King's Van & Storage Company v. Criner

1956 OK 236, 301 P.2d 1015, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 20, 1956
Docket36690
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1956 OK 236 (King's Van & Storage Company v. Criner) 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
King's Van & Storage Company v. Criner, 1956 OK 236, 301 P.2d 1015, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 581 (Okla. 1956).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

The defendant, King’s Van & Storage Company, Incorporated, a Corporation, plaintiff in error, will be referred to as King’s. The defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, d/b/a White’s Transfer Company, will be referred to as White’s. The defendant in error will be referred to as plaintiff.

The plaintiff was employed by the defendant White’s to drive a truck. White’s was a partnership engaged in the moving business in Tulsa, but it was not authorized to transfer goods in interstate commerce. Defendant King’s was in the same business [1017]*1017in Oklahoma City, but was a larger concern and was authorized to haul in interstate by the Interstate Commerce Commission. On occasions, as in this instance, King’s would lease equipment from White’s, including the driver, to handle jobs when it was more convenient or their own equipment was unavailable. The lease agreement here involved was executed in writing on September 4, 1951, and provided that White’s would furnish the specified truck and trailer and a driver to transport household goods from Oklahoma City to designated points in Kentucky and Tennessee. White’s were to maintain the equipment and pay the driver, but it was particularly provided that: ■

“2. During the period of this lease the said vehicle and driver shall be solely and exclusively under the direction and control of the lessee, who shall be liable to the shipper.
“3.' Upon expiration of this lease, possession of this vehicle will promptly be restored to the lessor.”

The leased trailer had King’s name printed thereom The driver was to obey King’s instructions and was to receive payment from the shipper for the transportation on behalf of King’s.

Just prior to the trip that resulted in the accident causing plaintiff’s injury, plaintiff, as driver, had been on a similar trip for King’s and White’s to Houston, Texas, using the same vehicle. While returning from Houston to Oklahoma- City, plaintiff discovered that the brakes were not functioning properly. He was able to control the truck, but when he reported to King’s at Oklahoma City, he told, them about the defective brakes and suggested that they should be checked. After his truck was loaded with furniture and he was given the bill of lading and the lease contract, this trip being for King’s plaintiff was told to proceed to Tulsa and have White’s see to the repairs. He was also shown the route to take in making the trip from Oklahoma City to the delivery points. The brakes continued to manifest the same malfunction of the trip from Oklahoma City to Tulsa. Plaintiff reported the defective brakes to White’s at Tulsa and was instructed to take the vehicle to the defendant McCarty’s garage. Around noon the plaintiff delivered the truck and trailer to the garage where Mrs. Simpson had already called and left instructions. Plaintiff offered to describe the condition of the brakes but was informed by the mechanic that he had already been told what to do.

McCarty testified that he repaired a leak in the hand valve and checked for other leaks in the brake system. He also testified that he drove the truck around the block using the brakes, but he did not otherwise check the brakes nor. examine the internal mechanism of the brake system. The truck was to be ready for plaintiff by 5:00 P.M. The truck was a 1948 model and there had never been any overhaul of the brake system nor was there any periodic check made of the brakes. When plaintiff returned and received the truck from McCarty’s, he went to White’s where a discussion of the route directed by King’s was held and ■ plaintiff was told to' “gb ahead and go the way they told me.” This route was known by drivers to be a bad road. Plaintiff left Tulsa and drove to Springdale, Arkansas, where he stopped for the night. The brakes were apparently functioning properly and continued to do so until just prior to the accident. Early the next morning, he continued the journey and proceeded to the top of Bush Mountain, approximately two miles west of the White River, which was some eight miles from. Eureka Springs, Arkansas. There he stopped and checked his tires, built up pressure in the air brakes, checked them to be sure they were working, and started over this two miles of curving hilly down-grade. This portion of the highway was described by highway warning signs as “dangerous”. Plaintiff was operating the - vehicle over this part of the road in second gear, low range, for its additional braking, effect. Part way down, plaintiff, discovered the brakes:

“ * * * seemed to act up, kind of
* * * like they did down in Texas, [1018]*1018and I started looking for a place to pull the truck off the road and there wasn’t no road there to get the truck on, or pull it off on, so I thought I would pull it up to the top of this hill and stop the truck, and I got to the top of the hill and I couldn’t stop it, it just went right on over the hill. * * * I went down the hill. I tried to swing wide so that I could turn the truck into that bridge and go across the bridge but instead it throwed me into an embankment there of solid rock.”

This, and other testimony of the plaintiff relating the total failure of the brakes, was the only direct testimony as to the cause of the accident. It was corroborated by the absence of skid-marks on the road. There was testimony by other drivers of this vehicle that in July there had been trouble with one of the hose connections of the air-system permitting a loss of air from the brakes and that this trouble had recurred after being repaired by the drivers. White’s knew of this difficulty. There was also testimony that the air hose connecting the tractor with the trailer was examined at the scene of the accident and found to be “worn out down to the thread” and not, in the opinion of the witness, as a result of the wreck. The defendant, McCarty, testified that he did not make an inch by inch examination of the hose, and that such a worn hose as was exhibited in the courtroom should be replaced. This portion of the hose, about which the testimony was given, was introduced in evidence but the entire hose connecting the air system of the tractor with that of the trailer was not produced in court. This particular portion of the hose was shown to be broken. Placed under operating pressure in a demonstration to the jury it showed marked weakness at the worn spot. A brake expert testified that a sudden loss of air from the service line connecting the two units or a slow leak anywhere in the system would not set the emergency system of the trailer. He also testified that a total failure of the brakes could only have been caused by a complete loss of air pressure, loss of hydraulic fluid, or a mechanical failure of the foundation system of the brakes. The brake shoes, that part of the system which creates the friction with the wheels of the vehicle, were proved to be adequate had the other portion of the system functioned.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff upon which judgment was rendered. Upon appeal, King’s does not argue that the verdict was excessive nor many of the other assignments of error presented in the motion for a new trial and the petition in error. The argument presented is based on the proposition that there was no duty owed the plaintiff by this defendant and that, if such a duty did exist, there was no evidence of negligence to sustain the verdict. Having failed to

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King's Van & Storage Company v. Criner
1956 OK 236 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 236, 301 P.2d 1015, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kings-van-storage-company-v-criner-okla-1956.