Northup v. Eakes

1918 OK 652, 178 P. 266, 72 Okla. 66, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 968
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1918
Docket9183
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 1918 OK 652 (Northup v. Eakes) 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
Northup v. Eakes, 1918 OK 652, 178 P. 266, 72 Okla. 66, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 968 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

KANE, J.

This was an action commenced by tbe defendant in error Prank D. Eakes against tbe plaintiff in error, for tbe purpose of recovering damages for loss of bis bam by fire.

’ Hereafter, for convenience, the parties will be designated “plaintiffs” and “defendants,” respectively, as they appeared in the trial court.

Originally tbe action was against George *67 Northup, T. A. Johnson, O. F. McConnell, N. E. Traywick, and a large number of other persons and corporations. The plaintiffs alleged that each of the several defendants named in said petition were the owners of separate oil and gas leases, and as such owners were engaged in producing therefrom crude oil; that said defendants in the operation of said oil leases permitted crude oil to flow from their respective leases into a small creek above the premises of the plaintiff, which crude oil flowed down said creek upon the premises of said plaintiff and in close proximity to his barn; that on the 14th day of March, 1914, the oil on said creek became ignited, and the fire thus started was carried against the barn of the plaintiff by the wind and the natural flow of the stream, completely destroying the same together with its contents.

Thereafter all of said defendants except the Twin State Oil Company filed separate demurrers to plaintiff’s petition upon the ground, among others, that there was a mis-joinder of causes of action set out in plaintiff’s petition, which demurrers were sustained by the trial court.

Thereafter plaintiff filed his amended petition, making the same parties defendants, which amended petition was substantially the same as the original petition, except in one paragraph it was alleged:

“That the said defendants, and each of them, on and prior to said date, wilfully, carelessly, and negligently and unlawfully and concurrently permitted the oil, waste matter, and inflammable products from their said wells on said leasehold estates to escape therefrom and from their said premises, respectively, and to flow concurrently into the said creek or stream, and the said inflammable matter from tlieir respective premises combined and together ran down, through, and over the premises of the plaintiff, Frank D. Eakes,” etc.

Thereafter the defendants filed separate demurrers to said amended petition, which demurrers were also sustained. Thereafter the plaintiff filed his second amended petition against George Northup, T. A. Johnson, O. F. McConnell, O. P. Baylon, and N. E. Tray-wick, which petition is substantially the same as the original and amended petition, except it omits the description of the oil and gas mining leases operated by the other defendants under the former petition and omits any allegations as to any persons, companies, or corporations causing or permitting waste oil to flow into said creek, except plaintiffs in error.

Thereafter these defendants- filed their demurrer to said second petition, which was overruled, after which the issues were made up and cause proceeded to trial, which trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount of the loss occasioned by the destruction of his barn and its contents. It is to reverse this judgment that this proceeding in error was commenced.

Counsel for defendant state their grounds Cor reversal in their brief as follows:

“(1) The defendants in error changed the theory of their lawsuit when the court sustained the several demurrers of all the defendants in the cause to the first amended petition. It was the theory of the defendants in error, in both the original and the first amended petition, that plaintiffs in error, ’ together with all other defendants named in said original and first amended petition, were jointly and severally liable for the damages complained of. But the court sustained the demurrer upon the ground of misjoinder of cause of action, and the defendants in error had. to and did elect, when those demurrers were sustained, to stand upon their first amended petition and adhere to their theory of joint and several liability and appeal from the judgment of the court sustaining said demurrer, or else adopt the theory of the trial court when the court held that the several defendants sued were not jointly and severally liable. As before shown, defendants in error elected to accept the theory of the trial court, viz.: That they had a separate cause of action against each of the several defendants named in the original petition or against each of the various lease owners, and thereupon dismissed the action as to all of the defendants who operated numerous other leases along said creek except as to plaintiff’s in error who were the joint owners of only one of those various leases. It is the contention of plaintiffs in error that having elected to dismiss as to all other defendants and sue these plaintiffs in error separately as was done under the second amended petition, the defendants thereby adopted the theory of the trial court when the demurrers were sustained, and filed their second' amended petition against these plaintiffs in error upon the theory that they did not have a right of action jointly and severally against all of the several lease owners who were made defendants to the original petition.
“ (2) The second ground - upon _ which plaintiffs in error based their contention that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed is-that under the law plaintiffs in error are not joint tort-feasors with the other several lease owners who were operating oil leases adjacent to the property of plaintiffs in error, and. not being joint tort-feasors, plaintiffs in error cannot be held liable for *68 all the damages caused or contributed to by each and all oí the other various lease owners adjacent to plaintiffs’ property* and from which other leases the undisputed testimony shows that large quantities' of refuse and waste oil had been permitted to flow into said creek and there intermingle and mix with the oil, if any, that flowed from the lease of piaintiffs in error, and, after so intermixing', flowed down the creek to the property of defendant in error, Eakes, and was ignited by some unknown agency, resulting in the burning of plaintiff’s property.
“(,3) The third ground upon which plaintiffs in error urged a reversal of the judgment of the lower court is that there were three separate, independent, and intervening causes, the three combined being the direct and proximate cause of the injury and damage complained of, but for which separate independent, and intervening cause defendants in error would not have sustained any damage, and that the wrong of plaintiffs in error, if anj-, was a remote and not the direct and proximate cause of the injury and damage complained of. The three separate, independent, and intervening causes which were the direct and proximate causes of the injury are: !
“(a) The construction of a stone dam across the creek in close proximity to the barn of defendant in error Eakes, which caused the water and waste oil in said creek to collect in large quantities at that point and prevented the oil from flowing down the channel of the creek past and below plaintiff’s barn.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 652, 178 P. 266, 72 Okla. 66, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northup-v-eakes-okla-1918.