveals that an important line of demarcation exists between that case and the group of cases exemplified by Weleetka Cotton Oil Co. v. Brookshire, 65 Okla. 293, 166 P. 408, wherein the principle is announced that in a civil case, all that the plaintiff is required to do, in order to establish his case, is to make it appear- more pro-bable that the injury came in. 'whole or in part from the defendant’s negligence than from any other cause, and this fact may be established by circumstantial ■ evidence.

The two rules are consistent. Considering them together, we. have this: If any one of several other conclusions is as consistent with the facts as is the conclusion that the negligence caused the injury, then the verdict may be said to be based upon conjecture. 'But if those other conclusions (i. e., that the negligence did not cause the injury, but that something else did) are not as consistent with the facts as is the conclusion that the negligence caused the injury, it cannot then be said that the verdict is based upon conjecture. It is a matter of equality or inequality of probabilities, and we mean real, logical probabilities, based upon established facts, as opposed to speculation and guesswork. We must exclude all those tempting so-called probabilities which are the result of heaping inference upon inference.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 802, 49 P.2d 203, 173 Okla. 456, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highway-construction-co-v-shue-okla-1935.