Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Adams

1936 OK 645, 64 P.2d 706, 179 Okla. 129, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 806
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1936
DocketNo. 24665.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1936 OK 645 (Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Adams) 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
Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Adams, 1936 OK 645, 64 P.2d 706, 179 Okla. 129, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 806 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

The parties appear here in reverse order to their appearance in the trial court, and will be referred to herein ■as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the court below.

Plaintiff sued the defendant and others for alleged damages caused by his cattle drinking salt water alleged to have been deposited in a running stream by the defendant. The suit was dismissed as to the other defendants. The cattle were alleged to have been damaged thereby during the grazing season of 1931. Plaintiff alleged damages of $11,910, and upon trial to a jury, same resulted in a verdict and *130 judgment in favor of plaintiff for $4,500, and the defendant appeals.

‘’The defendant urges here that the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court is contrary to law and denied defendant a fair and impartial trial. It complains of certain instructions given by the court, to which exceptions were taken, and of the action of the court in refusing to give certain requested instructions. It also urges that there is no competent and material evidence in the record to sustain the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court, and It likewise complains that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a new trial upon the defendant’s alleged newly discovered evidence.

The defendant’s argument with reference to the alleged erroneous instructions given by the court is directed primarily at instructions 4 and 7. Instruction No. 4 instructs the jury that the law of the state prohibits oil and gas mining operators from permit ting salt water and other deleterious substances to escape from their oil mining operations and to flow over the surface of the land into fresh water streams which are used as a water supply for stock. It instructed that if the jury found from the evidence that the defendant permitted salt water and other deleterious substances to so escape and flow over the surface of the land into streams which are the fresh water supply for cattle, and if plaintiff’s cattle drank therefrom and sustained injury as a proximate result thereof, then a verdict should be returned in favor of plaintiff to reimburse him for the injuries sustained.

The evidence discloses that during the period involved, plaintiff was grazing several hundred head of his cattle in his pasture, consisting- of several hundred acres of land. There is no dispute here that the evidence shows that the defendant permitted salt water to escape from its lease operations into a stream which traversed this pasture several miles. The defendant owned oil and gas leases on the land through which the upper part of the stream ran. It also owned surface leases on the land through which the upper part of the stream ran for a mile or more. The evidence was conflicting as to whether plaintiff’s cattle were injured by drinking the salt water from the stream at points where the defendant owned the surface lease, or whether the injury occurred from drinking the salt water at points on the stream in plaintiff’s pasture below the land upon which the defendant owned surface leases. The defendant makes the point that instruction No. 4 was erroneous in that it informed the jury that even though they found that the cattle drank from the poisoned stream at points located upon land covered by defendant’s surface lease’ still the defendant would be liable therefor.

The requested instructions which were refused by the court appear to have been designed to inform the jury that the defendant owned certain surface leases, and that the defendant would not be liable for the cattle drinking from the stream at points covered by the surface leases.

AVe have carefully examined the entire instructions, and it is our conclusion that the jury was fully instructed upon the point made by the defendant. AVe quote instruction No. 5, as follows:

“You are further instructed that under the law of this state, an oil and gas lessee has the right to produce salt water on its leased premises, and to permit salt water to flow over the surface of the ground of its leased premises, provided the oil lessee, in addition to owning the oil lease, owns the surface right or has a surface lease thereon.
“And in this connection, you are further instructed that if you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff permitted his cattle to graze upon the land on which the defendant owned the surface lease, and if you further find and believe from the proof before you that plaintiff’s cattle drank salt water out of any portion of Cedar creek upon which the defendant owned the surface lease and were injured as a proximate result thereof, then and under such circumstances you are told that plaintiff could not recover for any injury to his cattle which was occasioned as a proximate result of drinking salt water or other poisonous substances upon the surface leased premises of the defendant herein.
“You are instructed that it was not necessarily the duty of the plaintiff to fence out of his pasture that portion of the land upon which the defendant herein owned a surface lease, but in this connection you are told that if he failed to do so, and his cattle were injured as a result of his failure so to do, then and under such circumstances he could not recover therefor.”

Instructions Nos. 6, 8, and 9 also sufficiently inform the jury that the defendant will not be liable if. the jury finds that the cattle were injured by drinking the salt water from the land upon which the defendant owned the .surface lease. The defendant, although apparently recognizing that instructions 5, 6, 8, and 9 instructed the jury in conformity with its defense in this connection, complains that such instruc *131 tions are inconsistent with instruction No. 4 and • other paragraphs of the instructions. It points to a number of decisions of this court wherein it has been held that it is the duty of the trial court to give consistent and harmonious instructions, among which are Pittsburg County Railway Co. v. Hasty, 106 Okla. 65, 233 P. 218; Welga v. Thompson, 103 Okla. 114, 220 P. 271, and Petroleum Iron Works Co. v. Bullington, 61 Okla. 311, 161 P. 538, and others.

In the Hasty Case, supra, it is held in the fourth paragraph of the syllabus:

“The instructions must always be considered as a whole, but they must be consistent and harmonious, and where two instructions are given containing inconsistent or conflicting propositions, tending to confuse the jury, the cause will be reversed for the reason that the court is unable to determine which instruction the jury followed and which they ignored.”

We are aware that it is the established law of this state that the instructions of the court must be harmonious so as not to confuse the jury. Our consideration of the entire instructions here as a whole, however, does not result in a conclusion that the various paragraphs thereof are inconsistent or confusing to the jury. Instruction No. 4 informs the jury of the law generally, while the other instructions wo have mentioned specifically and in unmistakable terms instruct the jury, and reiterate, that it cannot hold defendant liable for any injuries by the cattle drinking salt water off of the premises covered by the defendant’s surface lease.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 645, 64 P.2d 706, 179 Okla. 129, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-territory-illuminating-oil-co-v-adams-okla-1936.