Mathers v. Younger

1936 OK 302, 58 P.2d 857, 177 Okla. 294, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 657
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 31, 1936
DocketNo. 26435.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1936 OK 302 (Mathers v. Younger) 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
Mathers v. Younger, 1936 OK 302, 58 P.2d 857, 177 Okla. 294, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 657 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Josie OB. Mathers, the plaintiff in error, brought suit against Lulu B. Younger, administratrix of the estate of George R. Beyers, deceased, to recover damages for personal injuries. The case was called for trial and testimony introduced by the plaintiff. The defendant in error interposed a demurrer to the evidence, which was sustained and the cause dismissed. A motion for a new trial was filed by the plaintiff, which was overruled, exception taken, and an appeal perfected to this court.

The parties will be designated as they appeared in the court below, jfiaintiff and defendant.

The petition filed by the plaintiff, in substance, alleges that the plaintiff at the time of filing the suit and at the time of the alleged injuries, was a resident of Noble county, and that George R. Beyers during his lifetime was also a resident of Noble county, and that Lulu B. Younger, one of his daughters, is the administratrix of the estate of George R. Beyers, deceased. That said George R. Beyers was a semi-invalid and that the plaintiff was employed by the said George R. Beyers at the time of the alleged injuries, to perform the following services at his home:

“Keeping house, cooking and serving his meals, caring for him and administering to the numerous sma’l wants that a man of broken health and advanced age would naturally require and that in the course there *295 of she was to and did receive a small wage in such capacity.”

Site states that about the 1st of May, 1934, the said George R. Beyers, attended by the plaintiff, made a trip from his residence, a distance of about nine or ten blocks, to the Long Bell Lumber Company in the city of Perry, and transacted some business of minor importance to the said George It. Beyers, deceased, and that the said George It. Beyers, deceased, was driving a Nash coupe in which the plaintiff and he were ridmg. ■ She alleges that at the place of business of the Long Bell Lumber Company, the said George R. Beyers stopped his car and transacted some business with said lumber company, the nature of which is to her unknown; that he re-entered the automobile and started the car and traveled towards his home, and proceeded less than a block from the place of business of the lumber compány when the injury to the plaintiff occurred.

She charges in her petition negligence as follows:

“That when said George R. Beyers had stopped at the said lumber yard, whether necessary or not, this p.aintiff does not know, but in fact he had set the emergency brake upon said automobile and that upon re-entering the same and starting northward, the said George R. Beyers negligently and carelessly proceeded to move said car northward without releasing or removing the brake so set by him, but left the same set and in starting the car in motion, carelessly and negligently ran it forward with the emergency brake set and drove approximately but something less than one block, and that said car filled with fumes and smoke and the smell of burning substance until it became suffocating and nauseating and said George R. Beyers pronounced the car as being afire and brought said car approximately to a stop and that by reason thereof this plaintiff was thrown into great fear and alarm and believed that a sudden escape therefrom was necessary to her safety and preservation and opened the door on the east or right-hand side of said car to alight therefrom and this plaintiff in said spell of fear and alarm and in the belief that her life was being hazarded and that said car would be immediately burned up or perhaps an exp'osion of gasoline might occur therein, attempted to leap and escape from the car, and while she was so attempting to do, the said George R. Beyers did further negligently and carelessly step on the accelerator and did cause said automobile to suddenly lurch forward with great force and violence, and in so doing, it jerked the feet of this plaintiff out from under her and caused her to take an unexpected plunge at, upon and against the ground and to throw her in a whirling motion from the running board and violently at, upon and against the ground at the right-hand or east side of said automobile.
“That the apparent necessity for this plaintiff to escape from said automobile, together with the sudden slowing down of the same and the sudden forward lurch, all caused by the negligence of the said George R. Beyers, caused this plaintiff to be thrown therefrom and sprawled upon the ground in an angular and whirling motion as aforesaid in such manner that she was thrown upon the left hip in an inclined position, whereby she was not only bruised but seriously wrenched and twisted in the left hip, the left knee, the left ankle and the attachments in the small of the back, connecting the hip with the back and that the same were bruised, wrenched, twisted and sprained and this plaintiff suffered a violent twisting, wrenching, injury and strain to the left ankle joint, the knee and knee joint, the hip .and hip joint and the connecting ligaments, muscles and attachments of each of the same and also of the hip and of the spine and back and the attachments thereto and thereof”

—and prays for a judgment to compensate her for the injuries sustained.

The defendant filed an answer, which consisted of a general denial, and pleaded contributory negligence. Plaintiff filed her reply, which consisted of a general denial.

Upon these issues the cause was called for trial. At the close of the testimony for the plaintiff, the following demurrer was interposed by the defendant:

“Gomes now the defendant and demurs to the evidence offered by the plaintiff on the ground and for the reason that the evidence fails to establish a cause of action as alleged in plaintiff’s petition in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, or even tends to establish a cause of action.”

The demurrer was sustained and the cause dismissed. It will bo observed by the petition that it is alleged that George R. Bey-ers was a semi-invalid due to age and ill health, and that ho needed and required am attendant to be in the home and to give him such personal attention as he needed in the following particulars: (1) Keeping the house; (2) cooking and preparing and serving meals; (3) supervising and attending to household affairs; and that the plaintiff alleges that she was employed to perform such services, and was in the employ of the said George R. Beyers at the time she alleges she sustained the injuries.

She alleges that on the date of the injury, she made a trip with said George R. Beyers *296 from his residence to the Long Bell Lumber Company, and that the said George K. Bey-ers transacted some minor business of importance to him. the nature and character of which is unknown. She alleges that he set the emergency brake at the time he went to the place of business of the lumber company, but al.eges that she does not know whether it was necessary or not. She alleges that as he returned he negligently left the brake set as he started away and traveled less than a block when the car was filled with fumes and smoke, and that both she and the said George R. Beyers believed the car to be on fire, and that she attempted to leave the car, and while she was attempting to leave the car and was partially out of the car, the said George R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 302, 58 P.2d 857, 177 Okla. 294, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathers-v-younger-okla-1936.