Oden v. Russell

1952 OK 414, 251 P.2d 184, 207 Okla. 570, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 849
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1952
Docket35214
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1952 OK 414 (Oden v. Russell) 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
Oden v. Russell, 1952 OK 414, 251 P.2d 184, 207 Okla. 570, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 849 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

The parties will be given their trial court designation. Plaintiffs in error were defendants.

In this cause plaintiffs filed an amended petition alleging ownership of the south two acres of lot 6 in McMul-lin’s addition to Oklahoma City and that defendants had ousted plaintiffs of possession, without right, of the north 93 feet of said real estate; that defendants had torn down and removed a boundary line fence constructed by plaintiffs, to their damage; that defendants had turned their livestock into a boysenberry patch and had later plowed up and destroyed the same, and by unlawfully keeping plaintiffs out of possession had prevented plaintiffs from using said land for truck gardening. It was further alleged that the taking of said land was willful, fraudulent, oppressive and malicious. Plaintiffs prayed judgment for actual and for exemplary damages.

Issue was joined, and on the trial a jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $350 actual damages and $750 exemplary damages, and defendants appeal from the judgment on the verdict.

In their brief defendants discuss their assignments of error under five propositions, but one concerning objections to certain instructions is abandoned. The remaining propositions are all predicated on the contention that the evidence does not sustain the verdict and judgment for either actual or exemplary damages.

Defendant Marvin E. Oden, Sr., and his wife were the owners of lot 6, described above, which was a tract of land less than five acres in area. On April 23, 1946, they conveyed, by warranty deed, to one J. P. Bowie, the south two acres of said lot 6, and Bowie conveyed the same to plaintiffs on October 4, 1948. About a month later Marvin E. Oden, Sr., and wife conveyed to defendants Marvin E. Oden, Jr., and Dorothy E. Oden, husband and wife, the north three acres of said lot. This resulted in an overlap of descriptions of properties conveyed by Oden, Sr.

Prior to the last mentioned conveyance a division line fence had been erected on the north side of plaintiff’s two acres. Defendants say that a surveyor, whose name they had forgotten, surveyed the north three acres described in the Marvin E. Oden, Jr., deed, and had placed stakes south of the fence. Without the knowledge or consent of plaintiffs the defendants, *572 in March, 1949, tore down the aforesaid line fence and erected another fence 93 feet south of the original fence. It is admitted that defendants’ stock grazed over this area and that later defendants plowed the same. Plaintiffs had their two-acre tract surveyed by the county surveyor and thereby learned that the property line was at about the place of the original fence between the properties.

In telephone conversations James H. Russell demanded of Marvin E. Oden, Jr., the removal of the fence. The evidence is in conflict regarding the use of profane language by these two parties in their several telephone conversations. The fence was not removed and this lawsuit was filed.

Defendants cite Cook v. First National Bank of Duncan, 110 Okla. 111, 236 P. 883:

“Where there is no competent evidence reasonably tending to sustain the verdict and judgment, such judgment will be reversed on appeal.”

This is a correct rule and it has been announced many times by this court. But each case must stand on its own facts, and where the record reveals conflicts in the evidence, intended to establish facts material to the issues, it can no longer be said that no competent evidence was introduced to sustain the verdict.

1'n the instant case the items of actual damage upon which plaintiffs relied were (1) destruction and loss of the line fence; (2) destruction of 200 growing boysenberry plants; (3) loss of the berry crop for two seasons by reason of their destruction by defendants. The survey -showed the tract to be 165 feet wide, and plaintiffs’ testimony showed it would cost $1 per foot to replace the fence. No evidence was offered to dispute that testimony.

There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether the original fence was moved to the south, as testified by defendants, or whether the wire of that fence was rolled up and removed to other places, as plaintiffs testified.

Defendants say that the proper rule for measurement of damages was not applied, and, since no evidence was offered in .accord with the proper rule, there was no competent evidence to support the verdict. We do not agree. Evidence as to the cost of replacing a destroyed fence is competent in proof of plaintiff’s damage.

“In an action for damages on account of the removal of fencing and other fixtures from real estate, if the things removed, although a part of the real estate, have a value which can be accurately ascertained without reference to the soil on which they stand, recovery may be had of the value of the things thus removed without reference' to the value of the real estate before and after the removal.” Kilgore v. Lyle, 30 Okla. 596, 120 P. 626.
“Ordinarily the measure of damages for the removal or destruction of buildings from real estate to which they are attached as a part thereof is what it would cost to replace them, not exceeding the value of the entire property, but if for any reason the buildings could not be replaced, the measure of damages would be the difference in the value of the entire property before - and after the removal or destruction of the buildings.” Silva v. City Council of City of McAlester, 46 Okla. 150, 148 P. 150,

The evidence as to the value of the boysenberry plants was in conflict. Plaintiff placed his value on producing plants which he said were totally destroyed by defendants. His value of $2 per plant was based on cost of plants and three years of care until they reached the stage of production. Defendants offered evidence that the value of plants for planting purposes was ten to twelve dollars per hundred plants. Under such a record it cannot be said that there was no competent evidence of value. The most that can be said is that under this record the evidence as to value was in conflict and thus presented a question for the jury. We cannot say that the verdict *573 for actual damage is not supported by any competent evidence.

Defendants predicate their contention of error in the assessment of exemplary damages upon their assumed premise that there was no proof of actual damages, and cite cases including Brown v. Higby, 191 Okla. 173, 127 P. 2d 195, wherein this court said: “It is the rule in this jurisdiction that in the absence of actual damages, there can be no recovery of exemplary damages.” Again we say that the rule announced is the correct rule of law, but it has no application here, since we have seen that there was competent proof of actual damages.

Defendants cite Keener Oil & Gas Co. v. Stewart, 172 Okla. 143, 45 P. 2d 121; Galt-Brown Co. v. Lay, 183 Okla. 87, 80 P. 2d 567; Pure Oil Co. v. Quarles, 183 Okla. 418, 82 P. 2d 970, and other cases, stating the general rule that fraud, malice, oppression or gross negligence must be established to authorize recovery of exemplary damages in a tort action and say that the evidence in the instant case did not sustain the verdict for exemplary damages under such rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 414, 251 P.2d 184, 207 Okla. 570, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oden-v-russell-okla-1952.