Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority v. District Court of Wagoner County

1980 OK 100, 613 P.2d 746, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 307
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1980
Docket54916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1980 OK 100 (Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority v. District Court of Wagoner County) 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 Ordnance Works Authority v. District Court of Wagoner County, 1980 OK 100, 613 P.2d 746, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 307 (Okla. 1980).

Opinion

IRWIN, Vice Chief Justice.

The issue presented is whether the Wagoner County District Court has venue of co-respondents’ transitory action for damages against petitioners. 1 The respondent judge overruled all challenges to venue and ordered the litigation to proceed. Petitioners commenced separate proceedings for this court to assume original jurisdiction and issue a writ prohibiting the respondent judge from further proceeding in the cause. Cases consolidated under Case No. 54,916.

The six petitioners (defendants in the district court) are: two governmental agencies (the Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority and the Grand River Dam Authority); three domesticated, foreign corporations (Georgia Pacific Corporation, National Gypsum Company, and N-Ren Corporation); and an Oklahoma Corporation (Pryor Industrial Conservation Company).

The co-respondents (plaintiffs in the district court) operate or own businesses adjacent or near Ft. Gibson Lake, part of which is in Wagoner County, Plaintiffs alleged that petitioners, in the operation of their governmental agencies and corporate enterprises, negligently permitted or caused to be discharged certain waste materials into Pryor Creek, a tributary of Ft. Gibson Lake, and that they sustained damages to their businesses from the waste materials flowing into Ft. Gibson Lake.

The cases are briefed and presented on the theory that Pryor Creek is in Mayes County and that all petitioners’ acts or omissions in permitting or causing to be discharged the waste materials occurred in Mayes County but that some of the alleged damages occurred in Wagoner County.

We are concerned here with multiple joint defendants. The venue of actions against such defendants lies only in the county or counties meeting the requirements of all applicable specific venue statutes, and only when such requirements have been met, the action is rightly brought. City of McAlester v. Fogg, Okl., 312 P.2d 867 (1956); Missouri-Kansas-Texas R.R. v. Coryell, Okl., 483 P.2d 1148 (1971); and Schwartz v. Diehl, Okl., 568 P.2d 280 (1977).

Co-respondents contend that venue of the action against the Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority (OOWA) lies in Wagoner *749 County under 12 O.S.1971, § 133, which provides:

“Actions for the following causes must be brought in the county where the cause, or some part thereof arose:
First . . .
Second. An action against a public officer for an act done by him in virtue, or under color, of his office, or for neglect of his official duties. * * * ”

Co-respondents argue that damages are a part of a cause of action, and since part of the cause of action arose where the dam- ■ ages occurred, i. e., in Wagoner County, venue of their action against 00WA lies in Wagoner County.

OOWA is a “public officer” within the contemplation of § 133. State v. District Court of Bryan County, Okl., 290 P.2d 413 (1955); and Hillcrest Medical Center v. Lee, Okl., 575 P.2d 971 (1978). Bryan County involved an action filed in Bryan County against the State Board of Education for the purpose of having declared unconstitutional an amendment to the school code pertaining to the procurement of library books for all the school districts in Oklahoma. Instead of allowing each school district to purchase the books it needed and permitting the local school boards to purchase books from local stores and dealers, the State Board was required to purchase all the books and have them shipped to the several school districts. Plaintiffs argued that venue was in Bryan County because the State Board’s action, pursuant to the amendment, would prevent them from acting in Bryan County. Our court prohibited the Bryan County court from further proceeding and held that the State Board’s official acts must be regarded as being performed at the State Capitol in Oklahoma County, and that venue was in Oklahoma County.

In State ex rel. Department of Corrections v. Brock, Okl., 513 P.2d 1293 (1973), the State Board of Corrections had leased a warehouse in Comanche County and the Board modified the warehouse to enable it to be used as a prison pre-release center.' In an action filed in Comanche County for injunctive relief against the department, plaintiffs alleged the pre-release center constituted a nuisance in that the sewer servicing the facility emptied into an open sewage lagoon which backed up to the property of some of the plaintiffs and was obnoxious to other adjacent landowners. In short, the conduct sought to be abated in Comanche County was the operation and maintenance of the pre-release center and its open lagoon which served as a sewer. Our court held that the Comanche County action was one which operates in personam and was to prevent the department from operating and maintaining the correctional facility. In prohibiting the Comanche County Court from further proceeding we said the decision to operate the pre-release center emanated from Oklahoma County, the county of the official residence of the department.

The Department of Corrections and Bryan County cases both recognized that § 133, supra, was identical to the Kansas statute and that “the decision of the highest court of- our sister state, where pertinent, should be persuasive.” Both cases cited with approval Huerter v. Hassig, 175 Kan. 781, 267 P.2d 532 (1954). The plaintiffs in Huerter were landowners whose farms were near Lake Nemaha in Nemaha County. Plaintiffs sought a writ in Nemaha County to compel the members of the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission to remove an obstruction in the Nemaha River which the state constructed in the building of Lake Nemaha and which plaintiffs alleged was damaging their land. The Kansas Supreme Court said that although the actual labor of constructing the dam and lake was performed in Nemaha County, if venue lay in Nemaha County, the Commission might be compelled to respond to actions in every county of the state in which its orders are carried into effect if damages resulted where the work was performed. In holding that venue did not lie in Nemaha County, but Pratt County, the Commission’s headquarters, the court said:

“Appellants [plaintiffs] cite State ex rel. v. Flannelly, 96 Kan. 372, 152 P. 22. It supports appellees’ [defendants’] rather *750 then appellants’ contention that the instant action should have been instituted in Pratt county where official action by the commission is taken.
In construing the statute in question it was there said:
‘The evident purpose of the statute is to confine actions on account of the conduct of officers to the county or counties in which the act or acts of the officer were done. These views are supported by Clay v. Hoysradt, 8 Kan. 74, 80, where this court said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1980 OK 100, 613 P.2d 746, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-ordnance-works-authority-v-district-court-of-wagoner-county-okla-1980.