Porter v. Wilson

1913 OK 605, 135 P. 732, 39 Okla. 500, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 21, 1913
Docket2469
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1913 OK 605 (Porter v. Wilson) 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
Porter v. Wilson, 1913 OK 605, 135 P. 732, 39 Okla. 500, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 537 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHARP, C.

In the trial below all issues, both of fact and of law, were submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff's testimony and after she had rested her case, defendants’ counsel demurred to the evidence, and requested the court to render judgment in defendants’ favor, in accordance with the prayer of their answer, assigning as a reason therefor that the testimony of the *502 plaintiff failed to prove a marriage of plaintiff’s mother and father, according to the customs and usages of the Creek Tribe of Indians. The demurrer was sustained, special findings of fact submitted by the court, and a decree entered for the defendants. In the special findings the court found that the marital relation alleged to have existed between Ben Porter and Jennie McGilbra, plaintiff’s parents, was not established by the testimony, and did not in fact exist, either by reason of the customs or the laws of the Creek Nation, but instead that the relation, once existing between them, was illicit, and that the plaintiff was the offspring of said meretricious relationship.

It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error .that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer, as there was evidence introduced at the trial reasonably tending to establish the allegations of plaintiff’s petition; that a demurrer admits all the facts which the evidence in the slightest degree tends to prove, and all the inferences or conclusions which may be reasonably and logically drawn from the evidence. This, in proper cases, is not only the rule in this state, but we believe to be the very general rule of all the courts. Upon a demurrer to the evidence, the court must consider as true every portion of the evidence tending to prove the case of the party resisting the demurrer, and cannot weigh conflicting evidence. Conklin v. Yates, 16 Okla. 266, 83 Pac. 910; Edmisson v. Drumm-Flato Com. Co., 13 Okla. 440, 73 Pac. 958; Cole v. Missouri, K. & O. R. Co., 20 Okla. 227, 94 Pac. 540, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 268; Ziska v. Ziska et al., 20 Okla. 634, 95 Pac. 254, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1.

In Conklin v. Yates et al., and Ziska v. Ziska et al., supra, the trial in both cases was had before the court; but the effect of a demurrer to the evidence in trials before the court does not appear to have been raised or considered, although the same general rule was observed as in jury trials. The statutory warrant for demurring to the testimony of the party on whom rests the burden of the issues is found in the third paragraph of section 5794, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws 1910, sec. 5002), which expressly provides for the order of procedure in jury trials. This *503 provision was held, in Chicago Lumber Co. v. Merrimack River Sav. Bank, 52 Kan. 410, 34 Pac. 1045, to be authorized by the spirit, if not the letter, of the Code of Procedure of that state (section 275 [4722] Stats. Kan. 1901), and which provision of the statute is identical with section 5794, supra. This practice appears to have been recognized by the Supreme Court of Kansas in a number of cases, among which are: Wolf v. Washer, 32 Kan. 533, 4 Pac. 1036; Farnsworth v. Clarke, 62 Kan. 264, 62 Pac. 655; Wehe et al. v. Mood et al., 68 Kan. 373, 75 Pac. 476. The nature of a demurrer to the evidence has been defined to be (2 Tidd. Pr. p. 265) “a proceeding by which the judges of the court in which the action is pending are called upon to declare what the law is, upon the facts shown in evidence, analogous to the demurrer upon the facts alleged in a pleading.” See, also, Suydam v. Williamson et al., 20 Wall. 427, 15 L. Ed. 978. And the practice of demurring to the evidence in jury trials, while not recognized in some jurisdictions, is an ancient and well-established one, having a firm support in principle, and recognized in many of the states, and by the federal and English courts (Elliott’s General Practice, secs. 855, 856), though in trials before the court the practice of demurring to the evidence appears to be an anomalous procedure, followed only by the- Supreme Court of Kansas, so 'far as our investigation of the authorities extends (30'Cyc. 1946; footnote to Elliott’s General Practice, sec.' 855).

Where the trial is before the court, it is charged with the duty of determining the facts, while where the trial is before the jury, the facts are for its determination; it being the province of the court to declare the law. We must not, however, overlook the very important fact that the court did not render its judgment alone upon the demurrer to the evidence, but, after a consideration of the proof submitted by plaintiff, made its findings of fact, thereby necessarily weighing the plaintiff’s testimony for the purpose of determining the rights of the respective parties to a recovery.

A similar question was before the Supreme Court of Washington in Lambuth v. Stetson & Post Mill Co., 14 Wash. 187, *504 44 Pac. 148, and from which we quote at length. It was said by Hoyt, C. J., speaking for the court:

“The cause went to trial before the court; a jury having been waived by the parties. After plaintiff had put in his evidence and rested, defendant moved for nonsuit and a dismissal of the action, on the ground that the evidence had not shown that plaintiff was entitled to recover. This motion was granted, for the reason, as stated by the court, that a fair preponderance of the proof established facts which prevented a recovery by the plaintiff. The granting of this motion, followed by a dismissal of the action, is the ground upon which plaintiff relies for a reversal. If the court had a right to' weigh the evidence tending to establish the facts alleged in the answer against that which tended to make out plaintiff’s prima facie case, and decide in accordance with what he thought to be the preponderance of the'evidence on either side, the judgment must be affirmed, for, if he had a right to do this, his conclusion has the force here of the verdict of a jury, and will not be disturbed if there was evidence upon which it could be founded. Could the court thus weigh the testimony for and against the claim of plaintiff upon this motion for a nonsuit, or must it be denied if there was any evidence tending to sustain the claim of plaintiff, however much there might be in opposition thereto? * * * Appellant has cited a large number of cases to show that a motion for a nonsuit should be denied if the evidence introduced by the plaintiff tended to establish the facts necessary to a recovery; but .all but one stated the rule in cases in which the cause was tried before a jury. * * * but, where the entire trial is before the court which must finally pass upon the law and facts of the case, there is no good .reason why it should not be allowed to determine the facts necessary to a proper application of the law at any time during the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 605, 135 P. 732, 39 Okla. 500, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-wilson-okla-1913.