Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Vandivere

1914 OK 299, 141 P. 799, 42 Okla. 427, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 1914
Docket3559
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1914 OK 299 (Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Vandivere) 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
Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Vandivere, 1914 OK 299, 141 P. 799, 42 Okla. 427, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 376 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

HARRTSON, C.

This was an action by Anna E. Vanclivere against the Missouri, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company, for damages sustained in the wreck of a passenger train on defendant’s road. On November 11, 1909, plaintiff was a passenger on defendant's road traveling from Dustin, Hughes *429 county, to Hoffman, McIntosh county, Okla. About 3 :30 o’clock in the afternoon of said day, a wreck occurred, the train was derailed, several coaches ran off the track, and the coach in which plaintiff was riding turned over, throwing plaintiff out of her seat and lodging her in a parcels rack on the opposite side of the coach, causing injuries for which she brought suit for $10,000. The cause went to trial June 19-, 1911, and verdict was rendered June 21, 1911, in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $3,000, upon which' verdict judgment was rendered, and, from such judgment and the order overruling motion for new trial, the railway company appeals, specifying 33 separate assignments of error. These we will group under the separate propositions to which they relate and determine them in their order. The facts will more fully appear in the opinion.

One assignment upon which plaintiff in error seems to rely, at least one to which a good portion of its brief is devoted, is that a trial docket was not made out by the clerk twelve days before the first day of the term. Plaintiff in error opens its argument in its brief with the following statement:

“The record in this case, as shown in the statement of this brief, shows clearly that the case was set for trial on the 6th day of June, 1911, for the 15th day of June, 1911, and that the district court of Plughes county was convened on the 5th day of June, 1911. The clerk was by the court itself directed to set this case for trial on the loth day of June, 1911, and the order was made and entered in open court.”

Sections 5832 and 5837, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws 1910, secs. 6164 and 6769), are then quoted in the brief, after which plaintiff in error makes an extended argument and citation of authorities in support of the contention that the clerk is absolutely required by statute to prepare a trial docket twelve days before the first day of the term. The docket in question is not made a part of the record, and does not appear in the record, but it appears from the record that the clerk made out a trial docket. The record does not disclose how many days before the first day of the term, which was June 5th, nor upon what day, it was made up, but it appears that the docket was made, showing that the court would convene on June 5th, and that the case at bar, which *430 was No. 495 in the court below, was set for June 6th; that on June 6th the court of its own motion reset the cause for June 15th, which was objected to by plaintiff in error; that at a later day in the term, June 13th, the court overruled plaintiff in error’s motion to strike the cause from the trial docket, and then offered to change the day of trial and set it for the 16th, in order to give the company one more day. Counsel for the company, however, stated that it did not care to have the change made. Thereafter the cause was set by the court for June 19th, and, all motions, demurrers, etc., having been overruled, the cause went to trial, resulting in the judgment as before stated.

In order to determine whether the court erred in abuse of discretion in overruling the motion to strike the cause from the trial docket for that term, it is necessary to take a chronological review of the pleadings, pleas, motions, and demurrers filed in this cause. The original petition was filed February 5, 1910, some three months or more after the injuries were sustained. Demurrer was filed by defendant March 5, 1910, and overruled in part and sustained in part August 4, 1910, and plaintiff given ten days to file amended petition. The court then adjourned to September 29th. In the meantime, August' 11th, plaintiff filed an amended petition. On August 22d defendant filed motion to strike certain redundant matter from the petition. On November 14th notice was filed to take up such motion to strike. On November 19th the motion to strike was sustained. On December 6th the court gave plaintiff until December 28th to file second amended petition, and on December 23d a second amended petition was filed. On January 21, 1911, defendant filed motion to make second amended petition more definite and certain. On March 15th plaintiff filed notice to take up the motion to make more definite and certain. On March 18th such motion was taken up and overruled and defendant given ten days to further plead. Defendant took the full ten days and on March 28th filed answer consisting of a general denial and setting up the defense of contributory negligence. On June 6th the court of its own motion set the cause for June 15th. On Juñe 13th defendant filed motion to strike the cause from the trial docket *431 on the grounds heretofore stated. On the same day the motion to strike was overruled, and, upon defendant’s objecting to changing the date to the 16th, the cause remained, set for trial on the loth, as first ordered. On June 15th it was reset for the 19th; defendant objecting and excepting. On June 19th defendant filed objections to going to trial on that day and filed motion, supported by affidavits, for continuance for the term. On the same day it filed a motion that plaintiff be required to submit to a physical examination. These motions were all overruled June 19th, and the cause went to trial, resulting as aforesaid.

As before stated, the record does not bear out the contention of plaintiff in error that the clerk failed to make up the docket twelve days before the first day of the term, and, while plaintiff in error argues the effect of such failure, he does not affirmatively state that such was a fact. Defendant in error, page 2 of his brief, states affirmatively that a calendar was prepared by the district clerk twelve days before the convening of the court. Such statement is unchallenged by plaintiff in error. In fact, plaintiff in error seems to complain principally of the court’s action in resetting the case after the term began. But. assuming, for argument’s sake merely, that the contention is true, the record shows that the issues were made up 85 days before the first day of the term. It further shows that on the second day of the term, June 6th, the court set this cause for trial on the 15th. That plaintiff in error used no diligence in preparing for trial in the meantime, but on the 13th filed motion to strike the cause from the trial docket on the ground that the clerk had failed to make up the docket twelve days before the first day of the term as required by statute. The court heard this motion and overruled it and offered to set the case on the 16th, in order to give plaintiff in error one more day. There is nothing in the record disclosing the court’s reasons for overruling this motion. It might have been the exercise of a sound dis-’ cretion because of the delay which had already occurred, and the further fact that plaintiff in error had used no diligence in preparing for trial, or it might have been that fhe court found, as a matter of fact, that the clerk had furnished or made up the *432 docket as required by law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 299, 141 P. 799, 42 Okla. 427, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-o-g-ry-co-v-vandivere-okla-1914.