Oklahoma City v. Rose

1935 OK 1054, 56 P.2d 775, 176 Okla. 607, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 962
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 29, 1935
DocketNo. 24687.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1054 (Oklahoma City v. Rose) 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
Oklahoma City v. Rose, 1935 OK 1054, 56 P.2d 775, 176 Okla. 607, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 962 (Okla. 1935).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

This action was commenced in tbe district court of Canadian county by Joseph L. Rose against the city of Oklahoma City by petition alleging the filing under date of February 11, 1925, of a suit against the defendant in the district court of Oklahoma county covering the identical cause of action and the dismissal ■of such action in Oklahoma county on January 3, 1931. The petition is marked filed January ©, 1930, but was evidently lodged in the district court of Canadian county on January 6, 1931.

Plaintiff alleges damages to his farm by reason and as 'a result of an overflow of waters of the North Canadian river caused by negligent construction and maintenance of a dam or embankment in connection with and a part of the city’s reservoir for its permanent water supply. He alleges that he owns the S.% of S.E.% and lots 2, 3, and 4 of section 3, twp. 12 north, range 5 west, Canadian county, and farmed the N. W.% of section 11 of said township and range; that in the months of June and October, 1923, floods came down the North Canadian river and by reason of the levee and embankment maintained by the defendant without sufficient outlet to allow the natural flow of such flood waters to pass on down the course of the river, same were hacked up against and overflowed plaintiff’s land, and that his land “in said section 3 was flooded and became watersoaked and permanently injured by the raising of the general level of the water in said river, and the said floods stopped the drainage of said land”; that the market value thereof prior to the floods was $20,000 and after the floods same was not worth over $2,000. Plaintiff also asserted damages to the crops in the following language, quoting from his petition:

“That this plaintiff during the year 1923 was cultivating, planting and raising crops on the said northwest quarter of said section 11, adjoining said other tract, and that at the time of said overflows, by reason of said negligent construction of said dams, dikes and by-pass, in said months of June and October, 1923, the said northwest quarter of section 11 was overflowed by and inundated by the said waters of the North Canadian river, as aforesaid, and the said waters destroyed 89 acres of corn belonging to this plaintiff growing in said section 3, the same of the value of $2,400, 25 acres of alfalfa growing on the same, of the value of $1,250, and levees and fences on said land of the value of $5,000, in the total amount of $8,650.
“That said overflow extended higher up to and around the plaintiff’s dwelling and into his barn where 3,500 bales of alfalfa hay, a Ford automobile and farm machinery were stored; that in the sa'id field on said described tract, there was 9,000 pounds of alfalfa seed not yet threshed, and all of said property, as aforesaid, was either damaged or totally destroyed, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $4,020, and the said buildings by reason of said water standing around the same, and by reason of ‘becoming water-soaked and weakened in the foundations were damaged in the sum of $200, for all of which the defendant has become liable on account of its negligence, as aforesaid.”

The defendant filed a special motion to dismiss, on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction, and a special and general demurrer, both of which were overruled, and answered by general denial and by specifically pleading that;

“* * * It constructed on said property a large reservoir for the purpose of providing an adequate water supply for the inhabitants of its municipality; that said reservoir was constructed and maintained in a careful and prudent manner; that on the date as alleged in plaintiff’s petition there occurred a heavy and unprecedented storm, rain, cloudburst, flood and other acts of God; that said flood and cloudburst and heavy downpour of rain were acts of God, and unprecedented and could not, with reasonable diligence, have been anticipated by this defendant, and that the damage done to plaintiff’s property, if any, was not the proximate result of this defendant having constructed said reservoir on the North Canadian river, nor upon any failure of the said defendant to open certain flood gates at the main dam, but was due to unprecedented rainfall and the conditions existing upstream from said reservoir, over which this defendant had no control, and for reason whereof it was not responsible.
“The defendant, further answering, sayr that the land described in the plaintiff’s petition would have overflowed in the rain 'at the time mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, if said defendant never had constructed its dam, reservoir and waterworks system, and that said overflow and damage, if any, to said plaintiff was the direct result of said unprecedented rain, storm and act of God”

—and subsequently filed an amendment to its answer, pleading the two years’ statute of limitation under subdivision 3 of section 185, C. O. S. 1921.

Plaintiff replied by way of general denial, and during the progress of the trial amended his reply by allegation dictated into the rec *609 ord that if the floods of 1923 were unprecedented, the negligence of the defendant concurred in and contributed to the damage complained of.

On these pleadings and issues presented thereby, the case was tried to a jury on May 12, 1932, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $7,000 for damage to lands owned by plaintiff in section 3, and $1,154 for crops in section 11.

The defendant filed its motion for new trial in due time alleging 14 separate grounds upon which it asserts that the verdict and judgment rendered and entered against it should be set aside and vacated, and upon such motion being overruled and denied by the trial court, preserved its exceptions and gave notice of appeal, and in due time perfected its appeal to this court. The defendant sets out in its petition in error 38 grounds upon which reversal is sought of the judgment entered against it. In its able -and exhaustive brief the defendant city presents the errors complained of under six propositions.

For convenience the parties will be referred to in this opinion as they appeared in the trial court.

Before considering the several propositions argued by the defendant ‘in its brief upon which it seeks a reversal of the judgment against it, upon a careful review-'O* the record, it appears that plaintiff in his petition alleges but one cause of action in damages, setting- forth several elements In various amounts aggregating $30,870, for which he prays judgment with interest and costs; that the cause was tried to a regular panel of twelve jurors, and that the trial court properly instructed the jury that:

“As many as nine of you may return a verdict. If nine or more of you, less than your whole number, reach a verdict, those of you agreeing thereto must sign it, but if you all agree it may be signed by one of your number as foreman.”

The jury returned two verdicts, one of which was for $1,154 for value of crops in section 11, and was signed by nine jurors. The other verdict was for $11,000 for damages to land in section 3 (reduced by action of the trial court under plaintiff’s remittitur to $7,000), and was also signed by nine jurors. Examination of these separate verdicts discloses the fact that John Schrieber, juror No.

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Related

Dunbar v. Tulsa Metropolitan Water Authority
1961 OK 51 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)
Powell v. Eastern Carolina Regional Housing Authority
112 S.E.2d 386 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1960)
Regier v. Hutchins
1956 OK 192 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)
Guy v. Pennsylvania Railroad
87 N.E.2d 712 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1949)
Rose v. Oklahoma City
1938 OK 246 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)
Thomas v. Oklahoma Power & Water Co.
20 F. Supp. 246 (N.D. Oklahoma, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1054, 56 P.2d 775, 176 Okla. 607, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-city-v-rose-okla-1935.