Key Et Ux. v. British American Oil Producing Co.

1945 OK 237, 167 P.2d 657, 196 Okla. 663, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 610
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 25, 1945
DocketNo. 31721.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1945 OK 237 (Key Et Ux. v. British American Oil Producing Co.) 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
Key Et Ux. v. British American Oil Producing Co., 1945 OK 237, 167 P.2d 657, 196 Okla. 663, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 610 (Okla. 1945).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.,

This cause is presented on appeal from the district court of Oklahoma county, wherein W. S. Key and Irene D. Key, husband and wife, failed to recover judgment against the British American Oil Producing Company, a corporation, for damages to their home alleged to have been caused by the company’s operation and maintenance of an oil well in close proximity to their property.

The cause was tried to a jury in the trial court, which jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiffs have appealed. They appear before this court as plaintiffs in error. The order of appearance is thus preserved and our continued reference to the parties will be by their trial court designation.

It is first urged by the plaintiffs that in the trial of this cause there was “judicial misconduct indicating bias and prejudice of the trial judge (which) prevented plaintiffs from having a fair trial.”

In reply to which the defendant asserts that “plaintiffs were accorded a fair trial by the trial judge.”

Plaintiffs first call our attention to *665 an incident connected with the impaneling of the jury. Counsel for plaintiffs examined one juror at length and then excused the juror by using a peremptory challenge, whereupon the court said: “Why did you take up all of that timé asking those questions? You knew you were going to excuse him. I would have done so.”

We are unable to find anything in the foregoing remark of the court which indicated or intimated his conclusions as to the merits of the case or which indicated an unwarranted bias or prejudice toward counsel for the plaintiffs.

Thereafter and during an intermission the trial court said to one of the other counsel for the plaintiffs: “We are going to have to hold Mr. Carey down or he will run away with this courthouse.” This remark was made during an intermission and while the jury was absent from the courtroom. Insofar as the remark may be said to indicate or intimate the conclusion of the trial court on the merits of the controversy, it is without color or meaning. We do not think it constituted error, and so hold.

Counsel for the plaintiffs next call our attention to an admonition by the trial court requesting counsel for the plaintiffs to stop asking leading questions. The following controversy occurred between court and counsel:

“Q. I have a home, Mr. Smiser, and I can tell you if I had a well that close to my home . . . (interrupted) The Court: Just a minute, I will have to swear you. Mr. Carey: I have to defend myself with the witness. The Court: I don’t think so.”

There is nothing in the foregoing remarks of the court which indicates the court’s conclusion with reference to the merits of the controversy. Nor do we deem the remarks unduly critical of counsel.

The plaintiffs direct our attention to the following incident as reflected by the record:

“A. I knew the values of property in Lincoln Terrace Addition. - Mr. Carey: That is right. The Court: Gentlemen of the jury, disregard the remark of counsel, please. Q. So you did today testify as to the fair market value of the improvements of this property of General Key as of March 28, 1940, when you had never been inside of it at that time. Mr. Carey: We object to that as argumentative and unfair. The Court: Wait a minute. Overruled. Mr. Cantrell: Will you hear from me? The Court: Yes, sir. Mr. Cantrell: Counsel knows that the answer this witness gave you was in response to a hypothetical question in which the facts previously testified to were assumed, and this is a deliberate attempt in my judgment to mislead the witness in the jury’s mind in making a statement which he didn’t ever make. The Court: Overruled and exception.”

Similar occurrences happened twelve other times during the trial of the cause. We have examined the "record of each of these occasions but fail to find any place where the trial court expressed or intimated an opinion as to the merits of the lawsuit or was unduly critical of counsel for the plaintiffs.

Thereafter and during the argument of the cause to the jury counsel for the plaintiffs was reprimanded. The record reflects the following incident:

“I say he said, gentlemen of the jury, that no repairing would do any good if the operations continued, so we have got a permanent damage and we are going to have a damage that is greater than we have been able to prove today because some of the damage hasn’t occurred. Mr. Pruet: We object to that. That is not what Stokes testified and not the law. The Court: That will be sustained. That is not the measure of damages, Mr. Carey; that is contrary to the instructions. Mr. Carey: May I say, I am saying that the proof is it will cause damage in the future. The Court: That is not the instructions in the case; not the issues in the case. Mr. Carey: Very well. I thought I had a right to argue that, and my understanding of the law is —. The Court: You heard me. I said that is not the issue in this case. Mr. Cantrell: Will Your Honor *666 excuse the jury, please? The Court: Your time is about up. Mr. Carey: I would like to finish my argument. Mr. Cantrell: Go ahead and finish it. The Court: Your time was up about a minute ago. I was letting you go because you didn’t seem to finish. How much more time do you want? . . . The Court: All right, gentlemen of the jury, retire to consider your verdict, please. (. Jury out.) Mr. Cantrell: Your Honor, please, I want to make a record on what happened just now. I think Your Honor was wrong. I say that respectfully, but I want this record to show that near the. conclusion of the argument. of counsel for the plaintiff, that because of what happened the court pounded the desk and exhibited a very great deal of impatience for counsel for the plaintiff. May I say further, in justification that I think Your Honor is entirely wrong in your ruling that counsel is not permitted under a claim for permanent damages, to argue that the damages will be continued.”

And again:

“Mr. Cantrell: Your Honor had a perfect right to make the ruling. The Court: I had to make the ruling twice. The first time I suggested to him. Mr. Cantrell: Counsel had a right to continue to express his own thoughts. The Court: Counsel did not have a right to' pursue it. Mr. Cantrell: He didn’t think them to be entirely divergent from Your Honor’s ruling because it has been our view that recovery of permanent damages or any discussion of what constitutes permanent damages, the damages already sustained, the present,damages now and future damages are involved and I can show Your Honor plenty of cases. The Court: That is not the damage in this case.”

And later:

“Mr. Carey: I think you committed reversible error in making the statement you did and pounding on the desk. The Court: That is baloney and you know it. Mr. Cantrell: I don’t agree with the court on that either.”

In Empire Oil & Refining Co. v. Fields, 188 Okla. 666, 112 P. 2d 395, this court said in paragraph 1 of the syllabus:

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Bluebook (online)
1945 OK 237, 167 P.2d 657, 196 Okla. 663, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/key-et-ux-v-british-american-oil-producing-co-okla-1945.