Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Davis

1938 OK 230, 77 P.2d 1147, 182 Okla. 397, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 29, 1938
DocketNo. 27831.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1938 OK 230 (Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Davis) 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
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Davis, 1938 OK 230, 77 P.2d 1147, 182 Okla. 397, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 568 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

RILET, J.

This is an action commenced by the defendants in error against the Phillips Petroleum Company and four other oil producing companies to recover damages to real property alleged to have been caused by the pollution of a stream known as Big Beaver creek, which flows in a southerly direction along the east boundary of the land involved.

The parties will be. referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, as in the trial court.

Plaintiffs claimed $220 damages because of loss of ihe usable value of said stream as a source of water supply for their livestock, and $2,700 damage to their land by reason of the pollution of three water wells.

Judgment was for the plaintiffs in the sum of $800, and defendants appeal.

Plaintiffs are the owners of about 95 acres in the northeast corner .of the southeast quarter of section 35, and about 30 acres across the road therefrom in the southwest quarter of section 36, township 27 north, range 4 east, in Kay county.

Plaintiffs’ land is roughly triangular in form. The Arkansas river forms the southwest boundary line, and Beaver creek forms the east boundary. Beaver creek empties into the Arkansas river at the southeast corner of' plaintiffs’ land. The strip of land owned by plaintiffs in the southwest quarter of 36 is something less than one-half mile in length, running north and south and about 350 or 400 feet wide at the north end.

Plaintiffs’ house, barn, and other buildings are in the northeast corner of' the southeast quarter, section 35. One of the three wells is located about 125 to 150 feet west of the west bank of Beaver creek in section 36, one across the road at the house, and one near .the barn.

The defendants operate oil and gas producing leases within the watershed of Beaver creek some distance above plaintiffs’ land. This oil field was developed before the year 1924. During the past years defendants have been producing salt water and other waste substances which have been permitted to flow into Beaver creek. On October 24, 1924, Herman Proctor and Annie Proctor, husband and wife, were the owners of the land now owned by plaintiffs. On that date they entered into what is termed an “easement and right-of-way” agreement with the Waite Phillips Company, and other oil companies, which in substance provided: That for the sum of $800, paid by the oil companies, Proctor acknowledged full payment of all damages then accrued or to accrue to Proctor’s land by the pollution of the stream, etc., within a period of nine years thereafter, and agreed to *398 claim no other or further damages on account thereof during said nine years.

There was further provision that in case of sale or lease of said premises by Proctor, he would advise the purchaser or lessee fully as to the provisions of said agreement.

On April 1, 1929, Proctor and- wife, by warranty deed, conveyed the land to plaintiff Lola Davis.

During all the time from October 24, 1924, down to 1934, defendant oil companies continued without complaint to drain salt water and base sediment and other waste matter from their oil wells into Beaver creek.

Plaintiffs in this present petition allege that:

“* * * Said defendants and each of them have brought to the surface of the ground large quantities of mineralized water commonly known as salt water, together with the base sediment, waste oil and other oil field products. That said defendants have caused and permitted during the operation ■of said leaseholds large quantities of said pollutive substances to escape into the natural drainage leading into said Big Beaver creek and they have intentionally disposed of said waste products chiefly by draining them directly into said natural drainage. * * *
“Plaintiffs further state that in the latter part of 1934. or the early part of 1935', the waters of the wells above mentioned became polluted with said poisonous substances from Big Beaver creek, placed therein by ilie defendants; that at first the pollution was only minor in degree, but as the months passed the degree of pollution increased fill in about the month of June, 1935, the amount of pollution in said wells became so great that the waters were, wholly unfit for either human or livestock consumption and have remained so ever since and by reason thereof plaintiffs have been compelled to abandon the same and have had to haul water ever since for bnnqp.hold purposes and livestock consump-f’on. That bv reason of the destruction of said wells the value of said lands have been diminished and plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum of $2,700.”

Defendants demurred to plaintiffs’ evidence. and renewed the demurrer at the close of all the evidence and moved for a directed verdict in their favor.

The sole contention made by defendants in this appeal is that the evidence in the case was wholly insufficient to justify the submission of the case to the jury. They contend that there was a total failure of proof to show that anything of a pollutive nature produced in the oil field operated by defendants found its way into the water wells of the plaintiffs.

There is no direct evidence tending to show that any “mineralized water,” commonly known as salt water, “or any base sediment, waste oil, or other oil field prod-ducts,” found its way into plaintiffs’ water wells, or that water in said wells contained any such substances in harmful quantities. There is no proof whatever that “base sediment or waste oil” from any source entered the wells or caused the alleged pollution. The controversy is then reduced to whether salt water caused the pollution, and if so, whether it entered plaintiffs’ water wells from Beaver creek.

The evidence on the latter question is wholly circumstantial.

The evidence relied upon by plaintiffs is in substance: That the water in Beaver creek liad been polluted from oil field waste, including salt water, and was unfit for use for stock water or domestic use since before 1924; that the water in plaintiffs’ wells was pure and wholesome up until sometime in the spring of 1935. About that time the water in the three wells had a bad odor and when pumped from a well and allowed to stand over night the water would turn yellow or red; the water had a bad taste, “like- creek water.” Plaintiff James Davis testified that the water from his wells “tasted like creek water, like Beaver creek smelled.” It was unfit for drinking purposes, or for “making coffee,” or ordinary laundry purposes, in that for such use it was necessary to add a large amount of lye; livestock would hardly drink it. The stock preferred to drink the water from Arkansas river. Plaintiffs quit using the water for domestic purposes and thereafter hauled water for family use from a well in the town of Washunga, about one-half mile north, and hauled water for laundry use from a Carter well. To sum up such evidence it may be said to establish that the well water deteriorated in quality, but the cause of the deterioration is not established with any degree of certainty. It is well settled that a verdict may properly be predicated alone on circumstantial evidence, but it cannot be based upon mere conjecture. Patterson v. Seals, 51 Okla. 347, 151 P. 591.

The most that may be said of plaintiffs’ evidence is that something got in the water *399

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 230, 77 P.2d 1147, 182 Okla. 397, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-petroleum-co-v-davis-okla-1938.