Regier v. Hutchins

1956 OK 192, 298 P.2d 777, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1956
Docket37023
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1956 OK 192 (Regier v. Hutchins) 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
Regier v. Hutchins, 1956 OK 192, 298 P.2d 777, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 506 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

In the trial court, the defendants in error herein were the plaintiffs, and plaintiff in error was the defendant. They will hereinafter be referred to by those appellations. The controversy between them involves injuries allegedly .inflicted in 1953 by flood-waters of the Washita River, upon a cotton crop. The cotton was growing upon approximately 50 acres of- a 240-acre farm owned by the plaintiff Jamie C. Hutchins, and, upon which, she and her husband, the other plaintiff, Joe Hutchins, reside. Downstream from where the river traverses this farm there was originally a large “ox-bow”1 bend in its channel as it crossed defendant’s farm. A few years before 1953, defendant commenced his efforts to shorten the river’s channel across his land, and, well in advance of the particular flood here involved, had dug a new channel straight across the neck of land between the ends of the ox-bow and had forced the river to occupy this new channel by building a levee or diversion dike paralleling the new channel, between it and the ox-bow bend, As a result of this blocking off, or barricading, of the old channel, when the river rose above its banks and inundated land on either side of its channel, upstream from defendant’s farm, where plaintiffs’ farm was located, such flood water was deprived of the old ox-bow channel as a means of escaping from said land when it started receding. Defendant’s responsibility for the damages for plaintiffs’ cotton crop was predicated on this alleged fact, and the further fact that after defendant’s shortening of the river’s channel in the described manner, the river, in times of high water, got out of its banks, and backed up, inundating plaintiffs’ cotton field to a greater extent than it had done during the years previous to such alteration of the river channel.

After the trial court had overruled, among other preliminary pleadings filed on his behalf, the motion of defendant to require plaintiffs to make their amended petition more definite and certain by stating what interest the husband, Joe Hutchins, had in the overflowed cotton land, and which, if either, or both, of the plaintiffs owned the crop thereon, and if so, what interest each had, defendant filed an answer denying, among other things, that he had been negligent in the “improvements” he had made on his land and that they had injured the land described in plaintiffs’ petition, or the crops thereon.

At the trial, after the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and motions for directed verdict, the issues of fact *780 with; reference to the alleged injuries to the' cotton crop, were submitted to a jury which rendered a verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of $542.50. Thereafter, at a further hearing, without a jury, the court sustained plaintiffs’ additional cause of action for an injunction against defendant’s maintenance' of the levy or dike as it then existed. Accordingly, the judgment thereupon entered for plaintiffs included not only their recovery of damages in the sum of $542.50, but also a decree that defendant cut an opening or gap fifty or more feet wide in the levy “to the level of the Hutch-ins’ land * * *

For reversal, defendant contends, under his first proposition that his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence should have been sustained and a verdict directed for him on the damage feature of the case. His fourth argument under this proposition pertains to the effect of the river channel “improvements” he made, and he asserts there was insufficient evidence to show they in any manner injured or harmed plaintiffs. He recognizes, however, that there was testimony by more than one witness to the effect that, subsequent to the flooding, the floodwaters were slower in draining off of the cotton land involved, after these so-called improvements, than before. His argument, when correctly analyzed, is that such evidence was not of such weight as to support the verdict, but he cites no authority, nor otherwise effectively demonstrates, that it was incompetent, Consequently, it is without merit. In this jurisdiction, determination of the truth and veracity of witnesses, and the weight to be given their testimony is the prerogative of the jury; and its verdict will not be set aside where there is evidence reasonably tending to support it. On the point referred to, there was, as conceded by defendant, such evidence. This is a sufficient answer to defendant’s argument in view of our well-settled rule of appellate review.

Defendant’s third argument, concerning the sufficiency of the evidence, is directed toward attempting to show that, according to the evidence, the flood of 1953 was an unprecedented one, though similar in size and extent to those that had occurred in previous years. His characterization of it as “unprecedented” refers only to the particular time at which it occurred. He says the fact that such flood was not shown to have ever occurred at the particular time in the year in which the 1953 flood occurred was sufficient to render it “unprecedented” within the rule exonerating defendants in such cases from liability, citing Oklahoma City v. Rose, 176 Okl. 607, 56 P.2d 775, and Town of Jefferson v. Hicks, 23 Okl. 684, 102 P. 79, 24 L.R.A.,N.S., 214. This argument relates directly to the precise circumstances which rendered the floodwaters in this particular instance injurious to the crop involved. These were that the land, on which the crop was growing, happened to be inundated just at the time when the cotton plants were in bloom, and squares were appearing thereon. There was evidence indicating that the floodwaters, in surrounding these plants at this particular time, and depositing silt and mud on them and in the plant’s blooms and squares, and, in remaining around these plants for as long as 72 hours, instead of receding within a considerably shorter period and taking with it much of the mud and silt deposited (as such flood waters had done in the years previous to defendant’s alteration of the river’s channel) the 1953 flood caused the blooms and squares to drop off, thereby reducing the cotton yield from the particular 50 acres involved. We do not think, the fact that the inundation in question occurred during the month of July, while the cotton was in bloom and had bolls forming on it, rather than having occurred in an earlier, or later period, of the year when the cotton’s growth was not at such a critical stage (as had previous floods) rendered it an “unprecedented” or “extraordinary” one within the contemplation of the rule defendant relies on. Though the question of whether the flood in a given case was an ordinary, or an extraordinary, one is not without difficulty, this court is generally recognized as having, early in its history, accepted and approved the definition of an ordinary flood as “one, the repetition of which, though at uncertain intervals, might, by the exercise of ordinary diligence in investigating the charac *781 ter and habits of the stream, have been anticipated.” See the Annotations at 23 A.L.R.2d 750, 757, and 93 C.J.S., Waters, § 20, Note 95, and 67 C.J. 709, Note 5, citing Town of Jefferson v. Hicks, supra, in which, at page 80 of the Pacific Reporter, such definition is quoted from 13 Ency. of Law, 2d Ed., p. 686. Madisonville, H. & E. R. Co. v. Renfro, Ky., 127 S.W. 508, 509, was a case in which Renfrew sought damages from a railroad company for constructing an embankment for its line of tracks in such a way that it caused floodwaters from Rough River to stand on his growing crop in July of 1909.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 192, 298 P.2d 777, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regier-v-hutchins-okla-1956.