Midwest City v. Eckroat

1963 OK 241, 387 P.2d 123, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 532
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 29, 1963
Docket39883
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1963 OK 241 (Midwest City v. Eckroat) 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
Midwest City v. Eckroat, 1963 OK 241, 387 P.2d 123, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 532 (Okla. 1963).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD-, Chief Justice.

In this action defendants in error instituted in May, 1959, as plaintiffs, they sought recovery of damages against the plaintiff in error, as defendant, on account of injuries they allegedly sustained by reason of the defendant city’s construction and maintenance of a sewage disposal and digester unit, or plant, across the road from plaintiffs’ farm.

In their petition, plaintiffs alleged the erection and maintenance of the unit “ * * in the Winter and Spring of 1957 * * * ”; and, in their first alleged cause of action, sought the sum of $25,000.00 in damages for diminution of the usable rental value of their property as a Grade A dairy farm and as a residence, by reason of the filth and sewage placed adjacent to, and upon, it in the operation of the plant.

In their second alleged cause of action plaintiffs sought the sum of $16,400.00 in damages for diminution in the fair cash' *125 market value of the property by reason of the sewage plant’s proximity to it.

By a motion to make more definite and certain, defendant thereafter filed, in combination with a motion to elect and strike, and a demurrer, it, among other things, sought to require plaintiffs to allege the exact dates when their cause, or causes, of action arose. As far as the record affirmatively shows, however, this motion to make more definite and certain was never ruled upon, though it appears by a minute copied into the record from the trial court’s docket, that the demurrer was overruled.

In a “FIRST AMENDED PETITION” plaintiffs thereafter filed, they again alleged the plant’s erection and maintenance “ * * in the Winter and Spring of 1957 * * * ”, and also alleged rejection of the claim for damages they presented to the defendant’s city council in April, 1959. In the first alleged cause of action of their amended petition, plaintiffs reduced the sum they were asking as damages for the diminished rental value of their property from $25,000.-00 to $3,600.00. In a part of said amended petition they designated as “THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION”, they sought as damages to the value of their farm, the same $16,400.00 they had prayed for under their second cause of action of their original petition; and, in a new second cause of action, sought an additional sum of $21,-400.00 as damages on account of personal inconvenience, annoyance, discomfort, etc.

Defendant’s answer to plaintiffs’ allegations was a general denied.

When the cause came on for trial in May, 1961, plaintiffs’ first witness, Ted Eckroat, during the early part of his testimony, told of various changes in living conditions on the involved farm brought about by the sewage disposal plant’s operation beginning in 1957. Later this witness’s testimony was interrupted by an objection interposed by counsel for defendant that such testimony should be confined to the period of time mentioned in plaintiffs’ hereinbefore quoted pleadings, namely: the “Winter and Spring of 1957.”

After talking to counsel for both parties out of the hearing of the jury, the trial judge ruled, upon consideration of plaintiffs’ pleadings, that (as to temporary damages, at least) they might show the damages which occurred during a two-year period previous to the filing of their petition on May 29, 1959. After this ruling, to which defendant was allowed an exception, and then was recognized as interposing a continuous objection to all evidence of damages suffered by plaintiffs at any time other than during the year 1957, the witness, Eck-roat, gave further and more detailed testimony as to temporary damages plaintiffs suffered during the period from the beginning of the' plant’s operation in 1957, until institution of this action in 1959.

After other witnesses for plaintiffs had given testimony on this, and other, subjects, their witness, Riley Black, a real estate man, testified as to the property’s permanent damages. His testimony was not confined to the property’s diminution in value as a grade A dairy farm, but he also testified as to its diminution in value for a low-cost housing development, for development as an industrial area, and for a gentleman farmer’s headquarters.

After the defendant’s witnesses had been heard, and before the cause was submitted to the jury, the court allowed plaintiffs, upon the parties’ agreement that the exact amount of land was 76.66 acres, to change the amount they were suing for on their third cause of .action to $22,998.00. By the verdict thereafter rendered, plaintiffs were awarded that amount on that cause of action, in addition to $3300.00 on their second cause of action, but were awarded nothing on their first cause of action. Judgment was thereafter rendered for plaintiffs, in accord with said verdict, for the total sum of $26,298.00.

After the overruling of its motion for a new trial, defendant perfected the present appeal.

Under the first proposition defendant urges for reversal, it complains of *126 the trial court’s admission, over its objection, of testimony on behalf of plaintiffs counsel concerning effects of the sewage plant’s operation that apparently did not manifest themselves until 19S8 and the early part of 1959. Defense counsel concedes that under the statutory two-year period of limitations with reference to the maintenance of nuisances (Tit. 12 O.S.1961 § 95) plaintiffs might have introduced evidence of injuries they suffered from the sewage plant’s operation during the entire two-year period preceding the institution of the .action; but they contend that, because 1957 is the only year mentioned in plaintiffs’ pleadings, plaintiffs were restricted in their proof to that year. Plaintiffs’ answer to defendant’s argument is, in substance, that technical accuracy in pleadings is not required in this jurisdiction, and that defendant was not misled by plaintiffs’ allegations, as was indicated by its not attempting to Rave the court require them to make their amended petition more definite and certain. They cite Liberty Plan Co. v. Francis T. Smith Lumber Co., Okl., 360 P.2d 500, for the proposition that no variance between the allegations in litigants’ pleadings and proof is material, or fatal, unless it appears to have actually misled their adversary to its prejudice — the burden being upon the adversary to show this. We are of the opinion that the allegations of plaintiffs’ first amended petition referring to the year 1957, are subj ect to more than one interpretation, and could reasonably be construed as representing no more than that defendant’s sew.age disposal plant was erected, and commenced operation, in the spring, and winter, of 1957, respectively. With said allegation thus construed, there was nothing in said petition to restrict plaintiffs to the year 1957, in establishing their damages.- Furthermore, as noted from our description of the trial proceedings, defendant made no attempt, after, filing its motion to make their .original petition more definite and certain (which was never ruled upon and accordingly is not before us. Ward v. Coleman, 170 Okl. 201, 39 P.2d 113, 1st syll.) to cause plaintiffs to be required to make the allegations of their first amended petition more specific. Under these circumstances, we think that it was within the trial court’s proper judicial discretion to admit into evidence the testimony concerning the damages that accrued to plaintiffs during the year 1958, and the early part of 1959.

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Bluebook (online)
1963 OK 241, 387 P.2d 123, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midwest-city-v-eckroat-okla-1963.