Huffman v. Gaylor

1954 OK 60, 267 P.2d 564, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1954
Docket35884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1954 OK 60 (Huffman v. Gaylor) 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
Huffman v. Gaylor, 1954 OK 60, 267 P.2d 564, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 439 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

The parties are referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

This is an action by C. D. Gaylor against Carl Huffman to recover damages' for injury to' his automobile motor allegedly caused by the negligence of an employee of *565 defendant while engaged in towing an automobile on-the frame of which the motor was resting, hut to which it was unattached, to defendant’s garage.

Defendant in his answer pleads that if plaintiff’s motor was damaged, which is not admitted but denied, the damage was caused by his own negligence and not by any negligence or carelessness on the part of defendant. He further pleads contributory negligence and unavoidable accident.

A pre-trial conference was 'held at which hearing it was agreed that the issues had been made up and that no new or novel questions of law would arise in the case.

After the pre-trial conference hut before trial of the case defendant employed different counsel and his counsel, without obtaining permission from the court and out of time (less than a week prior to trial date), filed an amended answer in which amended answer counsel s.eek to enlarge upon the allegations of negligence contained in the original answer. The amended, answer states that plaintiff was negligent in that he was engaged in the process of repairing his vehicle on the street in Oklahoma -City in violation of a city ordinance which reads as follows:

“Repairs in Street. No vehicle shall he repaired, washed or served with oil or gas while such vehicle is on the streets of this city, provided that this provision does not apply in case of an emergency.”

He further pleads in such amendment that the plaintiff negligently parked his vehicle in the center of Northwest 23rd Street in Oklahoma City near the intersection of Northwest 23rd and North • McKinley or negligently parked his vehicle alongside the street in such manner that it rolled from its parking position into the center of Northwest 23rd Street where it constituted a traffic hazard in violation of the ordinance of the City which reads:

“Responsibility of Owner. It shall he unlawful and an offense for any person, firm or‘corporation to knowingly allow, permit or suffer any vehicle registered in his or its name to stand or park in any, street, highway or parkway under the..control of the City in violation of the provisions set forth in this ordinance.”

That because of negligence of plaintiff in failing to obey the law of the City plaintiff was guilty of negligence which proximately caused or contributed to the incident which caused the injury and damage to the motor.

Defendant further pleads in such amendment, “that at the time the plaintiff alleges to have sustained his damages', this defendant was employéd by the City of Oklahoma City in their proper exercise of the police powers of this City, and that this defendant was lawfully engaged in impounding the plaintiff’s vehicle in accordance with Oklahoma City Ordinance No. 6344, Section 1, Section 2(c), and Section 3, and/or Title 8, Section 53 of the same ordinance.” ’

Plaintiff, at the commencement of the trial, moved to strike the amendment to answer, which motion was sustained.

At the close of the evidence defendant requested the court to direct a verdict in his favor. The request was denied and the case was submitted to the jury and a vei> diet was returned in favor of plaintiff and judgment entered on the verdict accordingly. Motion for new trial was overruled.

Defendant appeals and for reversal relies upon the following proposition: (1) error of the court in striking his amendment to answer; (2) error in the admission of incompetent and hearsay evidence; and (3) error in overruling request for directed verdict.

Defendant in his first proposition urges error in striking amendment to his answer. It appears from the record the amendment to answer was stricken for the reason that it was filed out of time, without permission of the court, and after pre-trial conference had been held. While, in our opinion, the court might properly have allowed the amendment to- answer to stand, under the record in this case it did.not commit prejudicial error in striking it.

The amendment to answer in no manner changed- the defense set up in the original answer. It sought, simply to. enlarge upon the allegations contained in the original answer. . ‘ -

*566 With reference to the ordinance first pleaded in the amendment by the trial court stricken, we note that no proof was made that plaintiff removed his motor from the automobile while it was parked in the street. His uncontradicted testimony was that he removed same while the automobile was parked in his yard.

With reference to the ordinance pleaded second in such amendment, it is to be observed that such court permitted the defendant to prove under the allegations in the original answer that plaintiff had violated that ordinance of the city, if his conduct was, in fact, a violation thereof, by parking on the street alongside the curb; that the automobile was discovered by the police in the middle of the street and that plaintiff paid a fine. Nothing more should have been established under these allegations contained in the amendment to answer.

Concerning the third ordinance, pleaded by reference, a sufficient answer to the complaint made of the court’s action in striking same appears to be plaintiff’s argument, not denied in the record or briefs, (and indeed it appears from the record that it cannot be denied) that at the pre-trial conference had" shortly after filing of the original answer and several months before the filing of the amendment, defendant’s counsel at the time, as above noted, stipulated in a pretrial conference order (signed by the Judge and counsel) that no novel questions of law (such as constitutionality of the ordinance) would be raised in the trial, and that the issues were made up.

Moreover we do not think the facts pleaded in the amendment constituted any defense to plaintiff’s cause of action. Plaintiff relied solely for recovery on the alleged negligent act of the employee of defendant in moving and towing the automobile to the garage without fastening the motor to prevent it from dropping. We have seen thfit plaintiff was not shown to have violated the first ordinance pleaded. We fail to see how the parking by plaintiff of the automobile in alleged violation of the second ordinance pleaded in the amendment to answer could have caused or contributed to the injury and damage to the motor. The fact that plaintiff had parked the automobile alongside the curb of the street and! it thereafter in some manner found its way to the middle of the street merely created! a condition which made it necessary to remove the automobile; that was not the-proximate cause of the injury and damage-to the motor and could not constitute ant intervening cause or contributing cause and so would not prevent recovery by, plaintiff. Jafek v. Public Service of Oklahoma, 183 Okl. 32, 79 P.2d 813; Munroe v. Schoenfeld & Hunter Drilling Co., 178 Okl. 149, 61 P.2d 1045. With reference to the third ordinance pleaded, it is argued that, defendant’s rights were prejudiced in that •he could not tell the jury he acted under-orders of the police.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 60, 267 P.2d 564, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huffman-v-gaylor-okla-1954.