Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Donelson

1941 OK 210, 116 P.2d 721, 189 Okla. 273, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 215
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1941
DocketNo. 29181.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1941 OK 210 (Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Donelson) 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
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Donelson, 1941 OK 210, 116 P.2d 721, 189 Okla. 273, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 215 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

Plaintiff in error and defendant in error are the oil and gas mining lessee and the owner, respectively, of land originally allotted to an Osage Indian.

This action was commenced by the owner, as plaintiff, to recover damages against the lessee, as defendant, in April, 1938. It was based upon three separate alleged causes of action. For the first of these plaintiff alleged that he had been damaged in the sum of $500, the reasonable value of a house that the defendant had removed from the premises without his permission. As a second cause of action it was alleged that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $200, the agricultural and grazing value of a strip of land through the center of the tract that defendant had appropriated by grading and oiling a road thereon. In plaintiff’s third alleged cause of action he claims to have been damaged in the sum of $400, the value of other portions of his land occupied by four houses in which tenants of the defendant lived, as well as other portions used by said tenants for gardens and pastures.

At the beginning of the trial, the court sustained the defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence-on the first of the plaintiff’s alleged causes of action; and after a trial by jury on the other two, overruled the defendant’s motions for a directed verdict and entered judgment in accord with a verdict of $100 in favor of the plaintiff.

The defendant has lodged the present appeal, but plaintiff has filed a cross-petition in error in which he complains of the trial court’s ruling on the introduction of evidence concerning his first alleged cause of action.

In further discussing the matters pertinent to our decision herein, the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Most of the argument advanced in the briefs concerns the trial court’s alleged error in overruling the defendant’s separate motions for a directed verdict as to plaintiff’s second and third causes of action. Under two of the propositions advanced by the defendant on this point, it is contended that the evidence plainly shows that the road and houses in question were built on the land be *274 fore plaintiff acquired it, and that the damages the latter sought to recover for the land occupied thereby accrued to the latter’s grantor, rather than to him.

The undisputed evidence disclosed that the road was originally built to provide a way of ingress and egress for land under lease by the Empire Oil Company which was situated in the vicinity of the land in question, and that employees, graders, machinery, and equipment of the county had been used to maintain the road since 1922 or 1923. The plaintiff acquired title to the land involved in May, 1936, and in the same month the defendant company’s employees oiled said road. Plaintiff testified in support of his claim that the land was “worth $200 less with the road running through than if it were not there,” and that it would be eight or ten years before the road, as graded and oiled, would again grow grass. Mr. H. F. Lesch, one of the defendant company’s employees, testified without contradiction that in 1929, several years before plaintiff became owner of the tract, the road had larger quantities of oil on it than it did at the time he testified. The foregoing clearly demonstrates that plaintiff has no cause of action against the defendant for the construction of the road, and there was no evidence introduced tending to show that the defendant company had anything to do with its grading and maintenance, except as above described. It is argued on behalf of the plaintiff that the trial court was warranted in submitting to the jury the question of his damages from the road on the theory that he was seeking temporary damages for the use of the land occupied thereby and because of certain evidence showing not only how many acres the road occupied, but also the value of the use of such acreage per year. This argument is untenable, however, for the evidence fails to show that the defendant company did anything to deprive plaintiff of the use of said land. The evidence does tend to show, however, that the land covered thereby was rendered unavailable for use as grazing or farm land by the construction of the road long before plaintiff’s purchase, and it is but reasonable to assume that this fact was taken into consideration at the time the purchase price for the tract, as a whole, was agreed upon between plaintiff and his grantor. The evidence does not show how much, if any, this condition was affected by the oil which defendant’s employees administered to the road bed in 1936, or to what extent, if any, this injured the tract more than it had already been injured or damaged by the road’s construction and previous oiling. Thus it is obvious that the trial court should have sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as to plaintiff’s second alleged cause of action.

One of the same factors which should have precluded the plaintiff’s second alleged cause of action from being submitted to the jury for consideration also exists in the evidence concerning a portion of the subject of his third alleged cause of action, namely, the use of the land occupied by the four houses hereinbefore mentioned. The undisputed evidence shows that the houses were located upon the same land they occupied at the time of the trial, before plaintiff ever purchased the tract in question. The land they occupied was thus rendered unavailable for grazing and agricultural purposes before plaintiff’s purchase. Whether the injury to the landowner from being deprived of the use of the land on which the houses stood be regarded as having been complete at the time of their erection and as giving only the party who owned the land at that time a cause of action therefor, or whether it be regarded as an injury to any subsequent owner who was deprived of the use of said land while the houses stood, it is clear that under the undisputed evidence in this record the alleged tort in question constitutes no basis for a cause of action by this plaintiff against this defendant. The evidence wholly fails to show that the defendant had anything to do with the erection of the houses. The defendant alleged that they were erected by its assignor and, as we have noted, the undisputed evidence shows that they *275 were erected before it appears that the defendant acquired any interest in the lease. The land on which the houses stood was unavailable to the landowner for grazing or cultivation, as long as they stood, whether they were occupied or unoccupied. In view of the foregoing it is manifest that plaintiff’s alleged damages from being deprived of the use of said land were not a proper subject for consideration by the jury in arriving at its verdict.

As to the damages which plaintiff sought to recover from the defendant company for the use by its employees of other portions of the tract for gardens and pastures, the evidence is insufficient to establish liability on the part of said company therefor. Counsel for the plaintiff contend that the rule of respondeat superior, requiring an employer to respond in damages for torts committed by his employees within the scope of their employment, casts no doubt upon the correctness of the judgment herein, for the asserted reason that the evidence shows the defendant company was causing its employees to supplement insufficient salaries it was paying them by gardening and pasturing cattle. There is no evidence in the record to support this assertion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 210, 116 P.2d 721, 189 Okla. 273, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-continent-petroleum-corp-v-donelson-okla-1941.