Lakeview, Inc. v. Davidson

1933 OK 522, 26 P.2d 760, 166 Okla. 171, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1933
Docket22407
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1933 OK 522 (Lakeview, Inc. v. Davidson) 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
Lakeview, Inc. v. Davidson, 1933 OK 522, 26 P.2d 760, 166 Okla. 171, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 383 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

RILEY, O. J.

Judgment of the trial court in the sum of $8,000 was in favor of Nan LeBron Davidson, plaintiff, and against Lakeview, Inc. It was based upon damages for loss of life by the drowning in Lake Overholser on May 15, 1929. of plaintiff’s five year old son, resulting from the sinking of a pleasure boat furnished for hire by defendant to the child’s father, who at the same time was drowned. Negligence relied upon as the proximate cause of the damages is the defective condition of the boat so furnished, consisting of inadequate buoyancy, and lack of life preservers as required by ordinance No. 3019, Oklahoma City, as amended, and a contract existing between defendant company and the city of Oklahoma City under and by which the defend *172 ant operated the concession of boating upon Lake Overholser, the water supply of said city.

It appears that on June 16, 1926, the said city leased to R. E. L. Einley its water reservoir to the extent that lessee was granted for a period of ten years the exclusive right to| issue permits to fish, hunt, boat, and maintain amusement devices and cold drink stands upon said reservoir and basin, in accord and subject to the terms of the ordinance above mentioned. On January 19, 1927, Einley assigned his right and interest in the lease to the defendant corporation. The assignment was approved by the city. Thereafter the defendant corporation operated the concession.

Section 9, par. D, of ordinance No. 8019, supra, provides:

“No person shall operate any boat upon such waters not equipped with one life preserver in good condition and of type approved by the water reservoir superintendent, for each passenger therein, and also not equipped with air chambers or chambers of sufficient displacement to insure buoyancy of the craft and passengers in event of capsizing. ”

The plaintiff alleged the terms and conditions of the contract and the duty imposed upon defendant by virtue of the contract and ordinance in reference to the furnishing to the public for hire, safe and properly equipped boats; that defendant, on May 15, 1929, acting under its lease contract and in pursuance of the ordinance governing, issued to Paul W. Davidson, for use of himself, his son, and William Barnhill, a permit and rented a boat for use upon said lake. That the boat so rented was not equipped with air chambers of sufficient displacement to insure buoyancy, which fact was unknown to Paul W. Davidson and his associates; that defendant failed to furnish said persons or equip said boat with life preservers as required by contract and ordinance; that the boat was thereupon used by said persons, a wind arose, the boat filled with water and, due to its dilapidated, leaky, and obsolete condition, it sank, resulting in the loss of life aforesaid.

The defendant admitted its corporate existence and its assigned lease contract, its operation of the concession as pleaded, otherwise it denied generally the negligence attributed to it. It alleged by way of conclusion that Paul W. Davidson was guilty of contributory negligence, and that his contributory negligence so stated was imputed to the child in his custody.

The answer of defendant assumes, and therefore eliminates from controversy, the relation of the parties and the loss of life.

Due to the fact that the occupants of the boat were drowned and the proximate cause of the loss is to some extent dependent upon circumstantial evidence, the evidence of the only eyewitnesses to the tragedy is material. Sam Huddleston and Lon Huddleston, brothers, were fishing on the dam. The former testified, in substance:

“I saw the deceased Paul Davidson, his youngest son, and Barnhill, a few minutes before their deaths; they were in the boat about 300' feet out in the lake. The boat was propelled by a motor; they were traveling in a westerly direction and a wave swamped the boat and it immediately went down. It went down so fast, it left them sitting there in the middle of the water * * * it just went right down.”

Lon Huddleston so testified.

For reversal it is contended, under assignments of error 1, 2, and 12, that the amount of the verdict is excessive. While it is to be remembered in this state that damages for wrongful death are strictly compensatory as distinguished from punitive, yet the law presumes a pecuniary loss to a parent from the death of a child.

Many elements material to gauge the amount of damages to be awarded in the case of wrongful death of an adult cannot be shown in the case of a minor. Typical of these is the actual earning capacity. While, in this record, there is no available exact word of testimony showing the economic or other conditions under which this child was being reared, its prospect for future life without handicaps, or the amount and number of financial contributions it might have otherwise made to the mother, nevertheless the judge and jury apparently were well advised as to the matters from a general view of the facts and circumstances of the case. After all, as stated by the Connecticut court, Gorham v. Cohen, 129 Atl. 523, “to attempt to determine what is the economic value of a life that is ended so shortly after it is begun opens at best an almost illimitable field for the exercise of judgment, and the conclusion of the 12 individual minds which combine to make the verdict, fortified as here by the refusal of the trial judge to interfere, is not easily to be set aside.”

As stated by the Washington court, Kranzusch v. Trustee Co., 161 P. 492:

“All the jury could do was to take into consideration the age, health and capacity *173 of the child, the situation of the parents, and award such damages as to them should seem just.”

The reviewing court’s duty is aptly stated in such cases by the California court, Gorman v. Sacramento Co., 286 P. 1083:

“Unless the verdict is so plainly and outrageously excessive as to suggest at first blush, passion, prejudice, or corruption on the part of the jury,” the reviewing court cannot set it aside.

General knowledge of the jury, in the case of Klusman v. Harper (Mo. App.) 298 S. W. 121, is relied upon to sustain a substantial verdict of a jury because of the great difficulty of procuring evidence as to the loss sustained by the death of a child of tender years. See, also, Ellis v. Ashton & St. Anthony Power Co. (Idaho) 238 P. 517; Spivack v. J. Hahn Bakery Co. (Md.) 214 S. W. 166; Stipetich v. S. S. & Mfg. Co. (Mo. App.) 218 S. W. 965; Flippen Prather Realty Co. v. Mather (Tex. Civ. App.) 207 S. W. 121; Williams v. Hines (Mo. App.) 229 S. W. 415; O’Meara v. Haiden (Cal.) 268 P. 334.

Under the circumstances of this case, we are unable to hold the verdict excessive.

Under assignments of error 9- (relating to instruction No. 11) and 10 (relating to requested instructions Nos. 9- and 10), it is urged the measure of damages stated is erroneous.

Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 522, 26 P.2d 760, 166 Okla. 171, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeview-inc-v-davidson-okla-1933.