Quapaw Co. v. Varnell

566 P.2d 164
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 26, 1977
Docket49408
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 566 P.2d 164 (Quapaw Co. v. Varnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quapaw Co. v. Varnell, 566 P.2d 164 (Okla. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

BOX, Judge:

An appeal by the Quapaw Company (Quapaw) from a jury verdict in favor of H. B. Varnell (Varnell) arising out of an oral contract of employment; also a cross appeal by Varnell contesting the amount of the jury verdict and the allowing of attorney’s fees to Quapaw.

The pleadings and proceedings reveal the following transpired: An action to recover money based upon an alleged breach of four oral employment contracts was filed by H. B. Varnell against the Quapaw Company, an Oklahoma corporation. The first contract related to the Blue Chip Quarry in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma; the second to a job in Broken Bow, Oklahoma; the third for a job near Nowata, Oklahoma, and the fourth cause of action was based on the asserted failure of Quapaw to pay vacation time during 1971.

For answer, Quapaw filed a general and specific denial as to each separate cause of action.

During the pleading stages, interrogatories were propounded by Quapaw and answered by Varnell; depositions were taken of other parties, after which Quapaw filed its Motion for Summary Judgment. From the overruling of same by the trial court, an appeal was taken by Quapaw to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court sustained Quapaw as to Varnell’s third and fourth causes of action, returning the case to the district court for trial on Varnell’s-first and second causes of action. After trial was had to a jury, a verdict was returned in Varnell’s favor, as follows:

We, the jury impaneled and sworn in the above entitled cause, do upon our oaths, find for the Plaintiff on his First Cause of Action and fix the amount of his recovery at $6,000.00
We, the jury impaneled and sworn in the above entitled cause, do upon our oaths, find for the Plaintiff on his Second Cause of Action and fix the amount of his recovery at $ X X X.

Thereafter, both Varnell and Quapaw filed their application for an attorney’s fee, each alleging that they were the prevailing party under 12 O.S.1971, § 936. The trial court found that each party was a prevailing party, setting Varnell’s attorney fee at $1,800.00 and Quapaw’s attorney fee at $2,400.00.

Both sides appeal. We will first take up Quapaw’s appeal wherein it is contended as follows:

PROPOSITION I: Party alleging an oral contract has burden of proving same, including fact that minds of parties met on all terms thereof, and where evidence does not reasonably and competently support such burden, verdict establishing validity of alleged oral contract must be reversed.

Without setting out the evidence in detail, from a review of same it reveals that there were contracts of employment entered into between the parties, the existence of which was admitted by the president of Quapaw.

*166 Quapaw cites several encyclopedia references and two cases which held that plaintiff had the burden of proving the contract and its terms. However, Quapaw makes no reference to any specific defect or testimony tending to prove that there were no contracts. The terms of the contracts were the matter of controversy between the parties. It is well settled that “the Supreme Court will not invade the province of the jury to weigh the evidence on appeal.” Illinois Bankers Life Ass’n v. Hardy, 174 Okl. 326, 51 P.2d 292; Oklahoma Union Ins. Co. v. Morgan, Okl., 32 P.2d 285, 289; American Employers’ Insurance Co. v. McGeehee, Okl., 485 P.2d 754.

Quapaw alludes to the fact that at the close of Varnell’s case, a demurrer to the evidence was lodged, and Quapaw moved for a directed verdict at the close of all evidence. The Supreme Court in the case of Bredouw v. Wilson, 208 Okl. 393, 256 P.2d 421, sets out the following rule:

The rule that where there is any competent evidence which would reasonably support a verdict in favor of a party against whom a demurrer to the evidence is leveled, the demurrer should be overruled, has been so often reiterated by this Court, that it has become axiomatic.

We hold that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury verdicts. See Coppock v. Woodworth, 202 Okl. 254, 212 P.2d 455; American Employers’ Insurance Co. v. McGeehee, Okl., 485 P.2d 754. Thus we affirm the jury verdict-judgments in favor of Yarnell.

Turning now to Varnell’s cross appeal, two propositions are argued as follows:

PROPOSITION II. Deposition testimony introduced by defendant over plaintiff’s objection denied plaintiff the right to cross-examine the witness.

Varnell argues that by reason of the alleged error, that the court should enter a verdict on his second cause of action, to-wit, $1,400.00, and makes the following statements:

The only issue to be raised is whether it was improper for the Court to overrule the objection of the Plaintiff to allow use of the deposition. There is no dispute that Mr. Childress was unavailable at the time of trial and that he could not be procured for testimony.
⅜ ¾: * ⅝: * *
Counsel for the Plaintiff took the deposition of Mr. Childress as a part of discovery procedures well over a year before Trial. Then, at Trial, the Defendant made Childress its witness by reading the deposition. At the taking of the discovery deposition, Quapaw’s Attorney made no cross-examination of Childress except to ask three (3) short questions regarding the time limit of the oral contract and if there was any written memorandum of the oral contract. (Emphasis supplied.)

12 O.S.1971, § 433 provides, in part, as follows:

The deposition of any witness may be used only in the following cases: 1st, When the witness does not reside in the county where the action or proceeding is pending, or is sent for trial by change of venue, or is absent therefrom. (Emphasis added.)

The Supreme Court ruled on this proposition in Smart v. Cain, 493 P.2d 821, as follows:

Syllabus by the Court
1. The admissibility of a deposition into evidence does not depend on the purpose for which it was taken. Nor is its use limited to the party who initiated it. Where a deposition is taken and filed in the case it becomes the property of the court and either party is entitled to its use in the trial of the case, subject, however, to other rules of evidence and statutory requirements.
2. Under 12 O.S. 433, it is error to refuse to admit the deposition of a party or witness in evidence where the witness is absent from the county on the- day of the trial, except where such absence is the result of a perpetration of fraud or collusion.

*167 Varnell’s contention, supra, has no merit; thus no error was committed by the trial court in allowing use of the deposition.

Varnell’s other proposition is as follows: PROPOSITION III. Plaintiff was the prevailing party in the action and is the sole party entitled to attorney’s fees as set forth in

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Bluebook (online)
566 P.2d 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quapaw-co-v-varnell-oklacivapp-1977.