Leeper v. Thornton

1959 OK 155, 344 P.2d 1101, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 15, 1959
Docket38295
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1959 OK 155 (Leeper v. Thornton) 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
Leeper v. Thornton, 1959 OK 155, 344 P.2d 1101, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 464 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This wrongful death action arose out of a collision between two automobiles on U. S. Highway 270, a few miles east of Shawnee, Oklahoma, on the morning of November 6, 1955. One of the autos was a black 1950 model four-door Kaiser Sedan that had been traveling west on said highway and was driven by one Hamp Thornton. The other was a white, or light colored, 1954 model, two-door Mercury Sedan, traveling east on the same road and driven by one William V. Lewis. The injuries received by Thornton and Lewis were fatal, and, according to Bryce Wilde, the Highway Patrolman who investigated it, there were no eyewitnesses to the accident. It is rather accurately calculated, and agreed, that the accident occurred a few minutes before 4:00 o’clock a. m.

This action was instituted in February, 1956, by plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, seeking damages for Lewis’ death against defendant in error, as defendant, on the theory that the collision was caused by Thornton’s negligence. In defendant’s answer and cross-petition, she not only denied plaintiff’s allegations of Thornton’s negligence, but, on the basis of allegations that the collision was caused by Lewis’ negligence, sought damages against plaintiff under two causes of action. On the basis of the second of these alleged causes, defendant, hereinafter referred to as cross-petitioner, prayed for damages in the sum of $540.56 to cover expenses incurred in connection with Thornton’s funeral and burial, and $500 as the value of his automobile.

In paragraph 7 of her first cause of action, cross-petitioner alleged that Thornton contributed $80 per month to the support of his three minor children by his divorced wife; that, had he lived, he would have continued these monthly contributions until each minor reached 18 years of age; and that the youngest of the three would reach that age 13 years from the date of the filing of the cross-petition. On the basis of these allegations and cross-petitioner’s calculations, the total damages she prayed for under her first cause of action, was $12,480.

When the case finally came to trial before a jury in October, 1957, cross-petitioner, with the court’s permission, amended the above described paragraph 7 of her cross-petition to show when Thornton’s youngest child, Richard Wayne, would reach his twenty-first (instead of his 18th) birthday, and to substitute the figure “$15,360.00” for the figure: “$12,480.00” as the total amount of damages she was claiming for Thornton’s anticipated contributions to the children’s support if he had lived.

At the trial, proof of which of the dead drivers was responsible for the early morning collision revolved primarily around attempting to show whether it was the result of Thornton’s driving his Kaiser across the center line of the highway into its south traffic lane where Lewis’ Mercury was traveling, or whether the Mercury crossed said line and .rammed the Kaiser while it was traveling in the north, or its own proper, traffic lane. As there were no eyewitnesses to the collision, and, when the cars were first seen afterward, they were so far apart and facing in such different directions from those in which they had been traveling, that an untrained eye could not readily, or at a glance, determine at just what point on the highway they had met,' photographs and testimony of experts were used to try to reconstruct the collision and show the jury on which side of the highway’s center line it occurred, and which car precipitated it by crossing into the other’s lane. The original photographs of the damaged *1104 autos at the scene, or in the surroundings in which they were first seen after the accident, and other photographs taken of them after they, were moved to Shawnee’s S & S Salvage Yard, were all taken by the same photographer and used by both opposing counsel in examining and cross-examining the expert witnesses. The witness plaintiff qualified as an expert was the above-mentioned highway patrolman, Bryce Wilde. The one called by the cross-petitioner was Mr. Ralph H. Snyder, a safety engineer.

After the evidence was all in and the cause submitted to the jury under instructions which erroneously represented the total amount cross-petitioner sought on her second cause of action to be $1140.56, instead of $1040.56, a verdict was returned for cross-petitioner in the larger amount on that cause of action, and for $15,360 on her first cause of action.

At the hearing on plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, the court found the verdict excessive to the extent of $100 in the amount awared cross-petitioner on her second cause of action, and excessive to the extent of $2880 in the amount awarded her on her first cause of action. Accordingly, cross-petitioner was required, as a condition to. the overruling of plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, to file a remittitur of said excessive amounts. After the remittitur was filed, and the order overruling her motion for a new trial was entered, plaintiff perfected the present appeal, and cross-petitioner cross-appeals complaining of being compelled to remit the cited amounts.

In her cross-appeal, cross-petitioner confesses that the remittitur of $100 on her second cause of action was proper, but says the remittitur of $2280 on her first cause of action was improper “under all of the evidence * * * ”. As hereinbefore indicated, the total amount she requested for damages to compensate for Thornton’s anT ticipated contributions to his children’s support, was computed from the number of years it would take the youngest child, Ralph Wayne, after the filing of the cross-petition in 1956, to reach his 21st birthday. After "her pleading’s amendment by' inter-lineation, the time that would take was still specified therein as “13 years.” ■ No record showing said minor’s age has come to our attention, except cross-petitioner’s testimony (at the time of the trial in October, 1957) that he was 9 years old. If he was then 9, he most probably was 8 in February, 1956, when the cross-petition was filed. If cross-petitioner was entitled to $80 per month, or $960 per year, for the 13 years elapsing between Ralph Wayne’s 8th year in 1956, and his 21st birthday, then, on the basis of the evidence and her pleadings, she could recover no more than $12,480. Therefore, we are unable to see how the trial court erred in directing a reduction of cross-petitioner’s recovery, on her first cause of action, from $15,360 to $12,480. Accordingly, we hold that the cross-appeal is without merit.

Plaintiff opens the argument on her appeal by taking the position that the verdict and judgment “is supported solely by the testimony of the witness Snyder” and must stand or fall upon its sufficiency. Then she proceeds to set forth the issues presented in seven paragraphs but her argument is set forth under three separate propositions, all of which relate directly or remotely to Snyder’s testimony.

Under plaintiff’s" Proposition No. 1, she cites the case of Young v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 10 Cir., 68 F.2d 83, as authority for her statement that where “the expert wi'.ness bases his opinion in part on facts which are not in evidence and on assumptions of his own, such testimony is without probative effect”, and she quotes from Craddock v. Greenberg Mercantile Inc., Mo., 297 S.W. 2d 541, cited along with Gaddy v. Skelly Oil Co., 364 Mo. 143, 259 S.W.2d 844

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Scribner v. Hillcrest Medical Center
1992 OK CIV APP 117 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1992)
Jordan v. General Motors Corp.
1979 OK 10 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)
Provence v. Cunningham
588 P.2d 1020 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1979)
Horsford v. Estate of Horsford
561 P.2d 722 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1977)
Jones v. Stamper
336 So. 2d 1251 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1976)
Kleinsasser v. Gross
129 N.W.2d 717 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1964)
Sandlin v. Freeman
1964 OK 141 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Little v. George Feed & Supply Co.
342 S.W.2d 668 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1961)
Miller v. Hickman
1961 OK 16 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)
Poggetto v. Owen
187 Cal. App. 2d 128 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)
Allan D. Campbell v. Mandy Lea Clark
283 F.2d 766 (Tenth Circuit, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1959 OK 155, 344 P.2d 1101, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leeper-v-thornton-okla-1959.