Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Matthesen

1935 OK 435, 44 P.2d 56, 171 Okla. 541, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 16, 1935
DocketNo. 25055.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1935 OK 435 (Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Matthesen) 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. Matthesen, 1935 OK 435, 44 P.2d 56, 171 Okla. 541, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 37 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

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

This action was instituted by plaintiffs George Matthesen ,and Carrie Matthesen, his wife, against the defendant, Phillips Petroleum Company, a corporation, to recover damages for the wrongful death of their son Byron Matthesen, a boy about five years of age, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant.

Plaintiffs alleged in their amended petition that on May 18, 1931, they resided on the south side of High street; that defendant was laying a pipe line in front of plaintiffs’ house; that defendant had unloaded and stacked a large amount of iron pipe in front of plaintiffs’ house on sloping ground adjacent to the ditch where the pipe was to be buried; that the pipe was attractive to children, and that children in the neighborhood were playing on said pipe; that the defendant negligently stacked the pipe on ground sloping toward the ditch, and failed to block or otherwise anchor the same; that the deceased son of plaintiffs, while on the pipe, was rolled into the ditch, and the defendant’s pipe rolled in upon him, injuring him to the extent that he died the next day. Plaintiffs alleged that the boy was about five shears old, strong, healthy, etc., and that plaintiffs suffered loss by his death in the sum prayed for. The defendant’s general demurrer to the plaintiffs’ amended petition was overruled, and exception reserved. The defendant thereupon answered by a general denial, and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the parents, for failing to guard the child and remove him from the proximity of defendant’s operations. Plaintiffs replied by a general denial. The case was tried to a jury, and at the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence, defendant interposed its demurrer thereto, which was by the court overruled, and exceptions saved.

At the close of all the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict. This motion was overruled, and exception saved.

Thereafter the case was submitted to the jury under the court’s instructions and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendant for the sum of $1,-850.

Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, exceptions saved, judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and from said judgment defendant appealed to this court by petition in error and case-made attached.

For reversal of the judgment, the defendant presents numerous assignments of error.

The first proposition presented is that the court erred in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to plaintiffs’ amended petition.

The rule is well settled that on a demurrer to a petition ¿s defective in that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, the petition must bo. liberally construed, and all its allegations, for the purposes of the demurrer, taken as true, and such demurrer can be sustained only where the petition presents defects so *543 substantial and fatal as to authorize the courts to say that, taking all the facts to be admitted, they furnish no cause of action whatever. If the facts stated in the petition entitle the plaintiffs to any relief, a demurrer for want of sufficient facts should be overruled. Shaffer Oil & Refining Co. v. Thomas, 120 Okla. 253, 252 P. 41.

The record discloses that defendant’s demurrer to plaintiffs’ amended petition was overruled February 13, 1932, and the defendant given 15 days to answer.

The defendant’s motion for new trial was presented on the 7th day of April, 1933, and the appeal was filed in this court October 2, 1933. It further appears that the defendant did not incorporate as error the overruling of the demurrer to the amended petition in its motion for a new trial. Counsel for plaintiffs do not raise the point in their brief, but in a number of decisions of this court, it has been held that when a defendant desires to present to this court as error the overruling of a demurrer to the petition, it may be presented by two methods:

(a) By saving the proper exception and having the appeal lodged in this court within six months of the date of the order.

(b) By saving the proper exception and incorporating the order of the trial court in overruling the demurrer as one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial, and perfecting the appeal in this court within, six months from the date of the overruling of the motion for a new trial. Aultman & Taylor Machinery Co. v. Fuss, 86 Okla. 168, 207 P. 308; Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Powell, 150 Okla. 39, 300 P. 788.

But aside from this, we are of the opinion that, although the amended petition might have been subject to challenge by proper motion, it was sufficient as against a general demurrer.

Defendant’s third and seventh assignments of error are treated together in its brief, and they will be considered together here. Defendant says the court erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence of the plaintiff, and in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant. These assignments go into the sufficiency of the evidence, and a consideration of the same requires an examination of all the evidence. In this we are required to view the evidence in the most favorable light towards plaintiffs’ case.

As to the following facts, the evidence of both plaintiffs and defendant is in reasonable accord:

The defendant was rightfully in the street laying its pipe line. On the morning of May 18, 1931, about 9 a. m. defendant’s •pipe line gang, consisting of 30 or 40 men, strung their eight-inch iron pipe along the street in front of plaintiffs’ house. The pipe wasj.'olled close to the fence on the east side of the street. The joints of pipe were about 20 feet long and weighed about 24 pounds to the foot, or about 480 pounds to the joint. The joints of pipe were dropped approximately end to end, except at one place where there was a culvert on the driveway leading to plaintiffs’ house. Here were placed two joints, to avoid blocking the driveway. The first joint was close to the fence on the east side of the highway, and the second joint was immediately west of the first joint. It was about four feet from the fence where the two joints lay to the ditch where they were to be placed. The ditch was about two and one-half feet deep, and the ground on which the two joints were resting sloped from the fence down to the top of the ditch at an angle of about 25 degrees. One of defendant’s men was working under the end of the culvert about 3:30 p. m. of the same day, May 18th, when the deceased, with his sister, about six years old, went on the culvert and stood looking down on defendant’s workman, who said to the boy: “Get back — don’t get up here close. I seen a snake under this bridge awhile ago”. (Prior to this time, the workmen had seen the child playing in the yard.) The boy thereupon left the culvert and climbed on the joint of pipe nearest the ditch, being the front pipe of the two joints near the culvert. The front pipe rolled into the ditch, with the boy on top of it, and the second pipe followed immediately behind and rolled into the ditch on top of the child, causing the injury from which he died. The evidence shows that other small children, possibly five or six, played on and about the pipe earlier in the day.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether the pipe was blocked to keep it from rolling.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 435, 44 P.2d 56, 171 Okla. 541, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-petroleum-co-v-matthesen-okla-1935.